Tag: Bola Ahmed Tinubu

  • We’ll resist any attempt to break our democracy – Tinubu

    We’ll resist any attempt to break our democracy – Tinubu

    The National Leader of All Progressive Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, on Monday warned those wooing the military to leave the barracks to desist from doing so, saying the people would resist any attempt to break the nation’s democracy.

    Tinubu, who spoke at a joint parliamentary session organised by the Lagos State House of Assembly to mark the state’s 50 years of existence, said the nation had gone too far to allow a military coup to happen again.

    He said such move would be resisted by Nigerians.

    “We have received warning that some people are trying to entice military to leave the barrack. But I want to caution here that those who think they can break our democracy for which many lives are lost are surely mistaken,” the former Lagos State governor said.

  • APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

    APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

    Bola Ahmed Tinubu a.k.a. Asiwaju or Jagaban (born 29 March 1952) was elected Senator for the Lagos West constituency in Lagos State, Nigeria in 1993, just before a military take-over in December 1993. After the return to democracy, he was elected governor of Lagos State, holding office from 29 May 1999 to 29 May 2007.

    He is an influential member of the All Progressives Congress (APC) party; he also holds both the chieftaincies of the Asiwaju of Lagos and the Jagaban of the Borgu Kingdom in Niger State, Nigeria. He is the National Leader of the All Progressive Congress (APC) party with President Muhammadu Buhari.

    His political career began in 1992, on the platform of the Social Democratic Party in the faction of the Peoples Front led by Shehu Musa Yar’Adua and other politicians in the faction such as Dapo Sarumi and Yomi Edu when he was elected to the Nigerian Senate representing the Lagos West constituency in the short-lived Nigerian Third Republic.

    After the results of the 12 June, 1993 presidential elections were annulled, Tinubu became a founding member of the pro-democracy National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), which mobilised support for the restoration of democracy and recognition of the 12 June results. He went into exile in 1994 and returned to the country in 1998 after the death of military dictator Sani Abacha, which ushered in a transition to civilian rule.

    In April 2007, after the elections but before the new governor had taken over, the Federal Government brought Asiwaju Bola Tinubu before the Code of Conduct Tribunal for trial over alleged illegal operation of 16 separate foreign accounts. In January 2009 the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) cleared Bola Tinubu of charges of conspiracy, money laundering, abuse of office and official corruption in relation to a sale of V-mobile network shares in 2004.

    Tinubu is married to Oluremi Tinubu, the current Senator representing Lagos central. His mother, Abibatu Mogaji died on June 15, 2014, at the age of 96.

  • Adele lived a life of service-Tinubu

    Adele lived a life of service-Tinubu

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has expressed sadness at the passing of Chief Ademola Adeniji Adele, a former Commissioner in Lagos State and a notable politician.
    In a statement issued on Thursday, Tinubu said Adele’s death at 60 “saddens us all.”
    “He was of great capacity and a consumate politician. He put his heart into whatever the assignment that was set before him. As a Commissioner of Sports in Lagos he excelled and our sports was the better for it. Even in politics, He loved Lagos dearly. He was a champion for Lagos and Lagos will remember him well.”
    Tinubu prayed for the family of the departed that God will comfort them and keep them safe.
  • APC and the  Tinubu phenomenon

    APC and the Tinubu phenomenon

    In 2003 when he broke ranks with his fellow Southwest governors and declined to form an ethnically motivated political and electoral alliance with former president Olusegun Obasanjo, few people knew what really motivated Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who was at the time Lagos State governor. When the alliance blew up in the faces of the Alliance for Democracy (AD) governors who blundered into it, it was suggested that Asiwaju Tinubu was prescient. It was obvious he could not trust Chief Obasanjo whom he considered adept at ambushing friends and enemies alike and skillful in seeking advantage over them, often unscrupulously. But there was a second, perhaps more potent, reason for balking at the deal with the former president. Asiwaju Tinubu was naturally uninterested in any alliance not anchored on ideas. Allying with Chief Obasanjo simply because he was Yoruba, especially one who neither approximated nor projected Yoruba worldview and values, was to him ignoble.

    In retrospect, Asiwaju Tinubu served notice early in the day what kind of politics he wished to play, and what kind of person he liked to be thought of. His ideas might not possess Aristotelian streaks, but he was passionate about them, and he took inordinate risk imbuing them with life. He was not afraid to walk alone, nor be pilloried fairly or maliciously, and he seemed to take pleasure in risking everything he had for the sake of causes, and if it came to that, persons, he believed in. But he took care to outlive the enemy rather than hug reckless martyrdom. He of course recognised he was not always right, but he seemed at peace with himself even when he was wrong. Sometimes brusque, sometimes combative, a little obtruding and consciously ruthless, he was in equal measure humane, farsighted, sacrificial and thoughtful. He in fact seemed to have built his political career on a curious amalgam of virtues and vices that made him one of the most loathed and loved, but more accurately paradoxically indefinable, person in politics today.

    Twelve years after he defined his place as a huge risk taker in politics, and after more than a decade of plotting and scheming, envisioning and practicalising, Asiwaju Tinubu has worked himself into a central position as an ideologue, kingmaker and democrat to whom, more than anyone, the country owes both the deepening of its democracy and the dramatic electoral overthrow of the Goodluck Jonathan government. He could have shortsightedly entered into the unwholesome and opportunistic electoral arrangement with Chief Obasanjo in 2003, and settled any discussion as to what kind of man he was. And in 2007, he could also have accepted the government of national unity offered by his close friend and former Katsina State governor, the late Umaru Yar’Adua. But on both occasions, his instinctive understanding of the value of opposition politics, his unstated belief in the superiority of his ideas, and his charismatic independence, even aloofness bordering on isolation, compelled him into a different political trajectory.

