I
need to preface this article with a few clarifications. I have taken a
long sabbatical leave from partisan politics, and it is real fun
watching the drama from the balcony. Having had my own share of public
service (I do not need a job from government), I now devote my time and
energy in pursuit of other passions, especially abroad.
A
few days ago, I read an article in Thisday entitled “Where is Charles
Soludo?”, and my answer is that I am still there, only that I have been
too busy with extensive international travels to participate in or
comment on our national politics and economy. But I occasionally follow
events at home. Since the survival and prosperity of Nigeria are at
stake, the least some of us (albeit, non-partisan) must do is to engage
in public debate. As the elections approach, I owe a duty to share some
of my concerns.
In September 2010, I wrote a piece entitled
“2011 Elections: Let the Real Debate Begin” and published by Thisday. I
understand the Federal Executive Council discussed it, and the Minister
of Information rained personal attacks on me during the press briefing. I
noted more than six newspaper editorials in support of the issues we
raised.
Beside other issues we raised, our main
thesis was that the macro economy was dangerously adrift, with little
self-insurance mechanisms (and a prediction that if oil prices fell
below $40, many state governments would not be able to pay salaries). I
gave a subtle hint at easy money and exchange rate depreciations because
I did not want to panic the market with a strong statement. Sadly, on
the eve of the next elections, literally everything we hinted at has
happened. Part of my motivation for this article is that five years
after, the real debate is still not happening.
The presidential
election next month will be won by either Buhari or Jonathan. For
either, it is likely to be a pyrrhic victory. None of them will be able
to deliver on the fantastic promises being made on the economy, and if
oil prices remain below $60, I see very difficult months ahead, with
possible heady collisions with labour, civil society, and indeed the
citizenry. To be sure, the presidential election will not be decided by
the quality of ‘issues’ or promises canvassed by the candidates.
The
debates won’t also change much (except if there is a major gaffe by
either candidate like Tofa did in the debate with Abiola). My take is
that more than 95% of the likely voters have pretty much made up their
minds based largely on other considerations. A few of us remain
undecided.
During my brief visit to Nigeria, I watched some of
the campaign rallies on television. The tragedy of the current
electioneering campaigns is that both parties are missing the golden
opportunity to sensitize the citizenry about the enormous challenges
ahead and hence mobilize them for the inevitable sacrifices they would
be called upon to make soon. Each is promising an El-Dorado.
Let
me admit that the two main parties talk around the major development
challenges—corruption, insecurity, economy (unemployment/poverty, power,
infrastructure, etc) health, education, etc. However, it is my
considered view that none of them has any credible agenda to deal with
the issues, especially within the context of the evolving global economy
and Nigeria’s broken public finance.
The UK Conservative
Party’s manifesto for the last election proudly announced that all its
programmes were fully costed and were therefore implementable. Neither
APC nor PDP can make a similar claim. A plan without the dollar or Naira
signs to it is nothing but a wish-list. They are not telling us how
much each of their promises will cost and where they will get the money.
None talks about the broken or near bankrupt public finance and the
strategy to fix it.
In response to the question of where the
money will come from, I heard one of the politicians say that the
problem of Nigeria was not money but the management of resources. This
is half-truth. The problem is both. No matter how efficient a father
(with a monthly salary of N50,000) is at managing the family resources, I
cannot see how he could deliver on a promise to buy a brand new Peugeot
406 for each of his three children in a year.
Even with all the
loopholes and waste closed, with increased efficiency per dollar spent,
there is still a binding budget constraint. To deliver an efficient
national transport infrastructure alone will still cost tens of billions
of dollars per annum even by corruption-free, cost-effective means. Did
I hear that APC promises a welfare system that will pay between N5,000
and N10,000 per month to the poorest 25 million Nigerians? Just this
programme alone will cost between N1.5 and N3 trillion per annum.
Add
to this the cost of free primary education plus free meal (to be funded
by the federal budget or would it force non-APC state governments to
implement the same?), plus some millions of public housing, etc. I have
tried to cost some of the promises by both the APC and the PDP, given
alternative scenarios for public finance and the numbers don’t add up.
Nigerians would be glad to know how both parties would fund their
programmes.
