Tag: Nigeria’s economy

  • Agric ’ll revive Nigeria’s economy, says Afe Babalola

    Agric ’ll revive Nigeria’s economy, says Afe Babalola

    •Warns on imminent food crisis

    Founder of Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti (ABUAD) Aare Afe Babalola has identified agriculture as the catalyst for the revival of the nation’s ailing economy.

    Babalola said the stark reality in face of the economic downturn occasioned by shortfall in oil revenue was that the citizenry must resuscitate the old glory of agriculture, which provided food, jobs and foreign exchange for the country.

    The legal icon, who is also a farmer, spoke at a four-day Agriculture Summit, organised by Ekiti State.

    He said the country was led into the predicament by what he called “misguided pursuit of oil wealth”.

    Babalola regretted the lack of interest by the younger generation in agriculture.

    “The trend has precariously placed Nigeria on the brink of a looming food crisis and rising cost of food prices,” he said.

    The former pro-chancellor of the University of Lagoslamented that Nigeria still imports food despite its huge agricultural potential.

    Babalola said the government, in collaboration with ABUAD, would organise a yearly agric festival to celebrate and encourage best farmers with awards and prizes just as the private university already started for best farmers in the 16 lcouncils of Ekiti State.

    He suggested that agricultural science be made compulsory and taught in elementary and secondary schools to stimulate interest in agriculture.

    Babalola said: “Universities must encourage students to study agriculture through reduction in school fees as exemplified by ABUAD, where there is 50 per cent reduction in tuition for students admitted to study agriculture.

    “In addition, graduates of agriculture must be empowered to practise their profession upon graduation just as ABUAD has been empowering its agriculture graduates with N250,000 for its initial start-up investment in any area of farming.

    “Across the country, each local government should be encouraged to ask different branches of families to come together and combine their lands, to work and generate large-scale industrial farming.

    “Also, local governments should encourage cooperative systems in each local government across states.

    “A pilot scheme can be initiated in each local government, whereby either 10 families or 10 cooperative societies will be assisted to acquire two hectares of land each for farming.

    “These two hectares of land will be inspected and supervised by a task force set up by the government in collaboration with ABUAD. The government will buy agricultural implements to plough the land for use during dry season.

    “Owners’ account will be debited for this job after harvest; the land will be ploughed and prepared against the rainy season. This singular pilot project will engineer food surplus in the society and money-making cash crops to provide wealth for families.”

    “For the government, no money will be lost and the government can recover all money invested.”

  • How to save Nigeria’s economy, by World Bank VP Otteh

    How to save Nigeria’s economy, by World Bank VP Otteh

    The government must diversify the economy if Nigeria is to survive falling global oil prices, World Bank Vice President and Treasurer Arunma Otteh said yesterday.

    She said Nigeria ranks 152 out of 188 in the Human Development Index, and ranks below the average for sub-saharan Africa.

    Otteh spoke in Lagos while delivering the inaugural Philip Asiodu Lecture Series, with the theme: “The proper role of oil in the context of accelerating growth and development in Nigeria.”

    It was organised in honour of a former diplomat and Minister of Petroleum Phillip Asiodu.

    Life expectancy in Nigeria, Otteh said, is 53 years, eight years lower than in Ghana and 21 years lower than in Brazil.

    On corruption, Otteh referred to the Transparency International’s 2015 report which places Nigeria on 136 out of 168 most corrupt countries. This, she said, affects the flow of foreign direct investment (FDI).

    “Nigeria rapid GDP growth over the past decade has not translated into strong human development and competitiveness compared to the rest of the world even when compared to many of its Sub-Saharan African peers,” she said.

    Otteh said Nigeria can no longer depend only on earning from oil, which now sells for as low as $26 per barrel, and which accounts for 95 per cent of the country’s foreign exchange.

    “Given the level of price uncertainty and Nigeria’s dependence on oil, it is all the more important to diversify away from oil,” she said.

    According to her, the oil industry needs reform, especially through amendment of laws governing the sector, some of which she said date back to the 1950s.

    Calling for the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill, she said: “A legal framework is extremely important because weaknesses in the sector have other consequences.”

    Otteh said the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) should be listed in the stock market. Doing so, she said, will lead to more transparency in the management of petroleum resources and prevent “discretionary spending” lack of accountability

    “Abundant availability of oil is one of Nigeria’s comparative advantages and diversifying its economy away from oil should not be construed as not taking advantage of efficient linkages between oil and related industries,” she said.

    Otteh believes conceptualising sound development plans, effectively implementing and monitoring them, backed by a vision that should be regularly re-evaluated, will take Nigeria to the next level.

    “Nigeria’s future must be captured in a comprehensive development plan. Nigeria must do more to improve on the welbeing of its citizens,” she said.

    Asiodu believes Nigeria suffers from “Dutch disease”, which he said has developed into “other diseases.”? “The Dutch cured themselves of the disease very quickly,” he said.

