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Business News of Monday, 17 May 2021

Source: economicconfidential.com

Despite Buhari’s forex ban, food imports gulps $1.24bn

Food products imports Food products imports

Food products imports gobbled up $1.24bn of the foreign exchange supplied by the Central Bank of Nigeria from October 2020 to March 2021 despite the ban directive from President Muhammadu Buhari.

The foreign exchange used for the importation of food products into Nigeria more than doubled in the fourth quarter of last year as against the previous quarter, during which Buhari directed the CBN to stop issuing forex for food and fertilizer imports.

Buhari gave the directive to the CBN in September at a meeting of the National Food Security Council at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, saying that firms that were bent on importing food should source their forex elsewhere.

“Nobody importing food should be given money,” he was quoted as saying in a statement from the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu.

The forex used for food products imports, however, rose from $121.13m in September to $198.43m in October, $204.76m in November, and $305.88m in December, according to the CBN data on sectoral utilization for transactions valid for forex.

The amount of forex used for the importation of food production into the country surged by 118.60 percent to $709.07m in Q4 2020 from $324.37m in Q3.

Food product imports gobbled up $582.38m forex in the first quarter of this year, compared to $470.01m in Q1 2020, the CBN data showed.

Forex supply for food imports rose from $163.60m in January to $197.73m in February but declined to $171.05m in March.

The CBN’s breakdown of sectoral utilization of forex showed that food imports accounted for about 11.68 percent of the $4.99bn utilized for imports in the country in Q1 2021.

Amid the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic, forex supply for food imports fell by 9.22 percent last year to $1.87bn from $2.06bn in 2019, accounting for about 6.57 percent of the $28.46bn utilized for imports.

The COVID-19-induced slump in crude oil prices in 2020 hammered government finances and the naira, causing dollar shortages, with the external reserves falling to as low as $33.43bn on April 29, 2020.

The naira was devalued by the CBN to 360 per dollar in March 2020 from 306/$1 and to 379/$1 in August.

The country’s external reserves have been fluctuating in recent months, rising from a low of $34.42bn on March 18 to $35.25bn on April 16 but dropped to $34.09bn on May 11.

The CBN spent over $1.3bn to defend the naira between January and February 2021, according to a member of the Monetary Policy Committee, Prof. Adeola Adenikinju.

“It is early in the day to know the extent to which the new policy of CBN to boost remittances will impact on pressures in the foreign exchange market,” he said in its personal statements at the MPC meeting held in March.

The MPC noted that the persisting uptick in food inflation was due to the worsening security situation in many parts of the country, particularly the food-producing areas, where farmers faced frequent attacks by herdsmen and bandits in their farms.

“While the central bank is intervening significantly in the agricultural sector, the rising insecurity in some food-producing areas, is limiting the expected outcomes in terms of supply to the market, thus contributing to the rise in food prices,” it said.

The apex bank, in June 2015, excluded importers of 41 goods and services, including some food products, from accessing forex at the country’s forex markets in a bid to conserve the external reserves as well as encourage local production of those items.

Following the forex restriction, the amount of foreign currency used for imports in the country plunged to $24.718bn in 2015 from $34.202bn in 2014. It further fell to $17.154bn in 2016 and $15.161bn in 2017 but rose to $15.87bn last year.

The forex utilized for food imports also dropped to $3.42bn in 2015 from $5.03bn in 2014. It dipped further to $1.79bn in 2016 and $1.51bn in 2017 but increased to $2.31bn in 2018.

In December 2018, the CBN included fertilizer on the list of 41 items classified as ‘not valid for foreign exchange’ in the Nigerian forex market.

The items are rice, meat, and processed meat products, chickens, eggs, tomatoes, and tomatoes paste, and vegetables and processed vegetable products.

The central bank said in July 2019 that it had restricted the sale of forex on the importation of milk from the Nigerian forex market.



Analysts at Cordros Capital Limited said Nigeria’s forex reserves sustained their decline for the fourth consecutive week, as it dipped by $111.56m week-on-week to $34.61bn on May 14, 2021.

The naira depreciated by 0.3 percent to N411.67/$1 and by 0.2 percent to N484/$1 at the Investors’ & Exporters’ window and parallel market, respectively.

Analysts said, “We expect improved liquidity in the IEW over the medium term, given higher oil prices and an expected increase in crude oil production volume.

“Accordingly, we expect the naira to remain relatively range-bound (N410/$ – N415/$1) at the IEW.”

Similarly, they added, the CBN would devalue the naira by 5.3 percent to N400.00/$1 at the interbank market to narrow the gap with the IEW rate.