    That trajectory has taken him through a roller coaster of emotions, plucked him from the politics of one state — Lagos — and hopped, stepped and jumped him via regional politics of the Southwest, and landed him smack in the coveted middle of national politics, as tactician, strategist and kingmaker. Now, even his enemies, of whom there are hundreds, will respect him though they continue to loath him. Asiwaju Tinubu’s success and prominence in politics must, however, be properly contextualised. In the 2015 polls, he was simply well positioned. Dr Jonathan had worked up the electorate into a fever over his poor handling of national affairs, including unemployment, Chibok schoolgirls abductions, declining economy, corruption and many debilitating and vexatious policies. A change had become desirable by as early as 2013. Gen Buhari, the APC candidate had also recognised the limitations of his politics of exclusion and non-compromise, and had risen astronomically in the stock of the electorate to achieve cult following. And the world itself, especially the great powers and superpowers, had become quite fed up with the mediocrity in Nigeria. The conditions were ripe for change, and it required someone of uncommon perception, vision and courage to midwife it.

    Nigeria was fortunate that the ripe conditions were met by one man (or what a great wit poignantly and cryptically describes as ‘cometh the hour, cometh the man’), Asiwaju Tinubu, who showed fierce determination and character in 2003, reinforced that character and self-belief in 2007, expanded his horizon from thence onward, and in 2011 began to envision the kind of alliances and friendship across ethnic groups, regions and religions that were necessary to change the old order. While still confined to his Lagos State as a lone survivor of the Obasanjo Tsunami, and whereas the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) controlled more states than his Action Congress (AC), he began to act and speak as the national opposition, unafraid he could be crushed by a dominant Abuja and a domineering and unsparing President Obasnjo.

    Not only did he succour former Plateau State governor, Joshua Chbbi Dariye, who was unlawfully impeached and hunted by both President Obasanjo and a colluding PDP in 2006, he also lent a helping hand to former Oyo State governor, Rashidi Ladoja, who had also come under President Obasanjo’s impeachment axe in the same year. To underscore the fact that his political convictions were not a fluke, he was to later extend the same assistance to the impeached Governor of Adamawa State, Murtala Nyako. An incurable believer in presidentialism and its undergirding principle of federalism, Asiwaju Tinubu gladly reached out as a champion of the constitutional doctrine of the separation of powers to anyone oppressed. It was no surprise that he took active interest in the electoral processes of Southwest states, including the South-South state of Edo; nor was it also surprising that many ambitious politicians saw him as a reliable friend and bulwark in the fight for electoral probity. He fought to reclaim Ekiti, Osun, Ondo and Edo States; and by the next round of polls in 2011, he offered more than an arm and a leg to claim Ogun and Oyo States.

    Between 1999 and 2011, it was clear to every observer that the presidency meddled in the affairs of the National Assembly, thereby robbing Nigeria of one of the main legs for the sustenance of democracy. In particular, Chief Obasanjo meddled actively in the legislature, enthroning and dethroning at will. Even out of power, in 2011, he still attempted to enthrone Hon Mulikat Adeola-Akande as the Speaker. By that time, however, Asiwaju Tinubu’s Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) had come of age. Brushing aside the sentiment of zoning and ethnicity, and recognising that his party held the ace in the Southwest, and also aware that he needed to stamp his authority on the democratic process, he forged an alliance with other independent forces within and outside the House of Representatives to elect a Speaker of their choice, Aminu Tambuwal.

    It took enormous courage to embrace a prescient choice that at face value seemed to disadvantage the Southwest to which the PDP had zoned the position. But needs must when the devil drives, and Asiwaju Tinubu shut his eyes, steadied his nerves and bit the bullet. The recriminations that followed were fearsome and unrelenting for more than four years. He was blamed for every problem in the region, and in particular for Dr Jonathan’s deliberate and orchestrated marginalisation of the Yoruba. The grey hairs and hot blood of the Afenifere and Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC) respectively assailed him, and propped up the Teflon Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State as the new rallying point for the Yoruba. They are now all silent, their last hoary gasp made when Oba Rilwan Akiolu of Lagos took the Igbo in Lagos to task.

    It is not clear at what point Asiwaju Tinubu began to entertain the thought of winning the centre, especially because he had unsuccessfully tried to forge a winning alliance both in 2007 and 2011 for that purpose. But after seeing the political spinoff from his fortuitous backing of Hon Tambuwal for the position of Speaker, and considering the doors it opened to the North, and the fact that many permutations suddenly became appealingly possible, a fresh and more vigorous attempt to form an alliance looked realistic. The Yoruba organisation, Afenifere, bitterly opposed the ACN, denounced Asiwaju Tinubu, and blamed him for all the region’s woes. Undeterred, however, a new broad-based alliance, which took advantage of the estrangement of some five or seven PDP governors, was formed a year after in 2012. But notwithstanding the flourish and excitement with which the new party called APC presented its roadmap and manifesto, few knew that barely two years later, they could sweep so dramatically and grandly into power.

    If Asiwaju Tinubu dreamt of winning the presidency for the APC, he did not speak it confidently. There were the structure and organisation of the gangling and unsteady party to contend with, as many old party hands resisted new ones. There were also contentious primaries to overcome, not to talk of the more volatile election of a presidential candidate. Indeed, every prognostication was unfavourable, with many analysts, including former Aviation minister Ebenezer Babatope, swearing that sooner or later the new party would implode. Surprisingly, perhaps also to the party’s leaders, the party held together. It also became clear that the driving force was Asiwaju Tinubu, who worked tirelessly and imaginatively to keep the new alliance going. Even if he could not get the ultimate prize of the presidency for the APC, he thought, the party could at least rise to become a strong and powerful opposition with expanded reach. A number of Southwest groups, including Afenifere, accused him of helping the North to enslave the Yoruba, but he forged on nonetheless.