    Asiodu added: “There must be a long term vision. We need leaders who commit to that vision.”

    A professor of economics, Akin Iwayemi, said Nigeria’s development will depend on political will.

    According to him, excellence cannot be achieved without paying a price. He added that Nigeria must also invest in research, science and technology, which form the basis of development.

     

  • Nigeria’s economy is collapsing, says PDP

    Nigeria’s economy is collapsing, says PDP

    THE Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has lamented that the nation’s economy is sliding into a state of collapse.

    Its Acting National Chairman, Uche Secondus, made the observation at the Godswill Akpabio International Stadium during an interdenominational thanksgiving service to celebrate the Supreme Court judgment, affirming the election of Governor Udom Emmanuel.

    Secondus, who did not mince words in condemning the All Progressives Congress (APC)- led Federal Government in the management of the economy, said Nigeria is in dire need of the PDP.

    He warned the Federal Government not to turn states controlled by the PDP into police states, where people would be intimidated by security agencies.

    His words: “Nigeria is in dire need of the PDP. You can see the difference. The difference is clear. Eight months ago, the exchange rate was N160, but today the exchange rate is N313.

    “Eight months ago, vessels of ships of goods and services were competing how to enter into our harbour and seaports, but none today.

    “Our economy is sliding and it is getting to a point of collapse. The political situation in the country is in coma and we challenge the APC-led government that it is time for them to realise that they need the people and they do not need the guns because we are not in the military.

    “We warn the APC-led government that Nigeria should not be a police state where our states are being harassed, our stakeholders being intimidated. Enough is enough.”

    He dedicated the victories of the PDP in Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Delta, Bayelsa and Abia states to God, saying had it not been the Lord who was on their side, the enemies would have captured the states.

    At the thanksgiving were Governors Ayo Fayose (Ekiti); Nyesom Wike (Rivers); Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu (Abia);  Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi (Enugu) and Seriake Dickson (Bayelsa).

    Former Benue State Governor Gabriel Suswan, ex-Anambra State Governor Peter Obi and past military administrators of Akwa Ibom State also attended the event.

    Fayose, who spoke on behalf of his colleagues, said it was high time the PDP took governance back from the APC.

    He explained that the inheritance of the party was taken away from it through wicked deception and propaganda.

    According to him, if the PDP put its house in order, it would win in subsequent elections.

    The Presiding Bishop of Living Faith Church Worldwide, David Oyedepo, ministered at the thanksgiving service.

    He said: “ What we are celebrating here is the Supreme hand of God in the affairs of men. I also want to say it is important to know why we need to do this. Thanksgiving is a debt we owe for every act of God we experienced.”

    Emmanuel thanked the people for coming out for the service.

    The governor hailed President Muhammadu Buhari for respecting the principle of separation of powers.

  • For Nigeria’s economy to bounce back

    President Muhammadu Buhari told the nation recently that Nigeria is broke,  as a result, the nation may need the services of 36 ministers but all may not be substantive ministers. Those who were responsible for the present economic predicament of our country were the first set of people that made the greatest noise about the statement of Mr. President. For 16 years the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP ) ruled the nation and they came on board when the world oil price was at its zenith. The world oil price rose as far as $109 under the PDP administration. If luck was all it require to run a good government, Nigeria might have reached the eldorado.

    Good governance depends on good ideas, wisdom and strategic planning. Unfortunately, those in the helm of affairs then appeared to be short of all the aforesaid. The collectivity were group of men who were merely concerned about themselves at that period in history, without a thought for the future.

    An x-ray of Nigeria Gross Domestic Products (GDP)  revealed that it grows by 2.35 per cent in 2015. It is the lowest GDP growth rate since the quarterly data due to decline in oil production and prices. The oil sector shrank 6.79 percent to a 5.14 per cent growth a year earlier and 8.2 per cent contraction in the previous quarter. Oil production stood at 2.05 million barrels per day (mbpd), 0.13 mbpd lower than the preceding period, and 0.16 mbpd down from a year earlier.  Electricity,  gas,  steam and water supply dropped by 11.61 percent (-27.92in Q1).

    In contrast, construction grew 6.42 per cent (+11.17 in Q1). Services expanded at a slower 4.6 per cent compared with a 7.04 per cent rise in the previous period. Information and communications sector grew 6.26 percent, internal trade went up 5.07 per cent, finance and insurance grew 6.41 per cent and real estate increased 2.97 per cent. Agriculture expansion slide to 3.49 per cent

    It is imperative to note that oil accounts for nearly 70 per cent of Nigeria public revenue and 90 per cent of foreign exchange earnings. The fall in oil prices has negatively impacted the nation finances and currency with the naira losing nearly 9 per cent to the USD. In 1961 the OPEC average oil price was $1.57, it rose to $17.44 in 1999, by 2010 world oil price was $109.45. Unfortunately, our leaders under the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP ) during the economic boom lost the opportunity to conserve the oil gains and reinvest such in order to boost our economy. Development according to President Barack Obama “depends upon good governance” and not upon strong men. The Excess crude oil funds in Saudi Arabia were kept for the development of health sector and infrastructural development. Algeria utilised the ECF, excess crude oil fund for road development and Angola do the same but Nigeria wasted the fund on acquisition of eleven presidential jets, over invoicing contractual agreement and launders over $159 billion dollars abroad.

