Monday, September 26, 2016

National Assets, National Cake

“If we have to sell our national assets to fund the 2016 budget; then we have to sell our coat of arms, national flags and anthem to fund the 2017 budget; as for the 2018 budget, the nation move from recession to receivership ,then we auction the whole territorial land mass of our country to the Bourgeoisie class to raise cash; then we all live on tenancy. This is what our ‘lumpen capitalists’ want”. - Senator Shehu Sani


When Monetary policy and Fiscal policy Differs

In public finance, monetary policy and fiscal policy are regarded as the two most widely recognized "instruments" used to influence a nation's economic activity. Monetary policy is primarily concerned with the management of interest rates and the total supply of money in circulation and is generally carried out by central banks. Fiscal policy is the collective term for the taxing and spending actions of governments. In Nigeria, fiscal policy is determined by the Executive in conjunction with the Legislative arm of government.

Monetary Policy

Central banks have typically used monetary policy to either stimulate an economy into faster growth or slow down growth over fears of issues like inflation. The theory is that, by senticising individuals and businesses to borrow and spend, monetary policy will cause the economy to grow faster than normal. Conversely, by restricting spending and encouraging savings, the economy will grow less quickly than normal.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) like other Central Banks has frequently used three different policy tools to influence the economy: opening market operations, changing reserve requirements for banks and setting the "discount rate." Open market operations are carried out on a daily basis where the CBN buys and sells government bonds to either inject money into the economy or pull money out of circulation. By setting the reserve ratio, or the percentage of deposits that banks are required to hold and not lend back out, the CBN directly influences the amount of money created when banks make loans. The CBN can also target changes in the discount rate, or the interest rate charged by the CBN when making loans to financial institutions, which is intended to impact short-term interest rates across the entire economy.

Fiscal Policy

Fiscal policy tools are numerous and hotly debated among economists and political observers. Generally speaking, the aim of most government fiscal policies is to target the total level of spending, the total composition of spending, or both in an economy. The two most widely used means of affecting fiscal policy are changes in the role of government spending or in tax policy.

If a government believes there is not enough spending and business activity in an economy, it can increase the amount of money it spends, often referred to as "stimulus" spending. If there are not enough tax receipts to pay for the spending increases, governments borrow money by issuing debt securities and, in the process, accumulate debt, or "deficit" spending.

By increasing taxes, governments pull money out of the economy and slow business activity. Governments might instead lower taxes in an effort to encourage more activity, hoping to boost economic growth. When a government spends money or changes tax policy, it must choose where to spend or what to tax. In doing so, government policy can target specific communities, industries, investments or commodities to either favor or discourage. These considerations are often determined based on considerations that are not entirely economic.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Recession: FIRS Put the Lid

Some economists have jokingly defined a recession like this: If your neighbor gets laid off, it's a recession. If you get laid off, it's a depression.

Economists officially define a recession as two consecutive quarters of negative growth in gross domestic product (GDP). It is also regards as a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months" as the hallmark of a recession.

Some businesses may be affected only moderately, or not at all, if the recession is mild and brief. If the recession lingers and the downturn is widespread, all big businesses - firms publicly traded on Nigerian Stock Exchanges (NSE) - may ultimately be hurt.

For decades, the Nigerian government have been talking about diversification of our economy for oil which has perennially form the major source of our revenue.

The Market of Hope

Oxford dictionary defined hope as a feeling of expectation and desire for a particular thing to happen. Another version called archaic put i...