This is a report by Forbes on the suspension of CBN Governor by President Jonathan.
Please read it.
As Nigeria has shifted from a corruption-addled frontier state to one of
the world’s few emerging market bright spots, it has been assisted
enormously by the charisma and gravitas of two of its financial leaders.
One is the coordinating minister for the economy and minister of
finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, familiar on the multilateral bank meeting
circuit for her strong leadership, candidacy for the world Bank
presidency – and her colourful headscarves. The other is central bank
governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, sharp-suited and sharper-minded. It’s
never been entirely clear how well the two people, or at least their
institutions, get along, but they present to the world a credible,
smart, articulate face for a country whose finances have often been
murky.
But now Sanusi, who was due to step down in June, has been suspended by
President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan over allegations of “financial
recklessness and misconduct.” Few in the west take these words – taken
verbatim from a statement issued by the president through his media
adviser, Reuben Abati – at face value, and the result has been to erode
confidence in one of the few market darlings of frontier-spirited fund
managers in recent years.
It’s fair to say that Sanusi has, from the outset, taken on the big fights.
The first of them was taking on endemic financial fraud in the aftermath
of a collapse in the country’s whole banking system in 2009. This was
difficult – he sacked eight chief executives of Nigerian banks in his
first four months – but considered a success story.
The last of them – the very last, it seems – was to take on corruption
in the national oil industry. In February he released a stack of
documents suggesting that Nigeria’s oil funds, the lifeblood of the
national economy, were being mismanaged. Since oil revenues generally
account for more than 70% of government revenue, any fraud within this
sector is consumingly important for what is probably Africa’s largest
economy (we’re all awaiting a restatement of national GDP which will
very likely elevate it about South Africa). Falling oil income has
caused problems with state finances and spending, foreign reserves, and
Nigeria’s own currency, the naira, which has been falling sharply this
year. There were hundreds of pages of data in the cache, but the key
point is an allegation that more than $1 billion per month in crude
sales, owed to the state, was not being remitted by the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation.
It is rumoured that President Johnson had asked Sanusi to resign
earlier, but he has now moved to suspend the governor in the strongest
possible terms. The statement says “Sanusi’s tenure has been
characterized by various acts of financial recklessness and misconduct”,
talks about “far-reaching irregularities under Mallam Sanusi’s watch”,
and urges his successor, deputy governor Sarah Alade, to “focus on the
core mandate of the bank and conduct its affairs with greater
professionalism, prudence and propriety to restore domestic and
international confidence in the country’s apex bank.”
Until recently, Nigeria had been much-loved among frontier investors,
for several reasons. Firstly, the size of its GDP; secondly, its
demographic position, with a young population chiefly within the
workforce age bracket; thirdly, oil; and fourthly, a sense that it was
cleaning up. High bond yields helped to drive heavy inflows into the
currency last year. But even prior to Sanusi’s removal, the gloss had
started to come off, as foreign exchange reserves had declined $7
billion from a $49 billion peak in April 2013, the naira had been
falling, and next year’s election had begun to distort spending patterns
and clarity in policy. News of Sanusi’s removal made things worse: bond
trading was halted and the naira fell still further. Samir Gadio at
Standard Bank said the move was “disruptive” and showed “the Central
Bank of Nigeria has de facto lost much of its independence”, adding that
“clearly it is driven by political motives given Sanusi’s vocal
criticism of oil revenue leakages and the opaque fiscal system in
Nigeria.” Strictly speaking, the President can’t remove the head of the
central bank, which is perhaps why this is a suspension rather than an
outright sacking; that would require a two-thirds vote in the Senate.
These are not good times for the MINTs, the newly-coined agglomeration
of emerging economies below the BRICs. Indonesia and Turkey are
suffering with their deficits and currencies; now Nigeria is in the mire
again. Let’s hope Mexico can stay steady on its own reform agenda so
that at least one of the four has a good year.
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