    The former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo declared in a newspaper that he left N287 billion recovered from the looted fund from late General Sanni Abacha when he left office in 2007. Former Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo Iweala confirmed that $500 million was recovered from Abacha. In addition 167 million euro to about $ 2.5 billion she claimed was recovered. Few months ago, Comrade Adams Aliyu Oshiomhole, the Governor of Edo, claimed that $50 billion was found in the account of a former minister’ under President Goodluck Jonathan in an American bank.

    On power, the sum of N2.740 trillion has been expended in that sector in the last 16 years, this information was disclosed by the Permanent Secretary of Ministry of Power, Ambassador Godknows Igalu to the Senate adhoc committee recently.

    According to Transparency International Corruption Perception Index for 2014, Nigeria is up by 8 to 136 out of 175 countries. Large scale fraud was reported in NNPC to the extent that the whistle blower, the former CBN Governor Malam Lamido Sanusi was ridiculously suspended and retired from his post for dare to mention that a sum of $20million was missing. The Minister of Petroleum,  Mrs. Alison Madueke was summoned by the National Assembly over allegations concerning missing funds, and for chattering a private jet to the tune of N10 billion. The minister declined the invitation several times. Today, she is currently in the United Kingdom facing charges of money laundering and bribery. The oil subsidies suspected scammers have been charged to court for economic sabotage, but none of the suspects has been convicted.

    The former Aviation Minister Mrs. Odua was allegedly involved in inflation of purchase of new vehicles for the sector. She was charged to court but she obtained perpetual injunction against the trial. The Airport renovation nation wide was humongous, but the world survey of major standard airports found Nigeria unqualified among the best in the world. The same applies to the railway system, while the world has moved on to supersonic trains, Nigeria continues to drag behind. The Chinese loan obtained for the renovation of our rail system was said to have been diverted to other purpose. Yet we are bound to pay back the loan with interest.  The Adhoc Committee of House of Representatives headed by Hon. E.J Agbonayinma is currently looking into the contracts/projects in the Federal Ministry of Transport with particular interest on railway tracks, maintenance and procurement/rehabilitation of coaches and locomotives as records have it that a sum of N187.2 billion has been expended

    The road network is nothing but death traps that have been sending innocent lives into early grave on a daily basis. The Lagos-Ibadan express ways for instance has remained a sorry sight. The rehabilitation of the said road is grounded due to non-payment of the contractors. If the federal government is financially solvent, the project would have been completed by now. The Airlines services is sordid. It continue to be a “coffin” in the air. In all, there is no single sector one can point to as viable.

    The economic reality is an indication that the President is using to determine the numbers of ministers that the economy could sustain. History of the First Republic revealed that Chief Obafemi Awolowo as the premier of Western  Region (now 8 states) had only 13 ministers, and Ahmadu Bello government in the North had 12 ministers. In modern times, states like Califonia in United States of America with population of 38.8 million and a Gross Domestic Product of $1.95 trillion has 14 full cabinet members. In the United Kingdom the cabinet composed of the Prime Minister and 21 ministers. Section 147 of the 1999 Constitution gave power to the president to appoint minister from each of the 36 states . Noble as this suggest, but the reality of the economy cannot support 36 ministers.

    The way forward

    The economy is down but the solution lies not in lamentation, nor in apportioning blame, statesmen are made of tougher stuff to turn things around for the betterment of the society. The Buhari administration should therefore arm himself with the sound knowledge of economy and political sagacity that will turn the economic downturn to economic gains.  President Barack Obama came on board when the American economy was unstable, and today the economy is adjudged among the best in the world.

    It is a known fact that oil economy is no longer reliable in the world today, but ability to tap other resources such as mining of various minerals, resuscitation of Aladja and Ajaokuta Steel Mills in Delta and Itakpe in Kogi state, can bring hope to the hopeless economic  situation. Gas flaring, if well tapped can fetch the nation more revenue.

    Agriculture has remained an old occupation that we can always fall back on. Before we ban importation of rice, we can invest more on the plantation in commercial quantities. Local rice producers can be motivated with finances and agricultural equipment. Activities of rice smugglers will need to be curtailed. Other agricultural produces must also receive government attention so as to meet the domestic needs of the citizenry. Once hunger is conquered, the people will be fit to contribute their efforts to the country’s GDP.

