Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai,
on Wednesday, faulted the decision of the Central Bank of Nigeria to
increase the Monetary Policy Rate from 12 per cent to 14 per cent,
saying the government might be forced to intervene and reduce it through
legislation.
The MPR is the anchor rate at which the
CBN, in performing its role as a lender of last resort, lends to Deposit
Money Banks to boost the level of liquidity in the banking system and
the economy.
If the apex bank wants to increase the
level of liquidity in the economy, it reduces the MPR, but increases it
when it wants to tighten money supply.
Before the increase in the MPR, banks
were lending to customers at an average of 25 per cent, but since the
new rate was announced, the DMBs have raised their lending rates to
between 28 per cent and 30 per cent.
El-Rufai said at a forum organised in
Abuja by the Women in Business, a non-profit making women advocacy
organisation, on Wednesday, that the high interest rate prescribed by
the apex bank was one of the major reasons for the massive job losses in
the country.
Emefiele had explained that in taking
the decision to increase the MPR, the CBN was faced with two policy
choices of whether to hold or reduce the rate to stimulate growth, or
increase it in order to curb inflation.
He said when considered from the
standpoint that the primary mandate of the CBN was to maintain price
stability, the committee decided to focus on its mandate by checking
inflationary pressures.
But el-Rufai in faulting the position of
the apex bank, stated that while inflation in the United Kingdom was
between seven and eight per cent, the lending rate was currently one per
cent.
He said, “We have a central bank that
has an MPR at what? Fourteen per cent, and banks lending at 20 per cent.
Only traders and drug dealers can make money at this interest rate.
“I have said it before and I will repeat
it again, unless the central bank and the banking system make a
conscious decision to bring the interest rate down, one day we will
legislate it.
“The rate of inflation in the UK is not
two per cent or one per cent. It is seven to eight per cent. But lending
rate is at one per cent. I think they cut the interest rate last week.”
The governor stated that the CBN’s
theory that the rate of interest must always be above the inflation rate
did make sense, noting that the country could always decide the
interest rate that would stimulate business activities.
“We must decide that businesses should
be able to borrow at the interest rate that makes sense and politically
lower rates to that level,” he added.
Attempts to get the CBN’s reaction to el-Rufai’s comments were not successful.
Repeated calls and a text message sent
to the acting Director of the apex bank, Mr. Isaac Okoroafor, were not
replied as of 8.26pm on Wednesday.
Ifeanyi Onuba, Abuja
Punch News
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