Forex accruals: Finally, state governors remove their blinkers!!
Acknowledgements and gratitude (1)
Market Law for Job Creation in Nigeria (2)
Market Law for Job Creation in Nigeria
Inflation: The quiet plague
Additional dividends of a deregulated foreign exchange market
The operation and benefits of a deregulated foreign exchange market
N1.3 Trillion Subsidy Savings As Pie in the Sky!
First deregulate the foreign exchange market
LABOUR STRIKES? EXPECT MANY MORE, UNLESS …!
Budget 2012: ‘fire on the mountain’!
The Bogey of fuel Subsidies
INFLATION: The quiet plague
CBN and EMT fumble on Monetary Policy
No subsidy! tollgates! more subsidies & deregulation!!
The wrong way to defend the naira
Economy: Undo Jonathan’s Sealed Failure (2)
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SubscribeEconomy: Undo Jonathan’s Sealed Failure (1)
This week, we publish the above titled piece by a guest columnist. The content, as avid readers will observe, is in consonance with what we have preached in this column for several years.
SOVEREIGN WEALTH WAHALA
The phrase, ‘Sovereign Wealth Fund’, SWF, may sound like ‘big grammar’ to the average layman, who, with little education, represents the critical mass of our population.
Fuel cartel and related issues
The issue of fuel subsidy has generated so much indignation all over the country. The reason for the heat is obvious; Nigerians readily remember the immediate hikes in the price of virtually every product or service as petrol prices climbed from less than 20 kobo/litre in the early 1980s to the current regulated price of N65/litre.
THE BOGEY OF FUEL SUBSIDIES
In spite of former President Obasanjo’s intimidating presence, his attempts to deregulate the pricing of petroleum products (particularly P.M.S./petrol) hit a brick wall. Consequently, the value of subsidies has steadily increased from less than N100bn a year to over N1,000bn, and may exceed 20% of the proposed 2012 budget according to media reports.
The wrong way to defend the naira
The Central Bank of Nigeria has been unusually silent on the widening gap between the official exchange and the Bureau de Change (BDC) rates of the naira to the dollar.
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