The Bahamian dollar being equal to the US dollar isn’t magic, luck, or vibes — it’s policy, structure, and restraint. The Bahamas made a deliberate choice decades ago to peg its currency, tightly manage imports, protect its tourism inflows, and align monetary discipline with a narrow economic identity.
Nigeria’s question isn’t “when will the naira equal the dollar?” — it’s “what are we willing to sacrifice, control, and redesign to make stability possible?” Currency strength is not a prayer point; it’s a reflection of trust, production, governance, and consistency over time. Until Nigeria decides whether it wants flexibility or discipline — consumption or production — parity will remain a comparison, not a destination.

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