
Nigeria opts to keep controversial forex system
Nigeria’s central bank will keep its foreign exchange system, supporting a controversial float of the naira that investors and the International Monetary Fund have asked the country to dismantle.

Central bank governor Godwin Emefiele announced his intent to keep the foreign exchange system at a briefing in Abuja where he laid out policy direction for the next five years.
“We would continue to operate a managed float exchange rate,” he said.
Emefiele also announced a plan to recapitalise Nigeria’s banks.
“Over the next five years banks would be required to hold higher capital,” he said, adding that foreign exchange depreciation had weakened the industry’s capitalisation.
The bank will discuss the plan at a committee of governors, Emefiele said, though he did not say when this would be.
The governor added that Nigeria’s pace of economic growth remains fragile, but the central bank would strive to decrease the inflation rate to single digits and maintain a positive interest rate.
The naira officially trades at about 306 per U.S. dollar. But it is sold on the black market at roughly 360 to the dollar, a disparity that has frustrated importers and other investors as well as the IMF.