Nigeria will
need to combine monetary policies with fiscal and structural policies in
order to overcome its worst economic crisis in decades and return to
growth, President Muhammadu Buhari said on Thursday.
Nigeria
is in the middle of its worst crisis in decades as a slump in oil
revenues hammers public finances and the naira. Gross domestic product
shrank in the first quarter and the central bank governor has said a
recession is likely.
"We fully understand that monetary policy alone is not sufficient to bring about desired economic growth," Buhari told a meeting of African central bank governors in Abuja.
"For
us in Nigeria, while we recognise the challenges we are confronting ...
we are determined to diversify the economy away from the excessive
reliance on oil and other primary products."
Nigeria's
central bank raised interest rates last month, and has been soaking up
liquidity in order to support the naira, which has lost around 40
percent of its value since it was floated in June.
Buhari
said the continent was confronted with slowing growth, weakening
demand, rising inflation, restrictions to capital flows, rising debt
levels, increases in exchange rate volatility and a depletion of foreign
reserves.
The central bank governors were meeting
to discuss ways to safeguard their economies from the expected
unwinding of loose monetary policies in the leading developed economies.
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