    We can resurrect dead and aged cocoa trees. A lot of revenue can still be obtained from the production of cocoa. The coffee production is still relevant.  The cashew nuts and groundnuts remain a viable option for economic development.  Maize and beans productions must not be ignored. Fish farming is another source of revenue generation both for the states and the individuals. Billions of naira have been wasted on fish importation. If there is time to turn the money on fish importation, it is now.

    Poultry farming is growing daily, but government involvements are little or nothing. Instead of allowing the importation of poultry products, we must expand the local production and ban its importation totally. As we save money which would have been spent on the importation, so we are likely to save the lives of our peoples who are being exposed to dangerous poultry products.

    Cattle ranches should be vastly created in all locality in order to preserve cattle and diaries products. The time to make it compulsory for cattle rearers to maintain a healthy camp or farm has come. This will end communal clashes with herdsmen all over Nigeria. If we will do the needful now,  Nigeria’s economy is bound to bounce back soonest.

     

    • Obaditan, a public affairs analyst sent this piece from Osogbo, Osun State
  • Nigeria’s economy on upward swing under Buhari, says DMO boss

    Nigeria’s economy on upward swing under Buhari, says DMO boss

    The Director General, Debt Management Office (DMO), Dr. Abraham Nwankwo, yesterday assured that Nigeria’s economy would not collapse as the nation’s domestic debt burden hits N11 trillion and external debts stands at $11 billion.

    Dr Nwankwo gave the assurance during an interview with newsmen in Kaduna shortly after the opening ceremony of a one-day enlightenment workshop for Nigerian Students’ Union.

    He said the economy is not only resilient and diversifiable but has started a more robust journey upward under the present administration. He added that it has become imperative for Nigerians to cooperate with President Muhammadu Buhari to achieve the desired change in all sectors of the economy.

    Reminding the students of their roles in nation building, Dr Nwankwo noted that as the future leaders, they should imbibe positive attitudes to the leadership position for the betterment of the society.

    He described the theme of the workshop, Understanding Public Debt Management, as appropriate considering the mood of the nation.

    Said he: “Presently Nigeria, owes domestically, about N11 trillion and externally about N11 billion dollars. Let me emphasise that debt matter is not just the quantum, what is important is how these resources are deplored to encourage growth, development, generate employment and reduce poverty.

    “Secondly, it matters whether what you borrowed you are in a position to pay back, to service it as and when due. And in Nigeria’s case, I want to assure you that Nigeria’s debt remains sustainable.

    “As you know, based on current global economic problems, particularly the collapse of oil prices, all of us should be aware that this is having significant impact on economies all over the world.

    “But even at that, I can assure that the Nigerian economy is very resilient because the government is in control, and Nigeria will continue to remain sustainable.

    “The debts figure is the total debt of the federation , including all the states governments, and the domestic debts of the federal government and all the state governments. So, the debts I mentioned is comprehensive; it is the total debts of Nigeria.

    “Let me emphasise to you that Nigerians should congratulate the government and the Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN ) that in spite of the shock occasioned by the very drastic fall in the oil revenue, we have continued to maintain a healthy reserve, and have continued to stabilise the naira exchange rate.

    “Nigeria should be very proud that it has a CBN, it has an economic system that in spite of the oil shock we had, other countries that have been in similar position, countries like Venezuela, Russia, have had their currencies devalued very rapidly in the 30 days of the oil shock. But you can observe that it was until about three months or four months later that in Nigeria case that the CBN has to do some little adjustments in the exchange rate.

    “Go and check, some countries have to go into food riots, a country like Venezuela, just because there is a collapse in oil prices, but Nigeria should be proud that the economy is so resilient that at a least we gave enough food for our population, and food prices continue to be moderate.

    “This shows that over these years, we have attempted to improve, to diversify the economy to centre on agriculture, and that is a source of inspiration for all of us, that given the the current administration of President Muhammadu Buhari, there is a certain change, and Nigerians should use this opportunity to do better than we did in the past by working that agriculture continues getting modernised so that we have food security, so that we also produce enough for processing and manufacturing to revive our agricultural sector.

    “This is the time for all Nigerians to do their best. All hands must be on deck so that the economy continues getting stronger and stronger”.

  • Nigeria’s economy may slip into recession, CBN warns

    Nigeria’s economy may slip into recession, CBN warns

    From the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday came a warning shot on the economy: Nigeria risks sliding into recession next year.

    The apex bank also hinted that the implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) might affect the country’s economic growth.

    Speaking yesterday at the end of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja , CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele lamented that with “two consecutive quarters of slow growth, the economy could slip into recession in 2016 if proactive steps are not taken to revive growth in key sectors of the economy.”

    Emefiele added: “The overall economic environment remains fragile. The economy further slowed in the second quarter of the year, making it the second consecutive quarterly less-than-expected performance.”

    In the face of the prevailing circumstances, the MPC advocated that a “synergy between monetary and fiscal policies remains the most potent option to sustainable growth.”

