![Click to see original Image in a new window](https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/polopoly_fs/1.1464117.1594530171!/fileimage/httpImage/image.png_gen/derivatives/landscape_620/a-vendor-wearing-protective-latex-gloves-counts-out-nigerian-naira-banknotes-in-a-store-in-lugbe-district-in-abuja-nigeria-on-wednesday-june-3-2020-the-government-of-nigeria-whose-revenue-could-be-slashed-by-more-than-half-this-year-due-to-the-oil-price-slump-finalized-plans-for-a-revised-budget-that-keeps-spending-almost-intact-and-that-will-mean-more-borrowing-photographer-kc-nwakalor-bloomberg.png) Nigeria, under pressure from multilateral lenders, has vowed to untangle its Byzantine foreign-exchange regime that deters investment in Africa’s biggest economy. But the slow pace of change signals the path to a single rate could be long and confusing for investors.
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