    Any astute politician who studied the statistics of the 2011 polls would know it is sentimental nonsense to speak of enslavement. Dr Jonathan himself had to forge an alliance between at least four geopolitical zones to win in 2011. No northern or south-western politician could win the presidency without a strong alliance. A smart politician would appreciate that Dr Jonathan’s policies had alienated the North. It was, therefore, ready for an alliance. The Southwest, notwithstanding the outlandish conclusions of the Afenifere, was also frustrated and alienated, and was ready for a deal. If no other zone embraced the change mantra, four zones already implicitly did. Having secured the friendship of the North, instead of hating and preaching to them like the Afenifere did, Asiwaju Tinubu managed to finally cobble together a winning alliance and formula which even the controversy over the presidential running mate could not scupper.

    Two final factors seal the reputation of Asiwaju Tinubu. Not only was he ready to work with difficult politicians like Chief Obasanjo, whose crippling conservatism and meddlesomeness many Nigerians resented, since 1999 he had imbibed the Obafemi Awolowo and Ahmadu Bello culture of leadership recruitment, building young men and women whom he unleashed on the country as future leaders, while also reconciling with his powerful detractors to the point of even describing Chief Obasanjo incredulously as the navigator. Those future leaders sometimes disagreed with him, and even took advantage of his liberal spirit and forbearance, but he seemed to have an uncanny appreciation of their limitations and thus readily accommodated or overlooked their foibles.

    He may not be president-elect or vice president-elect, but the role he played in deepening democracy, sustaining and nurturing the culture of opposition, and strategising the defeat of the PDP, have all raised his profile sky-high. Like the APC, his main challenge will be how to manage both his success and new profile. Two years after its formation, the APC won the presidency even before it had time to solidify its structure and reinforce its raison d’etre. It is, after all, clear that the party has many tendencies, and its core values may seem even tenuous and fragile, especially seeing how a mixed multitude had flocked into its membership in the past months. Asiwaju Tinubu himself, the man with the onomatopoeic Borgu (kwara State) traditional title of Jagaban, is not the most patient of men when it comes to running with a vision; but while he is doubtless a progressive, he appears more pragmatic than philosophical, more practical than an ideologue.

    The APC is a young party, undoubtedly precocious. But it is also brash and to some extent inexperienced. It needs time to establish itself and concretise its philosophy and traditions. Asiwaju Tinubu is tarred with the same brush. Though he sometimes sounds eclectic, his ideas are nonetheless still in formation. But much more challenging to him is that not being president or vice president, and being consumed by a gripping vision for the seemingly impossible, he must now watch how his party and other elected officials would run with the vision. He will assume that everyone has cottoned on to the vision; but more, he will squirm and writhe in anxiety from a point (which point?) in the scheme of things that posterity will place him. For someone so enormously endowed, but one also abounding in his own idiosyncratic shortcomings, his greatest battles may be ahead of him: not battles of strategising and winning elections; but battles of sustaining the lofty height he has climbed as a person and politician, and turning the APC into a more cohesive, disciplined and philosophical organisation, one capable of both midwifing the change the country yearned for when it voted Gen Buhari and developing Nigeria into a developmental tiger far surpassing those of Asia.

  • ‘Jonathan not on Tinubu’s radar’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, yesterday disowned text messages purportedly from him asking Lagosians to vote for President Goodluck Jonathan.

    A statement from his media office by Sunday Dare described the text message as “the mother of all lies by the PDP. Never did Tinubu and never will Tinubu support Jonathan. He is lost on Tinubu’s radar. Those messages are fake and lies from hell.”

    It added, “It is the PDP factory of lies in overdrive. Tinubu remains committed to Change. His support for Buhari is solid and no amount of PDP falsehood can change that.”

  • Tinubu: Nigeria’s  unemployment level worse than depression

    Tinubu: Nigeria’s unemployment level worse than depression

    Devaluation of the naira, diversification of the economy and the introduction of austerity measures are the Federal Government’s immediate response to Nigeria’s ailing economy. But the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, feels more proactive measures could get the economy on its feet. The former Lagos State Governor proffers some solutions in this article.

    Reason for Macroeconomic Policy

    This serves as a companion to my recent commentary on slumping oil prices. As hoped, that prior intervention helped to stir discussion on the critical issue of our economic well-being and the best policy direction to take in order to ensure that well-being. I would like to expand the discussion from the recessionary effects of decreasing oil prices to a more general discourse on macro-economic policy and the main objectives of the said policy. Several reasons spur me in this direction.

    First, falling oil prices constitute a clear and present danger. This alarm should wake us not only to the proximate threat but also lead us to reappraise government’s macro-economic policy anew. Even in the absence of the challenge of lowering prices, our economy is aptly characterised as a surfeit of idle capacity, unemployment and poverty.

    Second, the different policy directions that are possible must be starkly placed before the Nigerian people that they may decide upon which path they would place their economic destiny.

    In this regard, we must define the objective of macro-economic policy and then determine the best policy mechanism to reach the desired point. This delineation is essential because we always talk about the economy we assume everyone desires the same outcome. This assumption is equally parts naive and dangerous.

    Economics is not a science in the same degree as chemistry or physicse. A human invention, economics is shaped more by the ebb and flow of human nature than by unbendable natural law. Economic policy is more a matter of subjective preference than of inexorable conclusions. Conservative mainstream economists tell us differently. They want us to believe their prescriptions are the only plausible ones. Only one road exists: theirs. They do not want us to seek alternatives because they are afraid of what we might learn and how that might affect our heretofore-blind obedience to the subjective biases they parade as objective science. They are afraid that if we reject their economic model, they may lose their elite position.

     

    Difference between progressive and conservative economics

     

    I believe the highest objective of macro-economic policy is to provide for all the people the basic necessities of life and to progressively improve the lot of as many people as possible through broadly-based wealth creation by all segments of society and an equitable allocation of the fruits of the increased wealth to all, from those who labour to those who invest or supply capital. All must be duly rewarded. Balance must be maintained in the political economy so that no class becomes so powerful and affluent that it can bend the entire nation to undue benefit. This is the progressive’s macro-economic creed. Conventional neo-classical economists believe something different.

