Prophet
T.B. Joshua had prophesied on December 31st, 2015, that Nigerian
President Muhammadu Buhari would face ‘overwhelming pressure’ which he
would ‘not be able to resist’ to devalue the naira, a statement that
subsequent events have increasingly confirmed.
“The president
will do everything to reject revaluation of the naira – which is a good
idea from a good leader,” TB Joshua stated in a live broadcast during a
special New Year’s eve service.
“But there will be
overwhelming pressure which he will not be able to resist. Nigerians,
support and pray for your leader. The future is crying for help.”
Four
days later, International Monetary Fund (IMF) Chief, Christine Lagarde,
embarked on an official visit to the West African nation.
Underneath
the polished financial rhetoric, high on the agenda was a clear push
for Buhari to devalue the naira, heightened by the drastic reduction in
oil prices worldwide, Nigeria’s major source of revenue.
Influential
financial newspapers have reiterated this call with media such as
Financial Times, Forbes and Bloomberg blunt in their appraisal that
economic disaster was nigh in Nigeria lest drastic action be taken by
the government over the currency.
In an article published on
January 30th 2016 titled, ‘Hope The Naira Falls’ by The Economist, the
magazine stated, “President Muhammadu Buhari is repeating an economic
error he made as dictator 30 years ago,” citing the President’s refusal
to devalue the naira amidst growing pressure.
“Instead of letting
the naira depreciate to reflect the country’s loss of purchasing power,
Buhari’s government is trying to keep it aloft,” the magazine stated,
reminding people of the detrimental consequences Nigerians faced when
Buhari attempted the same policy during his last stint in power.
Among
those calling for devaluation is former CBN Governor, Mallam Lamido
Sanusi, who said devaluation was necessary as CBN would not be able to
sustain its current forex control policies on the long run.
With
global economic worries rising due to the continuing reduction in oil
prices, other oil-producing nations from Angola to Russia and Mexico
have let their currencies weaken.
However, the central bank of
Africa’s largest economy has determinedly pegged the naira at 197-199
per dollar since March to stem its slide, despite it selling for 306 per
dollar on the black market.
The policy has led to a shortage of
foreign-exchange and been widely criticized by investors and businesses,
who blame the restrictions for exacerbating the country’s economic
slump and discouraging potential investors.
However, President Buhari insisted on refusing to follow advice to devalue the naira.
He
likened devaluation of the Naira to having it murdered and said those
advocating for devaluation needed to convince him, adding he was not
ready to inflict more hardship on the poor citizens of Nigeria.
But
according to a report by Forbes titled, ‘Nigeria Faces ‘Bleak’ 2016 As
Currency Devaluation Looms’, the issue is not ‘whether’ devaluation will
happen but ‘when’.
However, TB Joshua said Nigerians should support President Buhari against Naira devaluation.
Only the Wise listens to Heavenly prophesies....
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