Do they intend to accentuate the huge public debt,
or raise taxes on the soon to-be-beleaguered private businesses, or
massively devalue the naira to rake in baskets of naira from the
dwindling oil revenue, or embark on huge fiscal retrenchment with the
sack of labour and abandonment of projects, and which areas of waste do
they intend to close and how much do they estimate to rake in from them,
etc?
I remember that Chief Obafemi Awolowo was asked similar
questions in 1978 and 1979 about his promises of free education and free
medical services. Even as a teenager, I was impressed by how he reeled
out figures about the amounts he would save from various ‘waste’
including the tea/coffee served in government offices. The point is that
at least he did his homework and had his numbers and I give credit to
his team.
Some 36 years later, the quality of political debate
and discourse seems to border on the pedestrian. From the quality of its
team, I did not expect much from the current government, but I must
confess that I expected APC as a party aspiring to take over from PDP to
come up with a knock-out punch. Evidently, from what we have read from
the various versions of its manifesto as well as the depth of promises
being made, it does not seem that it has a better offer.
Let me
digress a bit to refresh our memory on where we are, and thus provide
the context in which to evaluate the promises being made to us. Recall
that the key word of the 2015 budget is ‘austerity’. Austerity? This is
just within a few months of the fall in oil prices. History repeats
itself in a very cruel way, as this was exactly what happened under the
Shehu Shagari administration.
Under the Shagari government, oil
price reached its highest in 1980/81. During the same period, Nigeria
ratcheted up its consumption and all tiers of government were in
competition as to which would out-borrow the other. Huge public debt was
the consequence. When oil prices crashed in early 1982, the National
Assembly then passed the Economic Stabilization (Austerity Measures) Act
in one day— going through the first, second, and third readings the
same day.
The austerity measures included the rationing of
‘essential commodities’ and most states owed salary arrears. Corruption
was said to be pervasive, and as Sani Abacha said in that famous coup
speech, ‘unemployment has reached unacceptable proportions and our
hospitals have become mere consulting clinics’.
General
Muhammadu Buhari/Tunde Idiagbon regime made the fight against corruption
and restoration of discipline the cardinal point of their
administration which lasted for 20 months. I am not sure they had a
credible plan to get the economy out of the doldrums (although it must
be admitted that poverty incidence in Nigeria as of 1985 when they left
office was a just46%— according to the Federal Office of Statistics).
We
have come full circle. If the experience under Shagari could be excused
as an unexpected shock, what Nigeria is going through now is a
consequence of our deliberate wrong choices. We have always known that
the unprecedented oil boom (in both price and quantity—despite oil
theft) of the last six years is temporary but the government chose to
treat it as a permanent shock. The parallels with the Shagari regime are
troubling.
First, at the time of oil boom, Nigeria again went
on a consumption spree such that the budgets of the last five years can
best be described as ‘consumption budgets’, with new borrowing by the
federal government exceeding the actual expenditure on critical
infrastructure. Second, not one penny was added to the stock of foreign
reserves at a period Nigeria earned hundreds of billions from oil.
For
comparisons, President Obasanjo met about $5 billion in foreign
reserves, and the average monthly oil price for the 72 months he was in
office was $38, and yet he left $43 billion in foreign reserves after
paying $12 billion to write-off Nigeria’s external debt. In the last
five years, the average monthly oil price has been over $100, and the
quantity also higher but our foreign reserves have been declining and
exchange rate depreciating.
I note that when I assumed office as
Governor of CBN, the stock of foreign reserves was $10 billion. The
average monthly oil price during my 60 months in office was $59, but
foreign reserve reached the all-time peak of $62 billion (and despite
paying $12 billion for external debt, and losing over $15 billion during
the unprecedented global financial and economic crisis) I left behind
$45 billion.
Recall also that our exchange rate continuously
appreciated during this period and was at N117 to the dollar before the
global crisis and we deliberately allowed it to depreciate in order to
preserve our reserves. My calculation is that if the economy was better
managed, our foreign reserves should have been between $102 –$118
billion and exchange rate around N112 before the fall in oil prices. As
of now, the reserves should be around $90 billion and exchange rate no
higher than N125 per dollar.