    They believe the economy should be left to the rich and powerful. As the elite carve the economy in their own image, residual benefit will trickle down to the rest of the society. Implicitly, they think those with money have earned or purchased the right to shape the society without having to listen to others. Stripped to the bare essence, their sophisticated economic models and philosophy are but a pagan adoration of money. This is the way of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other global financial institutions. It is the creed of Reagan (Ronald) and Thatcher (Margaret) that did so much economic damage in the 1980s. It is gospel of the present government. They are Nigeria’s Tories, Nigeria’s conservative Republicans. If the choice came down to the choice between saving money or the people, a progressive would advocate saving the people by spending the money. The conservative would say expend the people, yet save the money at all costs.

    Against the backdrop of slumping oil prices, a picture of this difference has been placed before you. To avert the approaching recessionary storm, I espouse a counter-cyclical fiscal policy. This policy entails expansionary deficit, but non-debt, spending at the federal level. The spending must be aimed at public works infrastructural projects that are needed in any event as a foundational prerequisite for economic growth. This nation cannot grow beyond the capacity of the infrastructure to service it. Now is as good a time as any to take on this overdue mission. Moreover, by providing tens of thousands of jobs, this strategy will make productive now idle human capital. The wages these now unemployed earn will be used to consume goods and services, further spurring economic activity. In that wages will be relatively modest, their consumption will favour local goods and services more so, than do the consumption patterns of the affluent.

    Because the Federal Government has the sovereign power to issue our national currency, this can be done without risking insolvency or further debt. Inflation, not insolvency, is the constraint. The major concern will be in ensuring that inflation does not rise above the limits acceptable to our specific political economy. This can be done by making sure that expenditures are limited to those projects that increase productivity and have the positive economic multiplier effect that we seek. This will be a hard but not impossible feat. Harder would be to allow the nation to fall into steep recession and cause the masses to suffer unduly. However, laying the welcome mat for recession is at the top of this government’s policy menu.

    The Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala,  has stated that government will follow a pro-cyclical tact. Instead avoiding a downturn, they will intensify it by cutting federal spending and increasing taxes. This means gruel is straight from the IMF pot right into the beggar’s bowl the IMF would have us hold. It is a clarion for a deflating economy. Yet, this fate seems not to unduly bother the government. Global big money will applaud this government as one to like. But what they do will distress poor Nigerians.

     

    Hyperinflation scare: Conservative PDP fear mongering

     

    The Finance Minister and other conservatives have responded to my suggestions not by a critical analysis but by flippantly concluding that ruinous hyperinflation would result. This is an old trick of the conservative elite. Their ploy is to frighten the people from the very ideas that will benefit them. They want us to recoil from what might be our very rescue mission. Because their conservatism is also the economics of the global corporate media, this mythology dominates the airwaves and permeates our economic thinking. People generally have heard one side of the story. Repeatedly given only one account, they assume that the truth lies in the repeated tale.  This article is an attempt to sweep away some of the myths by which the elite steer us from an understanding that befits the national economic interests instead of theirs.

    The Finance Minister claimed my prescriptions would lead to situations that existed in Weimar Germany’s post-WWI (First World War), Zimbabwe and Argentina. I can categorically state the faithful rendition of my suggestions will never lead to such a condition. Numerous countries have walked this path and never came close to gross inflation. America did it in its formative years. It was also this route that led it from the Great Depression in the 1930s (The same with Germany). China walked a similar path in the 1990s when it began to record its unprecedented growth rates. Meanwhile, each nation that has committed itself to the policy approach of this government has jumped straight into the mire for several years before desperation or common sense forced it to redirect itself to a path more aligned to the one I have drawn.

    The examples the Finance Minister offered against my recommendations were a bit odd. A person is unwise to draw analogies to the past without having sufficient historical grasp of the prior situations. The analogies will be prone to be off-center as it is in this instance. The three circumstances she cited are far removed from what I am advocating. Either the Finance Minister was being glib, woefully ignorant, or both. If her intervention is indicative of her knowledge of history, our economy will be sorely pressed because her knowledge of the past will prove too superficial to do much good in the present.

    As a result of losing WWI, Germany was burdened with an onerous reparations bill by the victors.  Famed economist, John Maynard Keynes disparaged it as a “Carthaginian Peace” because the war damages exceeded the German capacity to pay without incurring national ruin. The damages amount to a confiscation intended to keep Germany in weak and indebted circumstance for perpetuity. The debt was to be paid in gold or in the currency of the creditor nation. Compounding the trouble, France and Belgium occupied the Ruhr, Germany’s industrial heart, reducing economic activity which further impeded the quest to pay the impossible war reparations. Left with no other choice, Weimar printed vast amounts of its currency and bonds to trade for gold, pounds and dollars in order to redeem the annual war bills when they fell due. Forced payment of an exorbitant external debt causes Weimar hyperinflation. This situation is a far-cry from a sovereign nation paying its own citizens a decent wage in its own currency for productive toil modernising the nation’s infrastructural base. Instead of citing the Weimar predicament, the Finance Minister should have studied the difference economic trajectories of France and England in the immediate post-war years. England adhered to gold-standard austerity economics. That nation fell into a recessionary trough. France exercised a looser peg to the gold standard and engaged in expansionary fiscal policy. The French economy was much healthier than that of its English channel rival.

    Zimbabwe was also cited. President Mugabe’s land redistribution and other policies caused inflation because these measures resulted in economic dislocation, resulting in diminished productivity and capital flight.  However, Mugabe’s hyperinflation came from another direction – an external shock similar to what crippled Weimar Germany. While fronting as a tough nationalist, Mugabe’s Achilles Heel was that he borrowed liberally from the International Financial Institutions (IFIs) and private banks. Debt was denominated mostly in American dollars. The IFIs and banks had always rescheduled his debt as it came due. When he embarked on land reform, the Western governments that control these entities changed their policies. They blocked debt extension. The vast bill became due. His feet to the fire, Mugabe did the only thing he could. He printed Zimbabwean dollars that he may go into the market to purchase American ones. The more local dollars he printed, the lower their value fell against the needed American version. The more he printed, the lower the value fell and the more he had to print. This culprit unleashed the hyperinflation. Finally, Zimbabwe succumbed to pressure, entering an agreement with the Western nations. He gained partial debt payment relaxation after pegging his currency to the American dollar and South African Rand, thus surrendering a huge chunk of his fiscal and monetary sovereignty to other nations. After the deal, Zimbabwean hyperinflation disappeared relatively quickly.