    The committee specifically “noted that liquidity withdrawals from the implementation of the TSA, elongation of the tenure of state government loans as well as loans to the oil and gas sectors could aggravate the liquidity conditions in the banks and impair their financial intermediation roles, thus affecting the economic growth, unless some actions are immediately taken to ease liquidity conditions in the market.”

    Emefiele added that despite the TSA, “banking system liquidity ratio remains moderate, consequently committee advised on the urgent imperative for banks to aggressively support the efforts of government at job creation by channeling available liquidity into target growth enhancing sectors of the economy such as agriculture and manufacturing, this is with a view to promoting employment creation through conscious efforts aimed at directing lending to the growth enhancing sectors of the economy.”

    The Committee considered that “the Bank (CBN) and Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) must strive to reverse the slowing GDP trajectory by actively staking up their efforts at catalyzing economy with substantial new loans to the target sectors earlier highlighted.”

    The committee also expressed concerns “that growth had come under sever strains arising from private and public expenditure in particular. It noted the impact of non-payment of salaries at the state and local government levels as a key dampening factor on domestic demands.”

    The CBN governor said year on year headline inflation continued to trend upward while month on month measures moderated.

    According to him, despite demand, the foreign exchange market “remains significant as oil prices continue to decline. Arising from this development there were indications that some of the banking sector performance indicators could be stressed if conditions worsen further.”

    The committee observed that the impact of the persistent decline in global crude oil prices on the fiscal position of government continues to reflect in rising credit to government.

    Emefiele said the committee also noted that the initial market reaction to the decision by JP Morgan to exclude the country from its government bond index for emerging markets “has largely dissipated as yields soon adjusted to their pre-announcement levels” but warned that “there may be second round effects over the next two months as the economy adjusts to that decision.”

    [ad id=”403656″]The committee reiterated its unwavering commitment to the Naira and exchange rate stability despite the pressures stressing that it is “mindful of the possibility of diversion of any extra liquidity to the foreign exchange market.”

    As a result of this development, the CBN was urged to “closely monitor the nature and sources of demand pressure in the foreign exchange market to ensure that funds are not diverted to demands for foreign exchange but applied to specific growth enhancing asset creation and lending by the banks.”

    It further noted that sectors like agriculture, MSMEs are sectors for rapid generation of productive employment and wealth creation as a result these sectors “must therefore be painstakingly encouraged.”

    The CBN governor stated that gross official reserves decreased modestly from US$31.20 billion at end-July 2015 to $30.63 billion on September 17, 2015. Based on this, the Committee underscored the imperative of growing and protecting the country’s foreign reserves and building fiscal buffers in the process of strengthening confidence in the economy which is essential for promoting growth and stability.

    Overall the MPC expressed optimism that business confidence will continue to be improved upon as the government continues to unfold its economic plans noting that “in addition, some of the reassuring measures of the administration including efforts aimed at resolving fiscal challenges at the sub-national levels and the fight against corruption and improved business environment will unlock investments.”

    At the end of the MPC meeting and after considering what it called “the underlying fundamentals of the economy, particularly the declining output growth, rising unemployment, evolving international economic environment as well as the need to properly position the economy on a sustainable growth path”, the MPC decided to reduce the Cash Reserve Requirement (CRR) from 31 per cent to 25 per cent.

    By a unanimous vote, the MPC voted to retain the lending rate or Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) at 13 per cent; retain the symmetric corridor of 200 basis points around the MPR; and retain the Liquidity Ratio at 30 per cent.

  • Nigeria’s economy under threat as debts hit N11tr

    Nigeria’s economy under threat as debts hit N11tr

    The growing profile of Nigeria’s  debt has become a source of concern, given the Federal Government’s penchant to add to its stock.  The latest addition of N473 billion, has once again opened the floodgate of the spiral rise, with its attendant consequences, reports SIMEON EBULU, Group Business Editor

    FEAR may well be  the word to describe the state of Nigeria’s debt profile, hovering at N11.24 trillion as at December 31, 2014 and still rising.

    The level which the nation’s debt overhang has attained is like a death-knell. Yet it keeps climbing.

    The revelation by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Nweala, that the Federal Government has borrowed N473 billion in the first quarter of this year to execute the 2015 National Budget, is another clear case of one-more borrowing too many, so to speak.

    Dr. Okonjo-Iweala said yesterday that of the N882 billon budgetary provision for borrowing, the Federal Government had already accessed N473 billion to fund Recurrent Expenditure, such as salaries and other overheads. The obvious reason for this development, she stressed, is the 50 per cent decline in the spot market of crude prices .which has inadvertently resulted in a cash crunch for the country.

    To remain focused on keeping the economy stable and the government running, the government  has embarked on “front-loaded  borrowing programme to manage the cash crunch in the economy,” she said.

    Nigeria’s borrowing profile  from independence, is a study in itself. Going by the data available to The Nation, there appears to be more questions than answers when it comes to x-raying how the nation arrived at this point in time, where nothing gets done unless it is powered by external revenue sources, rather than internally generated funds, or revenues earned from known government  sources, such as taxes, oil and non-oil exports.

