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Agbakoba Says Naira Is Africa’s Most Volatile Currency

Abuja, Nigeria — Nigeria’s local currency, the Nigerian Naira (₦), has emerged as one of the most volatile in Africa — and perhaps the world — a situation highlighted by prominent legal advocate, Olisa Agbakoba, SAN.

In his recent remarks, Agbakoba warned that mere circulars and policy tweaks by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), will not suffice to stabilise the naira‑dollar disparity. He argued that the underlying problem lies deeper: Nigeria’s economy lacks productive value and structural resilience.

What the Data Show

Agbakoba’s Critique

Agbakoba’s comments centre on two major threads below:

In his view, the high currency volatility is a symptom of deeper flaws: low economic activity, heavy import reliance, weak institutions, and inadequate reserves.

Why The Volatility Matters

Underlying Causes in Nigeria’s Case

What Can Be Done?

Drawing on Agbakoba’s prescriptions and broader commentary:

Conclusion

Nigeria’s naira has earned the uneasy label of one of Africa’s most volatile currencies.

According to Olisa Agbakoba, the instability is not simply a matter of exchange‑rate policy but reflects deeper economic and institutional faults: weak production, misaligned governance, and an overreliance on external flows.

Unless Nigeria addresses those root causes, any attempt at mere cosmetic currency‑stabilisation risks remaining temporary — and the naira’s volatility may continue to haunt the economy.

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