Third, the rate of public debt
accumulation at a time of unprecedented boom had no parallel in the
world. While the Obasanjo administration bought and enlarged the policy
space for Nigeria, the current government has sold and constricted it.
What debt relief did for Nigeria was to liberate Nigerian policymakers
from the intrusive conditionalities of the creditors and thereby truly
allowing Nigeria independence in its public policy.
How have we
used the independence? Through our own choices, we have yet again tied
the hands of future policymakers. This time, the debt is not necessarily
to foreign creditor institutions/governments which are organized under
the Paris club but largely to private agents which is even more
volatile. We call it domestic debt. But if one carefully unpacks the
bond portfolio, what percentage of it is held by foreign private agents?
And I understand the Government had removed the speed bumps we kept to
slow the speed of capital flight, and someone is sweating to explain the
gyrations in foreign reserves. I am just smiling!
In sum, the
mismanagement of our economy has brought us once more to the brink.
Government officials rely on the artificial construct of debt to GDP
ratio to tell us we can borrow as much as we want. That is nonsense,
especially for an economy with a mono but highly volatile source of
revenue and forex earnings. The chicken will soon come home to roost.
Today,
the combined domestic and external debt of the Federal Government is in
excess of $40 billion. Add to this the fact that abandoned capital
projects littered all over the country amount to over $50 billion. No
word yet on other huge contingent liabilities. If oil prices continue to
fall, I bet that Nigeria will soon have a heavy debt burden even with
low debt to GDP ratio.
Furthermore, given the current and
capital account regime, it is evident that Nigeria does not have enough
foreign reserves to adequately cover for imports plus short term
liabilities. In essence, we are approaching the classic of what the
Shagari government faced, and no wonder the hasty introduction of
‘austerity measures’ again.
Fourth, poverty incidence and
unemployment are also simultaneously at all-time high levels. According
to the NBS, poverty incidence grew to 69% in 2010 and projected to be
71% in 2011, with unemployment at 24%. This is the worst record in
Nigeria’s history, and the paradox is that this happened during the
unprecedented oil boom.
One theme I picked up listening to the
campaign rallies as well as to some of the propagandists is the
confusion about measuring government “performance”. Most people seem to
confuse ‘inputs’, or ‘processes’ with output. Earlier this month, I had a
dinner with a group of friends (14 of us) and we were chit-chatting
about Nigeria. One of us, an associate of President Jonathan veered off
to repeat a propaganda mantra that Jonathan had outperformed his
predecessors.
He also reminded us that Jonathan re-based the GDP
and that Nigeria is now the biggest economy in Africa; etc. It was fun
listening to the response by others. In sum, the group agreed that the
President had ‘outperformed’ his predecessors except that it is in
reverse order.
First, my friend was educated that re-basing the
GDP is no achievement: it is a routine statistical exercise, and
depending on the base year that you choose, you get a different GDP
figure. Re-basing the GDP has nothing to do with government policy.
Besides, as naira-dollar exchange rate continues to depreciate, the GDP
in current dollars will also shrink considerably soon.
We were
reminded of Jonathan’s agricultural ‘revolution’. But someone cut in and
noted that for all the propaganda, the growth rate of the agricultural
sector in the last five years still remains far below the performance
under Obasanjo. One of us reminded him that no other president had
presided over the slaughter of about 15,000 people by insurgents in a
peacetime; no other president earned up to 50% of the amount of
resources the current government earned from oil and yet with very
little outcomes; no other president had the rate of borrowing; none had
significant forex earnings and yet did not add one penny to foreign
reserves but losing international reserves at a time of boom; no other
president had a depreciating exchange rate at a time of export boom; at
no time in Nigeria’s history has poverty reached 71% (even under Abacha,
it was 67 -70%); and under no other president did unemployment reach
24%. Surely, these are unprecedented records and he surely
‘outperformed’ his predecessors! What a satire!
One of those
present took the satire to some level by comparing Jonathan to the
‘performance’ of the former Governor of Anambra, Peter Obi. He noted
that while Obi gloated about ‘savings’, there is no signature project to
remember his regime except that his regime took the first position
among all states in Nigeria in the democratization of poverty—- mass
impoverishment of the people of Anambra. According to the National
Bureau of Statistics, poverty rose under his watch in Anambra from 20%
in 2004 (lowest in Nigeria then) to 68% in 2010 (a 238% deterioration!).