    The hint that Nigeria would go a borrowing again, was given by Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala in far- away America in April during the last International Monetary Fund (IMF)/World Bank Group Spring meetings in Washington DC, United States (U.S.).

    On prospects of further borrowing, she said: “Government is considering and in fact taking steps to actualise this with the World Bank Group and the African Development Bank (AfDB).”  The other option of tapping the capital markets would be left for the incoming government. She said the government decided to look outside the nation’s shores for the next round of borrowing because it has reached, and almost exceeded taking the ceiling for local debts.

    Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said: “Our borrowing strategy is very prudent, and what we will do is that we have a lot of domestic borrowing than we want, so we are trying to switch and have a little more of external borrowing, but by drawing heavily on the multilateral institutions. So we will be going to the World Bank and the AfDB, and we will also look into the markets. But for the multilaterals, we’ve already embarked on discussions.”

    Her disclosure that N473 billion  has been borrowed is a confirmation that the proposal has eventually been actualised.

    In its  2014 Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA), the nation  also adopted a  subsisting debt management strategy as captured in the approved Nigeria’s Medium-Term Debt Management Strategy (MTDS), for 2012-2015, which seeks to achieve an optimal mix in the debt portfolio of 60:40 for domestic and external debts respectively as against the current mix of 83:17 through a gradual substitution of relatively more expensive domestic borrowing with cheaper external financing. Thus, the 2014 DSA has already incorporated government’s policy objective of reducing the overall cost of government borrowing at an acceptable level of risks. This may have informed the minister’s statement of government’s preference for approaching multilateral agencies.

    The objective of the 2014 DSA is to assess the country’s capacity to finance its projects/programmes and service its debt obligations, without undue large adjustments that may compromise its macroeconomic stability, overall growth and development.

    The government’s avowed confidence that it can continue to borrow on the argument that it falls within a safe threshold, is punctured when examined under an uncertain economic regime, as being faced by Nigeria. Even the government admitted this by its own record. It underlined the risks inherent on its path.

    “The pessimistic scenario ( where Nigeria is presently), assumes a reduction in the growth of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), increase in the rate of inflation, decline in revenue accruing to the Federal Government as a result of a fall in crude oil prices, deterioration in fiscal deficit and current balance, amongst others. Unlike in the previous years, which made pessimistic scenario revenue-specific, this years DSA considered deterioration in a broad range of macroeconomic indicators and variables that could impact negatively on the debt portfolio,” the sustainability analysis annual report said.

    Although the results indicate that the country will still remain at a low risk of debt distress under the pessimistic scenario, it also shows a rising trend for all the debt indicators throughout the projection period. This means that a prolonged deterioration in one or two of the variables could increase the risk of debt sustainability.

    The growing concern over the country’s debt overhang has been on the front burner  for years, but often times, government officials have always argued that the nation’s debt level has not gone out of a safe trajectory. However, the lid over this confidence margin, appears to be weakening and increasingly contested.

    A lecturer at the Pan Atlantic University, Lagos, Dr. Austin Nweze, pointed out a grave danger in accumulating excessive foreign debts as such would place undue burden on future generations, especially if the loans are not channeled into capital projects.

    He said that the danger lies ahead for the economy, should the existing level of borrowing from big nations continue, which could make the country to depend on lending nations.

    Nweze, however, said that there is nothing wrong in borrowing provided the funds are well utilised or invested in the provision of infrastructure.

    According to him, the fall in oil prices has reduced revenue receipts, forcing the government to look for money to run the economy.

    He urged the government not to leave behind a heavy foreign debt burden for the present and unborn generations. He cautioned that Nigeria, already under a heavy burden of foreign debts could be in great danger.

    He urged the ruling class and the older generations to set good example and educate the coming generations for a better and secured future.  According to him, such example should be set by not accumulating debt for future generations to inherit.

    He urged the government to invest borrowed money in projects that will benefit the economy, instead of consuming the money.

    Dr. Isaac Nwaogwugwu, a lecturer at Department of Economics, University of Lagos, said there is no way we are going to finance capital budget without borrowing.

    He said: “That is why the allocation to capital account or expenditure is very small unless the government says it not ready to invest or provide for the future then it’s going to borrow.

    “If government is committed to developmental issues there is no way it can run away from that? So, the volume of borrowed amount, or our debt stock wouldn’t matter so much. They can always try to cut down what they have borrowing and not that they can’t borrow.”

     

    Leakages

     

    Nwaogwugwu went on: “The danger on borrowing lies on fiscal leakages. If government can block leakages, that will be fine and that is the task for the new government, though the president-elect will find his hands tight on many issues.

    “We can’t run away from borrowing but all we have to do is to ensure that we block all leakages. All we have to do is that we become bold enough to address some fiscal issues involved in recurrent spending. Many things we spend on recurrent expenditures are simply used to maintain some people who run government.

