At least the taxi drivers of Lagos are happy, even if businessmen in Nigeria’s commercial capital are not.
A year after becoming president, Muhammadu Buhari pulled out of his first official visit to Lagos on Monday, averting citywide gridlock but angering business leaders who say the 73-year-old former military ruler is deaf to their plight.
With Africa’s largest economy now contracting, the foreign exchange market frozen by red tape and a new Niger Delta insurgency sending oil output to a 20-year low, it is a plight that gets worse by the day.
Yet businessmen say Buhari, who swept to power in an election a year ago, remains oblivious and continues to sacrifice short-term growth in pursuit of his long-term dream of overhauling the way Africa’s most populous nation works.
To many, sending Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, a Lagos commercial lawyer, to the meeting in his place – despite thousands of posters welcoming “the People’s President to No1 Africa’s mega city” – is another sign of his disdain.
“It is rather unfortunate that the federal government would raise the expectations of the people… only to cancel the presidential showing, seemingly with no obvious cogent reasons being given,” said Yemi Adeleke, director of World Trade Center, a trade and investment agency.
Buhari’s spokesman Garba Shehu said the president, who is based in the capital, Abuja, was forced to postpone his visit after being “faced with scheduling difficulties”. Buhari will visit the port city after the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan which ends at the start of July, he added.
Foremost among private sector complaints are foreign exchange curbs initially introduced to protect currency reserves hammered by the decline in the price of oil, but which are now a pillar of Buhari’s vision of a transformed economy.
SHOCK
In order to keep the naira at 197 to the dollar, the central bank has scuppered the interbank foreign exchange market, blocking access to dollars for anybody not armed with a valid overseas invoice.
Buhari argues that this is about ending speculation, as well as a decades-long cycle of devaluations that has hit ordinary Nigerians in the form of high inflation and discouraged the investment needed to build a serious domestic factory sector.
“It is extraordinarily frustrating for those of us in the business community who supported him that he has chosen to be intransigent about something it seems as if he doesn’t really understand,” said Timi Soleye, president of CRYO Gas and Power.
Critics, including the International Monetary Fund, point to a currency trading at almost half its official value on the black market, fuelling expectations of a devaluation that are now so widespread that investment has dried up.
This view received support on Friday, when the National Bureau of Statistics revealed the economy shrank 0.4 percent in the first quarter, with industry and manufacturing shrinking 5.5 percent and 7 percent respectively.
“It is now clear that the adverse effects of the oil price shock have filtered through to the demand side of the economy, and we maintain our view that Abuja’s current policy framework only serves to exacerbate the oil shock,” Cape Town-based NKC African Economists said.
“The economy might still find itself on a slightly firmer footing towards year-end, but this will largely depend on Abuja abandoning some of its unconventional economic policies.”
“COMMAND AND CONTROL”
Vice President Osinbajo hinted at changes when he called this month for a “substantial” review of foreign exchange policy, but there are few signs of this filtering down to the Central Bank of Nigeria, which announces its latest monetary policy decision on Tuesday.
Over the last year, Governor Godwin Emefiele’s speeches have chimed closely with Buhari’s views on the economy and currency, and this month the bank explicitly denied an online media report of an imminent devaluation to 290 to the dollar.
One-month deliverable forwards – essentially a view on the currency one month out – hit 245 to the dollar on May 16 after the devaluation report, but have retraced to 224 this week, reflecting a more sober analysis of the chances of a weaker naira.
All but one of 12 analysts polled by Reuters this month said the currency would be devalued, with a median expectation of a 15 percent weakening – although many were reluctant to be pinned down on the timing.
Analysts also say Buhari’s actions now closely mirror his behaviour as a military ruler in the early 1980s.
Besides sending in soldiers with bullwhips to bring order to chaotic queues at bus-stops, he tried to stimulate domestic manufacturing by banning imports and rebuffed IMF pressure to devalue the currency.
Still locked in a military mindset – he came to power in a coup and left via the same route – diplomats say he is unlikely to respond in a conventional manner to public or political criticism.
“Buhari doesn’t do politics. He does command and control,” said one Abuja-based diplomat. “And so far it’s working.”
Reuters