Forex
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#wikipedia.org. × pound sterling. Sterling (ISO code: GBP) is the currency of the United Kingdom and nine of its associated territories. The pound (sign: £) is the main unit of sterling, and the word pound is also used to refer to the British currency generally, often qualified in international contexts as the British pound or the pound sterling. Sterling is the world's oldest curre
#Dec.31.2999 

#wikipedia.org. × naira. The naira (sign: ₦; code: NGN; Yoruba: náírà, Hausa: نَيْرَ, romanized: naira, Igbo: naịra, Tyap: nera) is the currency of Nigeria. One naira is divided into 100 kobo. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is the sole issuer of legal tender money throughout the Federal Republic of Nigeria. It controls the volume of money supplied in the economy in order
#Dec.31.2999 

#economist.com. × Nigeria’s president pushes the limits of his power. A crisis in the oil-rich Niger Delta raises questions about the rule of law
#Mar.27.2025 

#economist.com. × Nigerian politics is a nasty place for women. A sexual-harassment scandal in parliament shows why
#Mar.20.2025 

#economist.com. × Nigeria seeks to restore pride in its artefacts, ancient and modern. A new museum in Benin City will showcase “a cauldron of creativity”
#Nov.28.2024 

#economist.com. × Why the fertility gap between north and south Nigeria matters. It has enormous implications for development
#Nov.07.2024 

#economist.com. × Floods in Nigeria’s north-east are aggravating a humanitarian crisis. The region had already been devastated by the Boko Haram insurgency
#Sep.19.2024 

#economist.com. × If Nigeria cannot end fuel shortages, disaster beckons. A new refinery creates a chance to scrap ruinous petrol subsidies
#Sep.09.2024 

#economist.com. × A Nigerian’s guide to weddings during the cozzie livs. Even the most lavish of partygoers are adjusting to a cost-of-living crisis
#Aug.29.2024 

#economist.com. × Africa’s two most populous economies brave tough reforms. Will Ethiopia and Nigeria be able to stick to them?
#Aug.08.2024 

#economist.com. × Soaring food-price inflation is hurting Nigeria’s poor. Conflict, a weakening currency and government blunders are all to blame
#Jul.11.2024 

#economist.com. × Nigeria’s high-cost oil industry is in decline. That will leave a gaping hole in exports and public finances
#Mar.21.2024 

#economist.com. × Nigeria’s currency crisis is decades in the making. Fixing it requires deep reform
#Mar.07.2024 

#economist.com. × Kidnappers are wreaking havoc in Nigeria. Yet President Tinubu’s security plan is worryingly like his predecessor’s
#Jan.18.2024 
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