     

    Funds not tied to

    specific projects

     

    “That issue started under former President Olusegun Obasanjo. If you look at the letter which Soludo (the former Central Bank of Nigeria Governor) wrote when he was talking about the Jonathan administration and how he mismanaged the  economy, he raised the issue of using the budget to finance consumption expenditure.

    “Basically, Soludo called the budget under President Jonathan a consumption appropraition. In as much as I agree with Soludo totally,  I also hold him accountable for some of the mistakes. It was when Obasanjo was in the office that Soludo was the CBN Governor, before Sanusi Lamido, took over with this minister of state for finance, who replaced Okonjo-Iweala .  “It was after that we borrowed money, they called it capital receipt and we used that money to pay salaries and wages; we used that money for recurrent expenditure. We borrowed money and we don’t tie it to capital projects. That is one of the biggest issue and where the dangers lie. Such loans must be tied to the budget and if we don’t, we’ll be  mortgaging the future of Nigerians.

     

    The way out

     

    Nwaogwugwu said: “We have to be fiscally discipline. We saw the Senate pass the bill; we saw the House of Representatives pass the bill and what did we see? The budget has increased. It has gone up to N4.5 trillion. But, what we discovered that National Assembly increased spending and mark up expenditure on things that might not be necessary. That has always been the problem. If the National Assembly can look at the budget critically and say, ‘we don’t need this; we don’t need that; let us start with their own remuneration; begin to cut them down, look at how much they are collecting’.

    “Look at the severance allowances… unless you cut these down, there is no way out. You look at the state bureaucrat today; the havoc they have caused to the economy is huge. Look at the monetisation policy of Obasanjo, they have abandoned it completely. Unless we have a National Assembly that is bold enough to say, ‘lets block this and that’, then we will move forward. The way out is that those we have elected should  block all leakages. If the politicians do the right thing we won’t have any problem.

     

  • How Jonathan administration ran  Nigeria’s economy aground, by APC

    How Jonathan administration ran Nigeria’s economy aground, by APC

    The President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration has succeeded in running the country’s economy aground with incompetence, massive corruption and unparalleled profligacy, the All Progressives Congress (APC) said yesterday.

    Its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, who said this in a statement, added that Nigerians cannot afford to reward the president with another four years.

    “The only reason the Jonathan administration and the PDP have been engaging in a campaign of mudslinging, rather than of issues, is to distract the attention of Nigerians from the very serious state of the nation’s economy. But we have decided to redirect the ongoing electioneering campaign to issues,” the statement said.

    It said whereas Jonathan has been promising that he would create two million jobs yearly if re-elected, the reality on the ground did not support that promise, especially because his administration failed to create meaningful jobs when oil prices were higher than $100 per barrel.

    The party noted that instead of employing, the president was “extorting hapless job seekers and giving them deaths instead”.

    “The Jonathan administration has been lying to Nigerians on the issue of employment. The Works Minister said Nigeria is like one huge construction site, with many people employed in this sector. But the truth of the matter is that the biggest construction firms in Nigeria have been retrenching, rather than employing.

    “Last year, Julius Berger retrenched 6,000 people while Dantata Sawoe laid off 2,800. If indeed Nigeria were one huge construction site, will these big construction firms be sacking workers?” APC queried.

    The party also said the Federal Government had pauperised most states and made it impossible for them to pay the salaries of their workers by refusing to refund the huge funds they spent on federal projects, adding: ‘’For example, Jigawa State is owed N13 billion by the Federal Government.”

    It said more than anything else, unprecedented corruption under the Jonathan administration has dealt a death blow to the economy.

    APC said, for example, crude oil stealing has become so legalised that there was now what is known as “Bayelsa diesel” in the market, “a fall-out of the 400,000 barrels per day of crude oil that is stolen in Nigeria, under the very nose of the Jonathan administration”.

    “To put things in perspective, apart from the fact that the 400,000bpd amounts to US$60 billion stolen in just four years, the 400,000bpd is the equivalent of the daily crude oil production of Equatorial Guinea,” the party said.

    It also said the government has not been able to account for huge sums of money, including the $20 billion missing oil funds and the funds that should have accrued to the Excess Crude Account (ECA).

    “At the crude oil benchmark of $77.5 for the 2014 budget, Nigeria made $33 per every barrel of oil, which amounts to about $24 billion in a year. However, there is less than $6 billion in the ECA. What happened to the remainder?

    “Also, over N1 trillion was budgeted for defence in 2014. What has the Jonathan administration done with the funds, with soldiers deployed to battle the terrorist group, Boko Haram, complaining of inadequate or ineffective equipment that are inferior to what is being used by the terrorists? What has happened to the huge funds since soldiers are being made to pay for their kits? Why has the huge allocation translated to more territories seized by the insurgents? These are some of the questions that the Jonathan administration should be answering, not asking Nigerians for another mandate,’’ APC said.