    The context of Argentine hyperinflation is also vastly different from what I set forth. In the late 1970s-early 1980s, the nation opened its financial markets. A rush of government and private sector dollar-denominated borrowing took place. Later, the military government ‘socialised’ much of the private debt. It assumed the private debt. This amounted to a grant to big international and domestic business. It would crush the government under a heavy debt burden. Worse, this was a time of Reagan and tight money in America. Interest rates on dollar debts exceeded historic norms. To pay the spiraling dollar debt and interest burden, Argentina printed pesos in order to purchase the dollars needed to redeem the debt. Hyperinflation came.

    My recommendations will not produce this situation. More instructive to our circumstance is the Argentine depression of 2001. At the best of the IFI’s from which our present government takes guidance, Argentina did a curiously destructive thing in the 1990s. It established a currency board, pegging its peso to the dollar at a ratio of one-to-one that was purely convertible. Much of the government debt was converted into long-term, 10-year dollar denominated bonds. The peg placed the nation on a dollar standard that functioned like the extinct gold standard. It would prove to be just as deflationary and ruinous.

    The nation’s exports became too expensive because the currency was overvalued. Earnings fell. Business activity shrunk. This was masked for a time by the influx of foreign capital taking advantage of the relatively high yields on government debt. The currency peg amounted to a trap. Due to the peg, creditors could lend government a peso yet demand payment of the principal and the interest in dollars. With the peso overvalued, this process effectively constituted a government subsidy to big investors. Worse, the peg-attenuated government’s ability to engage in expansionary fiscal policy because every peso issued became a potential dollar obligation. The government could not issue its own currency without incurring a proportionate contingent debt in a currency not of its ability to issue or control. Argentina had relinquished significant control over its monetary policy to those who control the dollar. In short, this was a calamitous attempt at turning a peso economy into a dollar-controlled economy. It was as foolhardy as using a short rope to tie a canoe to the anchor of an ocean liner. Once the massive anchor dropped that the canoe would sink was a certainty.

    More apposite to this situation is present-day Greece. By entering the Euro zone, that nation slipped itself in a vise. With its goods denominated in Euro, Greek’s exports shrunk because the exports had become more costly to the nation’s principal export recipients. These partners were not members of the common currency. Meanwhile, imports from Germany and other nations became cheaper and thus more plentiful. Also, European investors eagerly lent money to the Greek government since bond yields in Greece were relatively higher than other euro zone countries. As long as creditors rescheduled the loans, things were fine.

    The 2008 recession ended the merry ride. Creditors called for loans repayment. Greece faced a sovereign debt crisis because it had forfeited its currency sovereignty to the euro zone. The EU, IMF and World Bank imposed austerity measures on Greek in exchange for debt relief. These “experts” made a forecast that the economy would grow and the debt would quickly reduce. The opposite happened. The nation was thrust into a downturn steeper than the Great Depression. The Greek depression lasted six years. This year has seen modest growth. This growth is due to the tacit admission that austerity was too onerous a yoke. The Greek government was allowed to engage in fiscal expansion by passing an ambitious highway construction bill.

    These brief accounts of prior crises show austerity works all the time. It always brings contraction. These accounts also show that what I propose is far different from the situations raised by the government. What I advocate and the examples they use to scare Nigerians should not even be mentioned in the same breath.

     

    The nature and function of money in a progressive economy

     

    My policy is to use our currency sovereignty to spur economic activity. Government should deploy fiscal policy to engage in non-debt deficit spending on productive ventures that modernize our infrastructure and provide jobs.  This is a far-cry from nations printing money in order to purchase foreign currency to redeem foreign-denominated debt. One method is productive, the other promiscuous. They are as different as giving a shovel to your brother that he might help dig the foundation of the family house or giving the tool to an irate trespasser. That you may be hard struck in the later instance should come as no surprise.

    An overview of how we now fund government will better explain my concerns regarding the path this government has taken. The Nigerian oil is exchanged for dollars. The dollars are then used as the basis to calculate the naira to be given to the federal government. This process basically treats our money as a finite commodity and not as the sovereign instrument of a national government.

    Money is generally represented as a tangible thing. Its essential nature is otherwise. To treat money as a commodity is a subtle but grievous error. Money – historically – has taken the form of cowry shells, precious metal, paper stamped with pictures of famous personalities, and electronic transmissions. The essence of money is not found in the thing used to represent it. Those things change over time and with technology. Money is an idea, a social convention. Money is the concept of storing economic value in an agreed medium so that value can be transported over geographic space and across time. Money is not the gold or the cowry. Money is the intangible idea these tangible things represent.

    If the nature of money renders it more sublime than that of a commodity, its functional use should also transcend to how we use a commodity. Money should be used in a manner that assigns appropriate economic value to all potentially productive labour, resources and capital within the nation. To attach money to these things requires that they are placed in productive use and in the stream of commerce.

    Conversely, that which has no money attached to it is idle and unproductive. A jobless man with no family or friends has no income and receives no relief. Being unproductive, he has no money. As such, he is deemed to have no economic value. Economically, an able-bodied human being has been reduced to a cipher. The goal of progressive macro-economic policy is to liberate people from this dismal circumstance.

    Policy should minimise idle capacity by attaching value to these economic elements by funding their employment in productive endeavour. A government that enjoys the sovereign right to issue currency should not restrict its currency’s use to the amount of foreign currency it receives. This restriction forfeits much of the fiscal power resident in the Federal Government. This has nothing but mean consequence for the great number of ordinary people, especially the unemployed.