Our friend likened it to a father who had no idea of what to do
with his resources and was celebrating his fat bank account while his
children were dying of kwashiorkor. He pointed out that since it is the
likes of Peter Obi who are the advisers to Jonathan on how to manage the
economy (thereby confusing micromanagement which you do as a trader
with macro governance) it is little wonder that poverty is fast becoming
another name for Nigeria. It was a very hilarious evening.
My
advice to President Jonathan and his handlers is to stop wasting their
time trying to campaign on his job record. Those who have decided to
vote for him will not do so because he has taken Nigeria to the moon.
His record on the economy is a clear ‘F’ grade. As one reviews the
laundry list of micro interventions the government calls its
achievements, one wonders whether such list is all that the government
could deliver with an unprecedented oil boom and an unprecedented public
debt accumulation.
I can clearly see why reasonable people are
worried. Everywhere else in the world, government performance on the
economy is measured by some outcome variables such as: income (GDP
growth rate), stability of prices (inflation and exchange rate),
unemployment rate, poverty rate, etc. On all these scores, this
government has performed worse than its immediate predecessor— Obasanjo
regime. If we appropriately adjust for oil income and debt, then this
government is the worst in our history on the economy. All statistics
are from the National Bureau of Statistics.
Despite presiding
over the biggest oil boom in our history, it has not added one
percentage point to the growth rate of GDP compared to the Obasanjo
regime especially the 2003- 07 period. Obasanjo met GDP growth rate at
2% but averaged 7% within 2003- 07. The current government has been
stuck at 6% despite an unprecedented oil boom. Income (GDP) growth has
actually performed worse, and poverty escalated.
This is the
only government in our history where rapidly increasing government
expenditure was associated with increasing poverty. The director general
of NBS stated in his written press conference address in 2011 that
about 112 million Nigerians were living in poverty. Is this the record
to defend? Obama had a tough time in his re-election in 2012 because
unemployment reached 8%. Here, unemployment is at a record 24% and
poverty at an all-time 71% but people are prancing around, gloating
about ‘performance’.
As I write, the Naira exchange rate to the
dollar is $210 at the parallel market. What a historic performance!
Please save your breathe and save us the embarrassment. The President
promised Nigeria nothing in the last election and we did not get value
for money. He should this time around present us with his plan for the
future, and focus on how he would redeem himself in the second term—if
he wins!
Sadly the government’s economic team is very weak,
dominated by self-interested and self-conflicted group of traders and
businessmen, and so-called economic team meetings have been nothing but
showbiz time. The very people government exists to regulate have seized
the levers of government as policymakers and most government
institutions have largely been “privatized” to them.
Mention any
major government department or agency and someone will tell you whom it
has been ‘allocated’ to, and the person subsequently nominates his
minion to occupy the seat. What do you then expect? The economy seems to
be on auto pilot, with confusion as to who is in charge, and government
largely as a constraint. There are no big ideas, and it is difficult to
see where economic policy is headed to.
My thesis is that the
Nigerian economy, if properly managed, should have been growing at an
annual rate of about 12% given the oil boom, and poverty and
unemployment should have fallen dramatically over the last five years.
This is topic for another day.
So far, the Government’s response
to the self-inflicted crisis is, at best, laughable. They blame
external shocks as if we did not expect them and say nothing about the
terrible policy choices they made. The National Assembly had described
the 2015 budget as unrealistic. The fiscal adjustments proposed in the
2015 budget simply play to the gallery and just to pander to our
emotions.
For a $540 billion economy, the so-called luxury tax
amounts to zero per cent of GDP. If the current trend continues, private
businesses will come under a heavy crunch soon. Having put economics on
its head during the boom time, the Government now proposes to increase
taxes during a prospective downturn and impose austerity measures.
Unbelievable!
Fortuitously, just as he succeeded Shagari when
Nigeria faced similar situations, Buhari is once more seeking to lead
Nigeria. But times have changed, and Nigeria is largely different.
First, this is a democracy and dealing with corruption must happen
within the ambit of the rule of law and due process. Getting things done
in a democracy requires complicated bargaining, especially where the
legislature, labour, the media, and civil society have become strong and
entrenched.
