Jack Dorsey, Former CEO of Twitter says Nigeria, other poorer countries affected more by the Dollar Inflation
- Posted on April 13, 2022
- Business
- By Osinachi Gift
Jack Dorsey, the founder of Twitter and payment
technology company Square, has stated that the effects of the US dollar
inflation is being negatively felt by Nigeria and other developing countries.
He has lamented the crippling effects of the U.S.
dollar inflation on Nigeria and other developing countries. Dorsey made the
remark in reaction to white house projection of hike in inflation in the United
States and the country’s printing of its currency over the past years.
This comes as the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose/ to
its highest level since 2020.
In a response to the White House stating that it
expects US inflation to be ‘extraordinarily elevated’ in a new report, Dorsey
stated, “Every administration, republican or democrat, has an opportunity to
build trust with the public. Instead, every single time, they choose deception
and zero accountability. It’s not the party, it’s the system.”
On the negative consequences of US Fed printing,
Dorsey responded, “You don’t understand the power of the dollar and our single
export. Ask someone in Nigeria how the dollar affects them.”
In February, the American consumer price index jumped
7.9% from a year earlier following a 7.5% annual gain in January, accelerating
in February to a fresh 40-year high due to rising fuel and food costs, which is
also affected by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
However, the US inflation has also seen the US Dollar
gain an advantage on its peers, as Bloomberg reported in its Bloomberg Dollar
Spot Index that the dollar rose as much as 0.4%, eclipsing the previous high
for 2022 and reaching a level unseen since July 2020.
“The dollar advanced against most of its peers, with
some of the biggest gains coming against the Australian and New Zealand
currencies. At the same time, the British/ pound dipped below $1.30 for the
first time since November 2020,” it said.
The resulting effects hit poorer countries harder as
they have to buy imports in US dollars, coupled with rising costs of raw
materials and goods globally, especially diesel which is a necessity for doing
business in Nigeria.
Nigeria’s inflation rate changed direction in February as it rose 15.7% from 15.6% recorded in the previous month. Ayobami Omole, an Equity and Thematic Research Analyst at Tellimer Research has said that the high cost of diesel, partly caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine and impacting negatively on the manufacturing sector in Nigeria, is set to push Nigeria’s inflation for Q2 around the 16% rate.
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