    Forever tying the level of naira to dollar revenue intake means our economic decision makers have turned exchange rate management into the nation’s primary macro-economic goal. This is tantamount to giving food to the shadow yet leaving the actual man unfed. A sustainable exchange rate is a function of our economic strength not vice versa. A mechanistic pursuit of a high exchange rate as the chief policy objective is to love the image on the map more than the actual nation the map represents. The exchange rate is but a factor that helps measure economic strength; it can also be a tool used in building that strength. But, it is not itself the strength.

    The overriding economic objective is to produce sufficient economic growth and development that allocate equitable shares of income and wealth among the nation’s economic constituencies. If we achieve the target of this aim, exchange rate stability will follow suit. Should we labour otherwise by giving primacy to exchange rate, we shall achieve neither exchange rate stability nor adequate economic growth.

     

    Bank versus government creation of money

     

    The real issue is not how much naira is issued but how the money is used. To the extent the extra naira pays for economic activity that has a real value equal to, or exceeding one naira, inflation will not be problematic. Real costs within the economy will not rise as long as any additional local currencies are employed for things of productive value equal to the naira. Inflation jumps when the funds are spent on things of lesser productive value.

    This idea is not revolutionary. You see it in operation everyday but do not acknowledge it. When told that banks make loans based on deposits they hold, you have been told a myth. The government has given banks a charter to issue money. When, Nigerian banks issue loans, they do not check their vaults for naira. Upon concluding the borrower is sound enough to repay the loan, the bank creates money with the touch of a computer keystroke. The funds are created out of the thin air. In most developed economies, the vast majority of money is created in this fashion. Conservatives never complain about this process. They do not complain because this private-sector mechanism is predominately advantageous to the financial and economic status of the elite.

    The government using its currency issuance power to pay wages on infrastructural projects or to feed the hungry is done by the same mechanism. The mechanism is not different than how the banks create money except that the bank money creation is via loans. Thus, it is inherently associated with a new private sector debt. The government deficit spending is not necessarily tied to a debt. Consequently, such deficit spending may be less inflationary than private bank money creation because private bank money compels the payment of interest on the loan. Because of the interest on the loan, the real value of the bank money is less than the real value of the equal sum of government deficit spending.

    While the mechanisms of creating money by government and by private banks are similar, the conservative elite react differently to each. They hate government expenditure but extol private bank money creation. The different reactions cannot be attributed to the mere fact of money creation because creation of “money from the thin air” occurs in both instances. The conservative objection is embedded in the discomfort that the government may use the funds for reforms and projects that might help the average person and reduce elite control over the political economy. They fear the money might be used to reduce poverty and joblessness while spurring growth. The government deficit spending to help the poor and working class can amend the political economy in a progressive way inimical to elite interests. As such, their true opposition to government deficit spending is more a consideration of political power than objective economic principles.

    In the end, government deficit spending has been the most reliable method to lift a nation from economic downturn or to divert that downturn. We must divorce ourselves from the myth that the Federal Government deficit spending is wrong. For a state government or a private household, deficit spending incurs debt. High debt is impending disaster. However, the Federal Government occupies a different policy stratum due to its ability to issue currency. Deficit spending does not mean debt. All it necessarily means is that the government is giving the people more of what only government has the sovereign ability to create than it is taking from the people. That the people do not have capacity to issue money, the net flow of money from the government to them not only seems just, it makes common economic sense.

    Nigeria’s level of unemployment and idle capacity is synonymous with what other countries would lament as an acute depression. We have lived in this dire condition so long that we now consider it normal; in reality, we suffer from a chronic, structural depression. As with the fiscal expansion needed to pull nations out of the Great Depression, Nigeria must engage in similar fiscal expansion to thwart the impending downspin caused by faltering oil prices. If we take the path of austerity, the contraction may intensify to the point where the downward momentum plunges us into a recession otherwise avoidable if only wiser policy had been known by those entrusted to have known.

    •Tinunu is National Leader of the APC

     

     

  • PDP lacks integrity to query Buhari’s certificate, says Tinubu

    PDP lacks integrity to query Buhari’s certificate, says Tinubu

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has lambasted the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for calling on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to disqualify APC presidential candidate General Muhammadu Buhari over certificate issues.

    Tinubu, who spoke yesterday during the APC’s rally in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, described PDP as a “shameless” party.

    He said: “I laugh when the incapable government of Nigeria, the Poverty Development Party has nothing to say; they have the temerity to question the educational qualification of General Buhari and look for his certificate. Aaaaaaa! (laughter) Shame on them… what an insult!.

    “The Armed Forces institution… Don’t go through General Buhari, ask the military. After all, he went to Army school – from Cadet School, he got a star. From there, he became Colonel, dem no talk. Then Major, dem no talk, from Brigadier General to General, dem no talk. He went to war and came back, dem no talk. They (military) sent him to Army School in London, he passed; you (military) also sent him to United States where he and white Americans did left, right, left, he passed. He came back and was not removed from the Army. He became Head of State. Nobody talked about his certificate. Since he has been contesting for the presidency, no one complained about his certificate. Now that we begged him to come and rule, they are asking for his certificate. I don’t want to follow a leader who lies.”

    Tinubu reiterated that Gen. Buhari is the right person Nigeria needs at this challenging period.

    “Every nation,” he said, “has a period of challenges.” “When United States was challenged, they turned to a war great man, their ex-military general, Harrison Iowa; when the French were challenged, they turned to General Charles de Gaulle; when Britain was challenged, they turned to their great general, Winston Churchill. Today, Nigeria is challenged, economically challenged, physically challenged and security challenged; who do we turn to… General Muhammadu Buhari. He is the real man for the job; if you talk of military experience, he has it abundantly; if you talk of courage, he has it abundantly; if you talk of simplicity, he has it abundantly; if you talk of great determination, a combination of mission and ability to perform, honesty and integrity, he has it abundantly, abundantly, abundantly…”

    Tinubu flayed President Goodluck Jonathan’s 10 million jobs promise made at a campaign in Ibadan on Monday.

