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Now that CBN’s new naira policy has paraslysed MSMEs

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By Ola Emmanuel

 

THE skit maker chose a very auspicious location to pass the message across. Crossing the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, with the fast-moving vehicles on top speed in both direction, she struggled to climb over the divide in an attempt to cross to the other side. She was on call and passing a message as loudly as she could. Speaking in Yoruba tongue, she informed her brother in a telephone conversation that Nigeria had changed from what he knew it to be. Whenever he is sending money again, he should please add POS operators’ share because out of the N20,000 he sent, only N17,000 was given to her. The brother must not forget this very important part of the sharing of money that the POS operators now remove at source, she shouted repeatedly. What else to add? The message clearly captures 2023 Nigeria. Two months into year 2023, the economic machine has already ground to a halt and responses from the minders of the economic can best be described as products from a clouded minds.

The United Nations, in speaking for the MSMEs Day (June 27), declares that “policymakers must move beyond recovery and consider ways in which to lower and eliminate barriers faced by MSMEs, improve the business environment and access to finance, markets and technology in these fragile times. In the release, the international body goes further to state that, it is critical that countries and their development partners continue to support and empower MSMEs and unlock their full potential through inspiring innovations, creativity and decent work for all”. However, it remains to be seen how Nigeria’s economic and monetary policymakers, especially the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has been coming with their own innovation and creativity to make the MSMEs happy in Nigeria. Rather, the reverse is the case: monetary policy formulation is hardly thought through and not really subjected to economic health checks to fully identify and appreciate implications of such policies, and effects of patchy implementations, on the masses and enterprises.

What Nigerians are currently witnessing is not what they bargain for. Ordinarily, before the CBN embarks on the slapdash implementation of the new naira notes and the cashless policy, it ought to learn about the possible outcomes of such exercises from the economies that had towed same path. In 2016 India embarked on demonetisation policy and the outcomes were destructive to the MSMEs in the country. Years after, many of the micro and small enterprises are yet to recover from the damaging effects of India’s 2016 demonetisation exercise. Going by the Indian experience, not only will badly implemented demonetisation leave the rural economy, the backbone of the economy, paralysed, , the micro and small businesses in urban metropolis are bound to be negatively affected. The capacity of cash crunch to lead to non-availability of cash to pay for food speaks volumes about what reaction to expect from the people.  The Indian experience is enough to teach Nigeria’s policymakers good lessons. But it is hard to see that they really consulted books before embarking on the naira notes swapping (rather confiscation of peoples cash) at a time the economy is already wounded by intractable fuel scarcity.

According to the outcome of a report carried out on India’s demonetisation (which was reported and published online by Business Standard), two years after getting hit by demonetisation, MSMEs in the country continue to limp. Going by the outcome of a survey conducted across 25,000 units that comprised nearly 50 per cent of micro and small industries, 25 per cent each of medium and large firms found themselves suffering from the demonetisation debacle. Enterprises and value-chain players, especially in the leather industry, who used to collect raw leather and sell mostly for cash payments have almost disappeared today. Their businesses have been wiped out. Since November 8, 2016, Indian micro, small and medium enterprises and traders across industries are still wallowing in the aftershocks of the money swapping policy. From jobs loss to dissolution of businesses, the impact of the drastic economic measure is being felt continuously.

The demonetisation exercise in India caused panics and chaos in the country. The same scenario is playing out in Nigeria, save for the North. Down South, there is public unrest in cities and towns with the attendant destruction of banks and other public properties. People submitted their meagre cash to banks but couldn’t get their money back. What ought to be cash swapping turned to something else. It really shows the CBN did not gather useful data that could help it perform its policy implementation without hitches. One hopes what the CBN has unleashed will not degenerate to the level in India where daily wage workers were thrown into despondency and many were thrown out of work as employers could not pay them in cash due to the attendant cash crunch the demonetisation caused. Already, negative impacts on disposable income and the consumption patterns of the people is already being affected.

Though less currency circulation may reduce inflation and curb kidnapping, what is yet to be seen by many economists and financial analysts is the possibility of government’s assertion that the naira redesign will check the influence of money on the outcomes of the general election. From all indications, and the current appalling financial state of the masses, less amounts of money may be required to induce voters now compared to when there was free flow of cash.  As plausible and laudable as some of the reasons adduced for the naira notes redesign and the cashless policy may seem, the fact that the masses as well as micro and small enterprises have been thrown into untold hardships means that the CBN failed in its primary responsibility and must, as a matter of urgency, come up with palliative measures to cushion the effects of its latest monetary policy that is annihilating micro and small scale enterprises.

In my piece titled “Redesigned Bank Notes, Cashless Policy and Urgent Tasks Before CBN Governor published January 9, 2023, I identified some probable responses from the masses if the Central Bank of Nigeria failed to do a good job of the cash swapping exercise. I proffered in that where the cashless policy is forced on the masses through scarce bank notes, the banking sector is looking for poor peoples trouble which is not going to be palatable for the country; and to the ordinary person on the street, if banking will become a problem, it is better one keeps his money at home where he would be seeing it and monitoring it closely. The current situation as we entered into the presidential election week is already confirming this assertion. The CBN is so far failing, per minute, in its duty to ensure a hitch-free supply of cash to the people who had turned in their old naira notes before the initial January 31, 2023 deadline. With the current cash crunch and the inability of daily income earners to earn their livelihood, coupled with Point of Sales operators to milk the situation, the CBN needs to act magically and surgically to put a decisive end to this anarchy immediately. Not only must cash be released to flood the banks for unhindered onward release to the people, incentives must urgently be introduced if the cashless policy is to succeed. More importantly, palliatives must be rolled out for the micro and small enterprises without much delay to enable them recover that had happened to these enterprises. Due to non-patronages, many micro and small business operators who rely on daily sales to make ends meet had eaten their business capitals. Not a few has resorted to trade by barter in order to find foods for their families.

To anchor this piece, monetary policies must not be anti-people and the banking sector should not make itself an enemy of the people. The question before all of us is, is Indian demonetisation exercise a success or a failure? The fact that some segments of the countrys economy have not recovered six years after the decision to scrap all the high-value currency notes is a proof of how spectacular failure the policy is. Nigeria shouldn’t be another bad example.

  • Emmanuel, a business planning consultant, is founder of Leacent Incorporated Trustees.

 

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