A new law that would increase the percentage of gold from 4% to 30% in the nation’s foreign reserve assets is being considered by the Nigerian Senate. The reform will make the country’s foreign reserves less dependent on the US currency and more dependent on a more sustainable product.
A draft measure that is currently in the Senate would automatically name the Central Bank as the buyer of all gold generated in the nation, according to a report by Bloomberg Africa.As of the end of November, Nigeria’s reserves were valued at $34.8 billion, of which only 4% was held in gold.
The new bill will bring the mainly unregulated gold mining sector, which now contributes very little to the economy, under the Central Bank’s authority and integrate it into the formal economy.
In addition, the Red Chamber suggests creating a Gold Reserve Authority to supervise the nation’s gold reserve management. The goal of this new authority is to give the process of managing gold reserves more structure and supervision.
Apart from establishing the Gold Reserve Authority, the proposal recommends that Yemi Cardoso, the governor of the central bank, take charge of a recently established group dedicated to managing the gold reserves.
The committee would have the authority to decide how to handle and distribute the gold reserves. This committee’s structure and duties are intended to be very similar to those of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Central Bank.
The goal of this parallel organization is to guarantee that the country’s gold reserves are managed with a high degree of proficiency and uniformity.
In June, however, Nigeria’s foreign reserve assets increased by more than $5 million as a result of deals involving local miners who sold their gold bars to the country’s Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dele Alake.
He revealed this information to President Bola Tinubu when presenting him with a batch of gold bars purchased through the National Gold Purchase program.
In an attempt to strengthen the value of the naira relative to other currencies, he also made hints that the government is looking to buy more gold bars from regional artisanal miners.