    He said: “Today, many of our youths are unemployed and only yesterday (Monday), the man (Jonathan) promised 10 million jobs. He has spent six years without securing jobs for our children and now you are looking for votes. Is he a liar or not? Lies have torn their umbrella. They are failures. Under free economy aspect, they cannot create jobs for you. Are you not tired of it? You went to the university for seven or eight years for a four-year course. Are you not tired of it? School fees are becoming a thing of tears. Are you not tired of it? I can teach them how to create the jobs locally. We will give you student loan. Our programme – four years would be four years. You will not stay beyond four years before graduating from the university. By your fourth year, you will be taken through that critical path.

    “You have not been able to create that job for six years. You assembled our youths at the stadium in Abuja, Owerri, Enugu, everywhere and told them to pay for forms; they died without getting job. You did not show remorse. Nobody was sacked; and now he is making another promise. Who are you deceiving? PDP! Don’t be deceived. If they want to continue to say we are sadistic, we are not. Our children are dying. Our nation, our being, devastated through the hail of bombs. If your son comes back from school and says he has failed, you tell him to look for another job.  Jonathan said he has failed; let him go and look for another job. We don’t want a President that can’t perform. It is not his fault; he does not have what it takes to rule Nigeria. Let him go and rest at home.”

  • 2015: Jonathan gets bloody nose on corruption

    2015: Jonathan gets bloody nose on corruption

    Tinubu, Akanbi, Yusuf attack govt

    President defends his performance

    A damning verdict was yesterday returned on President Goodluck Jonathan’s anti-corruption battle.

    The government has lost the battle, some eminent citizens said.

    The subject dominated public discourse as leaders looked ahead to the New year.

    To Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) pioneer Chairman Justice Mustapha Akanbi, corruption is escalating.

    Foremost lawyer Yusuf Ali (SAN) said: “There is no drive against corruption by the current government and that is quite obvious because the president believes that there is no corruption in Nigeria.  He believes that what is going on is petty stealing.”

    All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu is worried about “the ever-widening inequality between the wealthy minority and the impoverished majority, fuelled largely by a scale of corruption and outright theft of public funds that have reached unprecedented heights in today’s Nigeria.” Tinubu’s view are in his New Year message to Nigerians.

    But Dr. Jonathan defended his integrity, saying Nigerians will appreciate him after he must have left office.

    Justice Akanbi and Ali spoke with reporters in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, on the sideline of a public lecture, entitled: “Corruption: The bane of our society.” It was organised by the Amicus International Club.

    They described the crusade against corruption by Jonathan’s administration as “lacklustre, dull and devoid of drive”.

    Justice Akanbi, a former President of the Court of Appeal, said: “The indices are that the moments are dark, the clouds have thickened, corruption is escalating. And we cannot pretend. The Transparency International (TI) put us at the position of 136th corrupt nation. You cannot deny it, even though it is a perception. Honestly, I do not see what is being done about corruption now.

    “Speaking for myself, I ask myself these questions: does it mean all the governors are corruption-free? Does it mean all the legislators are corruption-free? Does it mean the judiciary is corruption-free? We know that it is happening, but people are not being arrested; no action is being taken. The end result is that people accept bribe with impunity now.

    “At least if they had taken few people to court, we would have known that something is being done. There is a general lull and the fight against corruption has gone down completely. That is why we are gearing up the tempo now, so that people can be aware of it.

    “Now, when you look at many people wanting to be governors, is it because they want to serve their people or that they want to go and chop, chop chop?

    “It is apparent that many of them want to enrich themselves because they know that when you go there, you make money and become wealthy; ditto going to the legislature. Yet people are suffering; there is no development. Corruption, kidnapping and the ills of the society have gone on the ascendency.

    “Honestly, in terms of these governors, who has been arrested? We know about Oduahgate and the billions of naira that (former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor) Sanusi (Lamido Sanusi) alleged that was missing. The terrible thing is that the judiciary is not helping.”

    Ali said the president’s actions, utterances and body language suggested that corruption does not exist in Nigeria.

    The Ilorin-based legal practitioner said: “I have said this long time, no drive against corruption by the current government and that is quite obvious because the president believes that there is no corruption in Nigeria.

    “He believes that what is going on is petty stealing. So, if he doesn’t believe there is corruption, you can’t hold him for not driving any anti-corruption war. If somebody doesn’t believe there is a problem, then he would not be obliged to look for solution.”

    The lawyer added:  “Corruption makes all of us poorer in the short and long run. Even for those who are stealing our money, they are poorer; what is the essence of money you have stolen and you cannot display whatever you have acquired with it? You build houses outside of Nigeria; you are not proud to tell people you have built such houses and you buy big cars and keep them as if they are items of antiquity.

    “The saddest aspect is that when you take these monies out of Nigeria, you are mal-nourishing our economy and nourishing the economies of the countries that are already nourished. It is a-no win situation for those who are corrupt, those who condone it and the rest of us.”

  • Tinubu: Putting issues in perspective

    Tinubu: Putting issues in perspective

    Eric Arthur Blair (1903 – 1950), an English novelist, essayist, journalist and critic, is globally known under the pen name George Orwell. His works, usually laced with lucid prose is particularly geared towards creating awareness about social injustice, totalitarianism, and the need to promote democratic socialism. Pundits ranked him as one of the most influential English writers of the 20th century, and as one of the most important chroniclers of English culture of his generation.

    Sometime in his life time while on service at the Spanish war front, this author of the master piece: ‘Animal Farm,’ realised the speciousness of political propaganda when he declared: ‘Political language… is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.’ This statement truly applies to moves by some political deviants and their cronies to seize any opportunity to demonise Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu, former governor of Lagos state.

