The series of tweets on "Dorm" accounts from this account illustrate how financial ignorance and economic illiteracy can end up doing unintended and irreversible damage to the economy.
Thread:
1. Lets start with the fact that the author of this tweet - who is also a member of Nigeria's parliament - calls it "Dorm" accounts. It suggests ignorance of the name and the policy intention of these kinds of accounts. The correct name is "Dom", short for Domiciliary Accounts.
2. Dom accounts are a key aspect of the policy to incentivize potential forex inflows from autonomous sources into Nigeria by allowing autonomous recipients of these funds to DOMICILE them in Nigerian banks at close to the value at which the transaction was initiated.
3. "Autonomous Sources" are the primary source of forex inflows into Nigeria. In the Q4 2014, inflow through autonomous sources amounted to US$15.43 billion, which accounted for 65.4 per cent of the total inflow through the economy.
4. The CBN recognized this when, in late 2020, it issued directives reinforcing the rights of international money transfer beneficiaries to have unfettered access to their $$. Consequently, inflow improved. CBN even started and continued a N5 for each dollar received promotion
5. It is a no-brainer really. If you want people to bring Forex into Nigeria, you have to create a system that assures them, at the very least, that the money they bring in will have the value it would have had if it were kept outside Nigeria.
The 5 points above is why the quoted tweet is dangerous and could have an effect opposite to what the stated intention is. It is a direct attack on the single most important source of Forex inflows to Nigeria right now.
As we have seen in the UK this week, panic is a natural reaction to uncertainty. Careless & ignorant statements can fuel uncertainty. The last set of people that Nigeria can afford to panic right now are "autonomous sources" whose steadiness is perhaps our saving grace.
For those who are interested in the source of the data I have include in this thread, please see the CBN Fourth Quarter 2020 Economic Report. You can start reading at page 46. cbn.gov.ng/Out/2021/RSD/F…

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Nobody can shave your head via Zoom.

Policymaking is about consensus building. As such, people who haven't agreed yet can still talk.
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