Exchange rate policies backed by President Muhammadu Buahri are doomed to fail – Sanusi

Hamilton Nwosa
Writer

Ad

Details as FG, States LGs Share N2.103trn in September

By Abiola Olawale The Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) has disbursed a total of N2.103 trillion as federation revenue for September 2025, shared among the Federal Government (FG), 36 states, and 774 Local Government Councils (LGCs). The allocation was made at the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) meeting chaired by the Accountant-General of the Federation,…

Why I Don’t Want Nigeria to Qualify for 2026 World Cup– South Africa’s Minister Reveals

By Abiola Olawale South Africa's Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Gayton McKenzie, has unleashed a scathing attack on Nigeria's Super Eagles, declaring outright that he hopes they crash out of contention for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. McKenzie spoke during an interview with Radio 947 in Johannesburg, where he accused Nigeria of allegedly attempting…

From Harvard to Stanford: The Tuition Costs of the Top 10 Colleges

Key Takeaways Tuition alone at elite schools ranges from $59K to $71K, compared to $43K at the average private college. The University of Chicago tops the list. The cost of attending America’s most prestigious universities continues to soar. For the 2024–25 academic year, the total annual cost of the top 10 national universities now ranges…

Ad

Nigeria’s respected former central bank chief has said that exchange  rate policies backed by President Muhammadu Buahri are doomed to fail, the UK-based Financial Times newspaper reports.

Lamido Sanusi told the Financial Times that he was disappointed to see Mr Buhari’s strong security and anti-corruption efforts overshadowed by a monetary policy regime with “very obvious drawbacks that far outweigh its dubious benefits”.

Nigeria’s central bank last year imposed tight capital controls and pegged the currency, the naira, at an official rate currently 35% stronger than the black market rate.

The policies sparked capital flight and damaged the West African state’s reputation as a frontier market investment destination, the Financial Times newspaper reports.

Mr Sanusi – who is now the emir of Kano, an influential religious post among Muslims in Nigeria – was the central bank governor from 2009 to 2014, when he was suspended by then-President Goodluck Jonathan following a row over corruption in the oil sector.

Ad

X whatsapp