    The just concluded presidential primaries of All Progressives Congress (APC) and the process leading to the nomination of deputy to General Mohammadu Buhari, presidential flag bearer of the party curiously offered envious pathological haters of the Tinubu political giant strides to go to town with propaganda which according to Orwell is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.

    It is ironic that adversaries of Tinubu will read meanings into each of his political moves even when propelled by altruistic motive. This is pardonable because we live in a world where finding fault in others seems to be the favorite sport which has long been the basis of political campaign strategy that has not done our clime any good. This development cannot be compared with a situation of valid competition which pushes individuals and the society to do better. The truth which has since been neglected but which cannot be denied is that competition through party primaries is not just the basis for protection election contenders, but is also an incentive for achieving progress.

    The issues in the nomination of deputy to General Buhari in the aftermath of last APC presidential primaries were: Was Tinubu voluntarily offered the vice-presidential slots through the South-West by Buhari? If yes, why then the hue and cries. Can anyone question Tinubu’s constitutional eligibility for the position? Didn’t he have the right to aspire to such position during the negotiation period especially when such is offered his geo-political area? What is selfish about aspiration for a political position where one’s invaluable contributions are seriously craved? Despite the fact that Tinubu could have gone ahead and ensured, at any cost that he got the post, he allowed the statesman in him, as always, to overshadow personal aspiration by conceding the post to one of the most brilliant living legal minds from the SouthWest-Professor Yemi Osinbajo. He is used to identifying skills/talents with brains wherever they are and deploying them for public good as will be shown later in this piece.

    Tinubu puts it more succinctly while debunking speculations, especially from the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) that he has turned APC into his personal fiefdom and wanted the post badly; he said: “I am contented being the National Leader of the party…I am a Nigerian who loves my country. I am hopeful about what it can become. I have seen and conducted myself as a patriot long before I thought of myself as a politician.  I shall always walk this line and no other…After all the political calculations are made and the dust of competition has settled, it must be this nation and its people who stand first and foremost. The question becomes whether we stand strong, able to shape ourselves into our best future or will we stand frail and trembling, burdened by the abject failure to surmount the multiple problems confronting us. The PDP and other interests have stoked fear of a Muslim/Muslim ticket.”

    What other personal political sacrifice could have been more than this for a person so powerfully positioned like Tinubu to cede such a juicy post to a competent associate in Osinbajo which nobody but the PDP can deride on the altar of partisan politics, not progressive national interest. The man has really paid his political dues and should be accorded such recognition. Since 1992 when he was elected to the Nigerian Senate as representative of the Lagos West constituency in the short-lived Nigerian Third Republic, Tinubu has never looked back; making from, and ceaselessly giving back to the Nigerian society. Consequent upon the annulment of the 12 June 1993 presidential elections, he became a founding member of the pro-democracy National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), which mobilized support for the restoration of democracy and recognition of the June 12 results. He went into exile in 1994 and returned to the country in 1998 after the death of military despot Sani Abacha, which ushered in the transition to civilian rule.

    In the run-up to the 1999 elections, he contested under the platform of Alliance for Democracy (AD) for, and was elected as governor of Lagos state and served two terms of eight years. While serving as governor, his panoramic eye for discovering raw skills and talents came to the fore at a time when other leaders were inflicting political misfits on the people through public office. He, unlike some leaders, never gets intimidated when surrounded by egg heads from different fields of intellectual endeavours. Yet, he is at the same time at home with the hoi polloi as he never at any time while in power and outside it looked down on anybody. No wonder, Tinubu built one of the most admired and respected cabinets in the country where robust debates and superior arguments prevailed in the day to day running of his administration.

    His cabinet had champions in different fields like Yemi Osinbajo, Wale Edu, Yemi Cardoso, Dele Alake, Tunji Bello, Leke Pitan and Babatunde Raji Fashola, now governor of Lagos State amongst others that are still reference points in the nation’s public affairs.  Tinubu identified and deployed these distinguished Nigerians to the service of humanity. At the same period, the best that the ruling PDP and its leaders including ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo could do for the country was to promote mediocrity by looking for malleable and challenged personalities like late Umaru YarÁdua and Goodluck Jonathan to govern the nation when we had brains scattered in the nooks and crannies of the country waiting to be harnessed. The result is the inept and clueless governance that we have staring us in the face today across the land.

    It was the bid to fill in this avoidable leadership gap at especially the national level that led Tinubu to inspire others from his clan and top shots from the remaining geo-political zones/party platforms to rally together and form a mega-party that has come to be known as APC. In his  discerning eyes, he has also identified another distinguished professional and accomplished technocrat, Akinwunmi Ambode to take over from Fashola come 2015 after having won in the APC free and fair transparent governorship primaries early this month. What a man that is mischievously being derided for his sheer political sagacity and industry.

    The truth is that Tinubu remains yet unsung by political adversaries and envious folks despite his rare political sacrifice to the nation and humanity. He is being maligned in his pursuits of the long desired political change from PDP’s tyranny come 2015. The wind of change has become inevitable with his deft management of APC from its enemies predicted implosion. The imminent change is just a matter of time.

     

    –Adisa is a public commentator based in Lagos

     

     

  • Ribadu remains a friend, says Tinubu

    Ribadu remains a friend, says Tinubu

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday described Former Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Chair Nuhu Ribadu as “a friend and brother.”

    Ribadu, the 2011 election Presidential candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria (AC N), one of the major parties that fused together to form the APC, last week defected to the PDP.

    He is seeking the PDP ticket to contest election as governor of Adamawa State. The by-election is slated for October 11.

    The Adamawa seat came up for by-election following the impeachment of Governor Murtala Nyako of APC, ostensibly with the backing of the Presidency.

    Tinubu, in his first reaction to the defection, twitted yesterday: “Ribadu remains a friend & brother. He is mature. He remains one who believes in liberty, justice and service. I wish him LUCK with GOODLUCK.”