Fun

Nigeria’s government is blaming Binance for its own mismanagement

News Feed - 2024-04-12 01:04:52

Nicholas Anthony7 hours agoNigeria’s government is blaming Binance for its own mismanagementNigeria"s currency is collapsing because of financial mismanagement. Now, two Binance employees have been entangled in the government"s search for scapegoats.418 Total views1 Total sharesListen to article 0:00OpinionOwn this piece of crypto historyCollect this article as NFTJoin us on social networksThe naira is failing, and Nigerians are looking to alternatives. Yet, the Nigerian government is looking for anything other than its own actions to blame. In doing so, the government has somehow named Binance as the culprit for the naira’s crash and detained two of its employees in the process.


As far as the value of the naira is concerned, it’s time for the Nigerian government to take accountability for years of currency mismanagement. Better yet, it’s time for the Nigerian government to welcome currency competition.


While the naira has been falling for years, tensions escalated back in February after the naira’s most recent crash. At the time, Bayo Onanuga — President Bola Tinubu’s adviser on information and strategy — accused Nigerian citizens of being unpatriotic for trading naira for cryptocurrency. He went on to say, “Crypto should be banned in our country or else this bleeding of our currency will continue unabated.”


Related:Bitcoin"s halving won"t see a 600% return this year — so adjust your strategy


Authorities then accused Binance of moving $26 billion out of the country illegally, and invited Binance to send employees to discuss the issue. Binance thus sent two staffers — Tigran Gambaryan and Nadeem Anjarwalla. Nigerian authorities responded by placing them under house arrest. Anjarwalla has escaped, but Gambaryan — an American citizen and former IRS agent — is still in the country. Both men now face charges that include tax evasion, money laundering and providing financial services without a license.


This behavior by Nigerian officials is unfortunately all too common among government officials around the world. Rather than creating money that people choose to run to, governments often look to instead create restrictions that trap people with money they wouldn’t otherwise use.The naira"s inflation rate sat at a 28-year high as of March 2024. Source: Bloomberg


As Nobel laureate F.A. Hayek explained in 1976, one of the key purposes of currency competition “is to impose upon existing monetary and financial agencies a … much needed discipline by making it impossible for any of them … to issue a kind of money substantially less reliable and useful than the money of any other.” 


From this perspective, it should not be a surprise that Nigerian citizens have turned to cryptocurrencies — stablecoins, in particular — to get dollar exposure. The Nigerian government supplied an unreliable store of value and the public turned to better options.


By enacting restrictions to bar these alternatives, the Nigerian government is doubling down on its mistakes. It’s failing to recognize that cryptocurrency use is a symptom, not a cause, of the naira’s failure. The government is punishing its own citizens by trapping them on a sinking ship.Nigeria expressed more interest in cryptocurrency in 2023 than any other country in Africa, according to a CoinGecko study. Source: CoinGecko


Things are not looking good from an international perspective either. Consider the government’s actions over just the past few years. The Nigerian government created a central bank digital currency (CBDC), caused a cash shortage, banned cryptocurrency, lifted the ban on cryptocurrency, blocked access to exchanges, detained foreign citizens, and is now considering a ban on cryptocurrency once again.


Related: Bitcoin maximalism is misguided — Satoshi Nakamoto was a "Maxi Plus"


Whether it be cryptocurrency developers, exchange platforms, or even traditional financial institutions, it’s likely many companies are becoming increasingly hesitant from doing business in the country. And this lack of investment will again result in Nigerian citizens suffering the costs of the government’s mistake.


The Nigerian government desperately needs the discipline competition can provide.


Taking accountability for mismanaging the naira begins with letting the market, and the market alone, decide the exchange rate for the naira. The government’s on-again, off-again price controls have largely made a mess of the economy. In fact, had the government not placed such a heavy hand on exchange rates, it’s unlikely that Binance would have ever been blamed for the naira’s latest crash considering part of the accusation was that Binance manipulated the exchange rates.


The Nigerian government should also drop its CBDC. Reporting suggests that the central bank has spared no expense working with contractors to build, repair, and re-build the CBDC. This time and effort would be better spent focusing on the naira itself — especially since it ultimately took a government-created cash shortage to get CBDC adoption above 1 percent.