Second, the size, structure and institutions of the
economy have fundamentally altered. The market economy, especially the
capital market and foreign exchange market, impose binding constraints
and discipline on any regime. Third, dealing with most of the other
issues— insecurity, unemployment/poverty, infrastructure, health,
education, etc, require increased, smarter, and more efficient spending.
Increased spending when the economy is on the reverse gear?
If
oil prices remain between 40- 60 dollars over the next two years, the
current policy regime guarantees that foreign reserves will continue the
precipitous depletion with the attendant exchange rate depreciation, as
well as a probable unsustainable escalation in debt accumulation,
fiscal retrenchment or taxing the private sector with vengeance. The
scenario does not look pretty.
The poor choices made by the
current government have mortgaged the future, and the next government
would have little room to manoeuvre and would inevitably undertake
drastic but painful structural adjustments. Nigerians loathe the term
‘structural adjustment’. With falling real wages and depreciating
currency, I can see any belated attempt by the government to deal with
the bloated public sector pitching it against a feisty labour. I worry
about regime stability in the coming months, and I do not envy the next
team.
The seeming crisis is not destiny; it is self-imposed.
However, we must see it as an opportunity to be seized to fundamentally
restructure Nigeria’s political economy, including its fiscal federalism
and mineral rights. The current system guarantees cycles of consumption
loop and I cannot see sustainable long term prosperity without major
systemic overhaul. The proposals at the national conference merely
tinker at the margins.
In totality, the outcome of the national
conference is to do more of the same, with minor amendments on the
system of sharing and consumption rather than a fundamental overhaul of
the system for productivity and prosperity. President Jonathan promises
to implement the report of the national conference if he wins. I commend
him for at least offering ‘something’, albeit, marginal in my view. I
have not heard anything from the APC or Buhari regarding the national
conference report or what kind of federalism they envisage for Nigeria.
In
Nigeria’s recent history, two examples under the military and civilian
governments demonstrate that where the political will exists, Nigeria
has the capacity to overcome severe challenges. The first was under
President Babangida. Not many Nigerians appreciate that given the near
bankrupt state of Nigeria’s finances and requirements for debt
resolution under the Paris Club, the country had little choice but to
undertake the painful structural adjustment programme (SAP).
I
want to state for the record that the foundation for the current market
economy we operate in Nigeria was laid by that regime (liberalization of
markets including market determined exchange rate, private sector-led
economy including licensing of private banks and insurance,
de-regulation, privatization of public enterprises under TCPC, etc).
Just abolishing the import licensing regime was a fundamental policy
revolution. Despite the criticisms, these policy thrusts have remained
the pillars of our deepening market economy, and the economy recovered
from almost negative growth rate to average 5.5% during the regime and
poverty incidence at 42% in 1992.
Under our democratic
experience, President Obasanjo inherited a bankrupt economy (with the
lost decade of the 1990’s GDP growth rate of 2.2% and hence zero per
capita income growth for the decade). His regime consolidated and
deepened the market economy structures (consolidation of the banking
system which is powering the emergence of a new but truly private
sector-led economy and simultaneously led to a new awareness and boom in
the capital market;
telecommunications revolution; new pension
regime; debt relief which won for Nigeria policy independence from the
World Bank and Paris Club; deepening of de-regulation and privatization
including the unbundling of NEPA under PHCN for privatization;
agricultural revolution that saw yearly growth rate of over 6% and
remains unsurpassed ever since;
sound monetary and fiscal policy
and growing foreign reserves that gave confidence to investors;
establishment of the Africa Finance Corporation which is leading
infrastructure finance in Africa; backward integration policy that saw
the establishment and growth of Dangote cement and others; established
ICPC and EFCC to fight corruption, etc).
The economy roared to
average yearly growth of 7% between 2003 and 2007 (although average
monthly oil price under his regime was $38), and poverty dropped from
estimated 70% in1999 to 54% in 2004. Obasanjo was his own coordinating
minister of the economy and chairman of the economic management team—
which he chaired for 90 minutes every week. I met with him daily. In
other words, he did not outsource economic management.
