ADVERTISEMENT
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Friday, April 10, 2026
NewsOnline Nigeria
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
NewsOnline Nigeria
No Result
View All Result
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Home Crime Watch

Looting in Dollars, Paying in Naira: How Corruption Is Weakening Nigeria’s Currency By Festus Edovia

Perhaps even more damaging is the erosion of investor confidence. Investors pay close attention to the behaviour of those in power.

by NewsOnline Nigeria
April 10, 2026
in Crime Watch, Opinion
0
Festus Edovia

There is something deeply troubling about a country where public wealth is looted in foreign currency while ordinary citizens struggle daily with a weakening local currency. In Nigeria, corruption has evolved beyond mere theft of public funds, it has become a form of economic sabotage with far-reaching consequences for the nation’s financial stability.

 

Today, the looting of public resources is no longer just about the act of stealing; it is also about what happens to the stolen wealth afterward. In many cases, these funds are quickly converted into dollars and transferred abroad. When this occurs on a large scale, the impact goes far beyond the individuals involved; it places immense pressure on the foreign exchange market and weakens the value of the naira.

 

ALSO: From Brain Drain to Brain Gain: Can Nigeria Create the Conditions for Its Talent to Return?

 

Every time billions of naira are exchanged for dollars and hidden in foreign accounts, demand for foreign currency rises artificially. This demand is not driven by productive investment or legitimate trade but by the desire of corrupt elites to protect illicit wealth. The outcome is predictable: the naira loses value, sometimes gradually and sometimes through sudden and painful depreciation.

 

Yet the consequences extend even further.

This pattern of corruption fuels massive capital flight. Resources that should remain within the Nigerian economy, supporting industries, generating employment, and financing infrastructure are instead locked away in foreign financial systems. As a result, the domestic economy is deprived of critical capital needed for growth and development.

 

Perhaps even more damaging is the erosion of investor confidence. Investors pay close attention to the behaviour of those in power. When they observe a system where influential figures move wealth abroad rather than invest it locally, it sends a troubling signal. It raises a simple but powerful question: if those who govern the country do not trust the naira, why should investors?

 

This loss of confidence can be devastating. A currency is not just a medium of exchange; it is a reflection of collective trust in an economy. Once that trust begins to erode, restoring it becomes extremely difficult, regardless of policy adjustments or monetary interventions.

 

To be clear, corruption is not the only factor behind the naira’s persistent struggles. Nigeria’s heavy reliance on imports, a fragile industrial base, and inconsistent economic policies also contribute significantly to the currency’s vulnerability. However, the practice of converting stolen public funds into foreign currencies amplifies these structural weaknesses, turning economic challenges into deeper crises.

 

In effect, it represents a double theft. First, public funds are stolen from the national treasury. Second, ordinary Nigerians bear the hidden cost through a weaker currency, rising inflation, and an increased cost of living.

 

If the naira is to regain strength and stability, the fight against corruption must move beyond rhetoric. It requires decisive action to curb illicit financial flows, enforce transparency in public finance, and ensure that stolen wealth is not only recovered but prevented from leaving the country in the first place.

 

As long as Nigeria’s wealth continues to be stored in dollars abroad, the naira at home will inevitably bear the consequences.

 

Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM.

Previous Post

FirstBank Partners Eko Hotels, KEY Academy to Sponsor ChessMasters 2026 School Tournament in Lagos

Trending Stories

No Content Available

Latest Stories

Festus Edovia

Looting in Dollars, Paying in Naira: How Corruption Is Weakening Nigeria’s Currency By Festus Edovia

FirstBank

FirstBank Partners Eko Hotels, KEY Academy to Sponsor ChessMasters 2026 School Tournament in Lagos

Dollar to Naira Exchange Rate

Dollar to Naira Exchange Rate Today, April 9, 2026

Friday Public Holiday

State Government Declares Friday Public Holiday, Shuts Markets Ahead of Tinubu’s Visit

Nnamdi Kanu

Ohanaeze Ndigbo Demands Release of Nnamdi Kanu, Says Entire Igboland Feels His Imprisonment

Nigerian Army Brigade Commander

BREAKING: Nigerian Army Brigade Commander Executed By Terrorists in Borno

Wema Bank

Wema Bank Posts ₦221.9bn Profit Before Tax in FY2025, Declares ₦1.25 Dividend as Assets Cross ₦5tn

Arewa APC Leaders

BREAKING: Arewa APC Lagos Suspends Chairman Sa’adu Dandare Gulma

Arewa APC Leaders

Arewa APC Leaders Petition Lagos Governor, Demand Removal of Chairman Sa’adu Dandare Gulma

Save Our Democracy

BREAKING: Atiku, Peter Obi, Amaechi Lead ADC ‘Save Our Democracy’ Protest in Abuja

NewsOnline Nigeria

Get the Latest Naija News, Breaking News, Top Stories, World News, Business, Politics & Entertainment from NewsOnline Nigeria.

RELEVANT PAGES

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

ALERT US

Important Press Releases, Special Investigations: admin@newsonlineng.com

OFFICE ADDRESS

13 Poland Street, London, United Kingdom (UK)

Copyright © 2026 NewsOnline Nigeria

No Result
View All Result
  • Headlines
  • Top Stories
  • Politics
  • Crime Watch
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

Copyright © 2023 Newsonline Nigeria