Turning back to 1976, Hayek wrote, “As soon as one succeeds in freeing oneself of the universally but tacitly accepted creed that a country must be supplied by its government with its own distinctive and exclusive currency, all sorts of interesting questions arise which have never been examined.” As evident by their use of cryptocurrency, Nigerian citizens have already recognized what Hayek described. Now the only question is whether the government will follow suit.


The government can continue years of currency mismanagement. Or, it can embrace competition and work to create something every citizen will want to use.Nicholas Anthonyis a guest author and policy analyst at the Cato Institute’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives. He is the author of The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act’s Attack on Crypto: Questioning the Rationale for the Cryptocurrency Provisions and The Right to Financial Privacy: Crafting a Better Framework for Financial Privacy in the Digital Age.


This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.# Nigeria# Africa# Cryptocurrency Exchange# Inflation# Binance# Opinion# Exchanges# RegulationAdd reaction

News Feed

US Senator Calls Sam Bankman-Fried to Answer for Failure of FTX and Alameda Research
US Senator Calls Sam Bankman-Fried to Answer for Failure of FTX and Alameda Research Two congressional hearings will be held next week on the collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FT
Bittrex Target of Latest $1 Million Crypto SIM Hack Lawsuit
Crypto exchange Bittrex is being sued over a SIM swap that netted criminals 100 bitcoin, currently worth nearly $1 million. The case resembles other recent high-profile heists in wh
Despite Trust Model Debates, Ethereum Is Bitcoin’s Largest Sidechain by Total Value Locked
Despite Trust Model Debates, Ethereum Is Bitcoin"s Largest Sidechain by Total Value LockedThe Ethereum network now has more bitcoin held in reserves than the Lightning Network, acco
Venezuela’s Maduro Wants to Offer Crypto-Based Loans to Agricultural Producers
Venezuela"s Maduro Wants to Offer Crypto-Based Loans to Agricultural Producers Nicolas Maduro, president of Venezuela, stated the country could offer cryptocurre
Amaka Nwaokocha2 hours agoSenator Lummis urges clear crypto regulations after XRP rulingThe outcome of the case could establish a precedent that shapes the regulatory landscape for digital assets within the United States
Galaxy Digital Terminates $1.2 Billion Bitgo Acquisition Deal, Crypto Firm Still Plans for Nasdaq Listing
Galaxy Digital Terminates $1.2 Billion Bitgo Acquisition Deal, Crypto Firm Still Plans for Nasdaq Listing Galaxy Digital Holdings and the company’s CEO and founder Mike Novo
Yearn Finance Token Jumps 270% in 5 Days – Defi Token YFI Worth More Than a Single Bitcoin
Yearn Finance Token Jumps 270% in 5 Days - Defi Token YFI Worth More Than a Single BitcoinDecentralized finance (defi) continues to make waves this week, as the Yearn Finance projec
Strategist Mike McGlone Believes Bitcoin Can Jump to $60K Resistance vs. $20K Support
Strategist Mike McGlone Believes Bitcoin Can Jump to $60K Resistance vs. $20K Support The senior commodity strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, Mike McGlone, ha
El Salvador Bitcoin holdings hit record $164M as BTC profits pass $50M
William Suberg9 hours agoEl Salvador Bitcoin holdings hit record $164M as BTC profits pass $50MBitcoin adoption in El Salvador has netted the government up to $53 million in profits thanks to BTC price record highs.3527
William Suberg14 hours ago70% of BTC dormant for a year — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this weekBitcoin faces a slow grind after earlier brisk BTC price gains, but the ingredients for a sustained rally are there, market
TikTok to automatically label AI-generated content
Savannah Fortis10 hours agoTikTok to automatically label AI-generated contentTikTok takes a proactive step in assuring AI authenticity on its platform by automatically labeling AI-generated content using new Content Cred
NYCB and Group of Banks Join to Launch USDF Stablecoin
NYCB and Group of Banks Join to Launch USDF Stablecoin A group of U.S.-based banks is launching their own stablecoin, USDF. The stablecoin will be issued by the USDF Consortium, wh