We
expected that the next government after Obasanjo would take the economy
to the next level. So far, we have had two great slogans: the 7-point
agenda and currently, the transformation agenda. They remain empty
slogans without content or direction.
Let me suggest that the
fundamental challenge for the next government on the economy can be
framed around the goal of creating twelve million jobs over the next
four years to have a dent on unemployment and poverty. The challenge is
to craft a development agenda to deliver this within the context of
broken public finance, and an economy in which painful structural
adjustments will be inevitable if current trends in oil prices continue.
Most other programmes on corruption, security, power, infrastructure,
etc, are expected to be instruments to achieve this objective.
So
far, neither the APC nor the PDP has a credible programme for
employment and poverty reduction. The APC promises to create 20,000 jobs
per state in the first year, totalling a mere 720,000 jobs. This sounds
like a quota system and for a country where the new entrants into the
labour market per annum exceed two million.
If it was intended
as a joke, APC must please get serious. On the other hand, President
Jonathan targets two million jobs per annum but his strategy for doing
so is a Job Board— another committee of sort. Sorry, Mr. President, a
Job Board is not a strategy. The principal job Nigerians hired you to do
for them is to create jobs for them too. You cannot outsource that job,
Sir. Creating 3 million jobs per annum under the unfolding crisis would
task our creativity and audacity to the limits.
I heard one
politician argue that once we fix power, private sector would create
jobs. Not necessarily! Well, this government claims to have added
1,700MW to the national grid and yet unemployment soars. Ask Greece,
Spain, etc with power and infrastructure and yet with high unemployment.
Structural dislocations play a key role. For example, currently in
Nigeria, it is estimated that more than 60% of graduates of our
educational system are unemployable.
You can understand why many
of us are amused when the government celebrates that it has established
twelve more glorified secondary schools as universities. I thought they
would have told us how many Nigerian universities made it in the league
of the best 200 universities in the world. That would have been an
achievement. Surely, creating millions of jobs in this economy would,
among other things, require ‘new money’ and extraordinary system of
coordination among the three tiers of government plus the private
sector.
Unfortunately, from what I read, the CBN is largely
likely to be asleep at this time the country needs the most
revolutionary finance. This is a topic for another day. Only the
President can lead this effort. Moreover, we are waiting for the two
parties/candidates to spell out HOW they will create jobs, whether it is
the 20,000 jobs per state by APC or 2 million per annum by President
Jonathan. Let us know how you arrived at the figures. Whichever of the
two that is declared winner will have his job cut out for him, and I
expect him to declare a national emergency on job creation.
Surprisingly,
none of the parties/candidates has any grand vision about African
economic integration, led by Nigeria. There is no programme on how to
make the naira the de facto currency of ECOWAS or the international
financial centre that can attract more than $100 billion per annum.
Where
is the strategy for orchestrating the revolutionary finance to power
the economy during this downturn? For President Jonathan, I find it
shocking that the most important initiative of his government to secure
the future of the economy by Nigeria refusing to sign the ruinous
Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the European Union is not even
being mentioned. President Obasanjo saved Nigeria from the potential
ruin of an ECOWAS single currency while to his credit Jonathan
safeguarded our industrial sector/economy by refusing to sign the EPA.
Or does the government not understand the import of that? It will be
interesting to know the APC’s strategy for exploiting strategic
alliances within Africa, China, and the world for Nigeria’s prosperity.
If
Buhari wins, he will ride on the populist wind for “change”. Most
people I have spoken to who have decided to vote for Buhari do not
necessarily know the specifics of what he would offer or how Nigeria
would be different under him. I asked my driver, Usman, whom he would
vote for President.
He responded: “If they no rig the election,
na Buhari everybody go vote for”. I asked him why, and his next response
sums it: “The man dey honest. In short, people just want to see another
face for that villa”. But if he wins, the honeymoon will be brief and
the pressure will be immense to magically deliver a ‘new Nigeria’ with
no corruption, no boko haram or insecurity, jobs for everyone, no
poverty, infrastructure and power in abundance, etc.
As a first
point, Buhari and his team must realize that they do not yet have a
coherent, credible agenda that is consistent with the fundamentals of
the economy currently. The APC manifesto contains some good principles
and wish-lists, but as a blue print for Nigeria’s security and
prosperity, it is largely hollow. The numbers do not add up. Thus, his
first job is to present a credible development agenda to Nigerians.
