HomeNewsOpinionAfrica's Currency Woes: Decline of Nigeria’s naira points to a bigger problem in the continent

Africa's Currency Woes: Decline of Nigeria’s naira points to a bigger problem in the continent

The steep currency declines in Africa should force a switch away from imports toward domestic production and exports. But barriers such as high labour costs, expensive power, poor infrastructure and inefficient regulation limit African firms’ competitiveness. The depreciations could end up reducing both imports and domestic consumption and lead to stagflation

March 01, 2024 / 16:49 IST
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Africa’s rapidly depreciating currencies are eroding households’ savings.

On Tuesday, Nigeria’s central bank announced a supersized 400-basis-point rate hike in the fight against inflation and its depreciating currency. Hard to say if this move will stop the naira’s depreciation. Since January 2022, it has declined by 74 percent against the US dollar. And Nigeria is not alone. Other African countries have had a rough go over the past two years. The Ghanaian cedi, Kenyan shilling and South African rand are all down over the same period.

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Africa’s rapidly depreciating currencies are eroding households’ savings, increasing costs for businesses and deterring long-term foreign investment at a time when the region’s economies are seriously struggling. For policymakers, the only sustainable interventions ought to be aggressive export promotion and free floats to let markets determine currency price levels.

Depreciation episodes create both economic and political challenges for officials. On the economic front, reliance on imports of food and fast-moving consumer goods means that currency depreciation translates into rising inflation. It also increases the cost of servicing foreign debt, forcing governments to increase domestic borrowing and crowd out private lending. Meanwhile, foreign investors worried about currency risk and repatriating profits have rushed to wind down equity and debt positions, putting further pressure on weakened currencies.