Foreign reserve now $38bn — Okonjo-Iweala
The nation’s foreign reserve currently stands at $38 billion, the
Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, disclosed yesterday.
Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Speaking at the Public Affairs Forum, in Abuja, the minister said the economy was stable and the Gross Domestic product, GDP, was growing at over 6 per cent in spite of the challenges facing the nation.
Her words, “One of the key things I want to tell you is that we have
tried to keep this economy stable under this administration. All these
things you are seeing- the investments in roads, the investments in
industries cannot happen if your economy lacks stability.
“If you
wake up worrying about inflation; if you wake up worrying about exchange
rate, you know Nigerians watch the exchange rate every single day. If
you wake up worrying about no growth then you cannot even talk about
investing in the sector.
“So the number one task that every
government delivers in every country- America, UK, Nigeria- is
stability. One thing you have to say for the administration of President
Goodluck Jonathan is that it has been able to deliver on macro-economic
stability for the past three years.
“The exchange rate, yes, it has
gone up and down, it fluctuates, but it has been relatively stable. The
inflation rate has come down from about 12 per cent last year to about
8.5 per cent. The reserves are at $38 billion today and enough to
cushion us for 5 months. We have been able to put a little more into the
Excess Crude Account”.
The minister described Nigeria’s fiscal
deficit as “one of the lowest in the world- just over 1 per cent of
GDP”, adding that many countries, even in Europe, run fiscal deficits of
between 5 to 10 per cent.
On borrowing , she noted that Nigerians
voiced their objections to large borrowing and that as such the
President Goodluck Jonathan administration decided to maintain a low
debt profile.
“By 2010, we borrowed N1.3 trillion to help finance
our spending. We determined under the president who said Nigerians don’t
want borrowing, let’s bring it down. Today do you know what our
borrowing is, N571 billion. We will continue to take it down, even if it
is by N1, we will continue trending down. The debt stock is very high
because of past borrowing but will continue to bring it down. That means
we must be prudent in the way we spend and we must also be very fast to
try to organize additional revenues”.
Non-oil revenue
Dr.
Okonjo-Iweala said that the nation was too dependent on oil revenue and
that with the falling oil price in the international market, coupled
with declining crude oil production, expanding the non-oil revenue base
had become inevitable.
Her words, “We are too depending on oil. The
price of oil is now coming down. The quantities are also not as large as
they used to be. So we have to plan differently. That is why we have to
rely more on non-oil.”
“I am convinced that this economy can generate additional $ 3 billion that can help us finance our expenditures”.
She pointed out that Nigeria has a big responsibility, not just for
itself but for the whole West African Sub-region and the entire African
continent.
“We form 77 per cent of west African GDP, we form 25 per
cent of Africa’s GDP. It means that if things don’t work well in
Nigeria, a quarter of the African GDP is affected”, she said, adding,
“that is why this administration is not only thinking of what we will
deliver here but how to be a responsible African citizen and global
citizen in the way it delivers for its home people”.
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