The
second key challenge for Buhari and his team will be to transit and
transform from a group of what I largely refer to as aggrieved people’s
congregation to build a true political party with a soul from the
patchwork of political associations. It is surely easier to oppose than
to govern. This should not worry us much. After all, even the PDP which
has been in power for 16 years is still an assembly of people held
together by what I refer to as dining table politics.
I am not
sure how many members can tell you what their party stands for or its
mission and vision for Nigeria. The third but more difficult agenda is
cobbling together a truly ‘progressive team’ that will begin to pick the
pieces. The lesson of history is that the best leaders have been the
ones who went beyond their narrow provincial enclaves to recruit talents
and mobilize capacities for national transformation.
In
Nigeria’s history, the two presidents who made the most fundamental
transformation of the economy, Babangida and Obasanjo, were exceptional
in the quality of the teams they put together. I therefore pray that
Buhari will be magnanimous in victory – if he wins—to put together a
‘team Nigeria’ for the rescue mission.
If Jonathan wins, then
God must have been magnanimous to give him a second chance to redeem
himself. Most people I know who support Jonathan do so either out of
self-interest or fear of the unknown. As a friend summed it: the devil
you know is better than the angel you do not know. One person assured me
that we would see a ‘different Jonathan’ if he wins as he has been
rattled by the harsh judgment of history on his presidency so far. I
just pray that he is right. In that case, I would just draw the
President’s attention to two issues:
First, beside the coterie
of clowns who literally make a living with the sing-song of
transformation agenda, President Jonathan must know that it remains an
empty slogan. His greatest challenge is how to save himself from the
stranglehold of his largely provincial palace jesters who tell him he
has done better than God, and seek out ‘enemies’ and friends who can
help him write his name in history. Propaganda won’t do it.
Second,
Jonathan must claw back his powers as President of Nigeria. He largely
outsourced them, and must now roll his sleeves for a new beginning. I
take liberty to tell you this brutal truth: if you are not re-elected,
there is little to remember your regime after the next few years.
On
7th January 2004, I made a special presentation to an expanded economic
management team to set agenda for the new year (as chief economic
adviser). The focus of my presentation was for us to identify seven
iroko trees that would be the flagship markers for the administration as
well as how to finance them. I use the same framework to evaluate your
administration.
What I say to you, Mr. President, is that your
record of performance so far is like a farmland filled with grasses.
Yes, they are many but there is no tree, let alone any iroko tree, that
stands out. Think about this. The beginning of wisdom for every
President in his second term is to admit that he is racing against time
to cement his legacy. So far, your report card is not looking great. You
need a team of big and bold thinkers, as well as with excellent
execution capacity. So far, it is not working!
Under the
executive presidential system, Nigerians elected you to manage their
economy. You cannot outsource that job. Our constitution envisages a
federal coordination of the economy, and that function is performed by
the National Economic Council (NEC) with Vice-President as chairman.
Indeed, the constitution and other laws of Nigeria envisage the office
of the VP as the coordinator on the economy.
All major economic
institutions of the federal government are, by law, chaired by the
Vice-President including the national planning (see functions of the
national planning commission as coordinator of federal government
economic and development programmes), debt management office, National
Council on Privatization, etc. As chairman of National Planning (with
Ministers of Finance, Agriculture, CBN governor, etc as members), the VP
oversees the federal planning and coordination.
Then the
Constitution mandates the VP as representative of the federal government
to chair the NEC, with only CBN governor and state governors as
members—to coordinate national economy between federal and states. No
minister is a member of NEC. Many people do not understand the logic of
the design of our constitution and the role of the VP. Of course, the
buck stops on the desk of Mr. President. Only the President and VP have
our mandate to govern us.
Every other person is an
adviser/assistant. I bet that you will only appreciate this article
AFTER you leave office. Now that you are in power, truth will only hurt!
Be assured that those of us who are prepared to die for Nigeria will
never spare you or anyone else this bitter truth.
Nigeria must survive and prosper beyond Buhari or Jonathan!
- Charles Soludo, CFR, was former CBN Governor
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