    The party also reminded Nigerians that Ifeanyi Uba, who is the face of the so-called Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) that has spent over N25 billion campaigning for the president, is one of those accused of kerosene subsidy fraud.

    “But instead of prosecuting him diligently, the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) has settled the matter out of court and returned all his seized assets to him. How else can a government encourage corruption and impunity?” it queried.

    APC accused the Jonathan administration of engaging in mind-boggling profligacy at a time of harsh economic realities, adding: ‘’This Administration has just built a new banquet hall at the presidential villa to the tune of $100 million and it is now shopping for a brand new private jet to add to the presidential fleet that is bigger than those of more endowed nations as well as most airlines across Africa.”

    “We have provided these facts and figures so that Nigerians will know how and why their nation’s economy has arrived at this sorry pass under the most incompetent, most corrupt and most profligate administration ever in the history of the country.

    “When they promise millions of jobs if re-elected, Nigerians should ask them how many jobs they have created in six years. When they promise to tackle corruption, Nigerians should ask them what has happened to the $20 billion missing oil funds and the $24 billion that accrued to the Excess Crude Account in 2014 alone. They should ask where TAN got the 25 billion Naira it has frittered away on a campaign that is heading nowhere. They should ask why the likes of Ifeanyi Uba are now part of the president’s men, when he should be answering questions on the kerosene subsidy fraud. They should ask why there is no money in the Pension Fund,” the party said.

  • Nigeria’s economy to grow by 6 % in  20 years – Chidoka

    Nigeria’s economy to grow by 6 % in 20 years – Chidoka

    Despite present difficulties, Nigeria holds great opportunities for her citizens with projections that its economy would continue to grow at the rate of over six per cent in the next 20 years.

    The Minister of Aviation, Chief Osita Chidoka, made this known at the weekend when he delivered the 44th Convocation Lecture of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka titled: ‘Rebuilding the Nigerian Dream: Mapping the Building Blocks.’

    The minister said that Nigeria has highly skilled, hardworking people with huge natural resources and a large population that make the country a big market for goods and services which are key areas that would serve as stimulant to her economic growth.

    Chidoka said that Nigerians are fastidious and therefore have the tendency to criticise their country even when it is unnecessary, adding that although that attitude is seemingly wrong, it spurs the citizens and government to do things better.

    “The most virulent critics of Nigeria are Nigerians. When two or three Nigerians are gathered, their topic is usually Nigeria. Its missed opportunities, its poor outcomes and, particularly, the giant strides of other countries. A few years ago Nigerians celebrated one year of no blackouts in Ghana. Even though no such celebration took place in Ghana.

    “They talked about how the Ghana Cedi was equivalent to the US Dollar even though it was just a decimalisation. Now that the Cedi has turned out to be one of the world’s worst-performing currencies, losing nearly 300 per cent of its value within a couple of months, and blackouts have become a common feature in Ghana as its budget deficit balloons, the Nigerian media has curiously kept silent. I don’t see any media commentaries on the fact that Ghana has fallen back to the International Monetary Fund (Talley, 2014), and indeed to Nigeria, for assistance,” Chidoka said.

    He remarked that Nigeria has great opportunities that ensure a better future for its citizens, noting that these opportunities should be harnessed by young Nigerians who should be creative and make use of any chance that comes their way, adding that the country has huge potential to be great.

    “Nigeria has many things going in its favour. We are regarded as Africa’s largest economy, with an annual growth rate of 6 to 8 per cent. As Cosmo pointed out, we have one of the largest mobile phone markets on the continent. And nearly 40 per cent of our population has access to the internet. That is almost as much as South Africa at almost 47 per cent and far higher than Indonesia at only 16 per cent. Even Brazil has only managed to connect 53 per cent of its population online (CIA, 2015),” the minister said.

  • ‘Nigeria’s economy resilient’

    ‘Nigeria’s economy resilient’

    Moody’s Investors Service said Nigeria’s economy remains resilient in the face of falling oil prices even as the currency slumped to a record low and growth in Africa’s largest crude producer is set to slow.

    Nigeria’s economy, the continent’s biggest, will probably expand five percent next year, Aurelien Mali, Moody’s senior analytical adviser, said yesterday in an e-mailed statement.

    That’s in line with forecasts from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the government’s revised estimate of 5.35 per cent.

    The West African nation’s government relies on crude exports for about 70 per cent of its income and 95 per cent of foreign exchange earnings, leaving it vulnerable to price and quantity shocks.    Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is seeking to cut spending in next year’s budget by eight per cent to 4.36 trillion naira ($23.9 billion) as revenue plunges.

    “Nigeria benefits from a resilient economy and robust fiscal position, although the recent drop in oil prices will likely put pressure on public finances and could lead to the widening of fiscal deficits,” Moody’s said. Spending cuts and taxes on non-oil industries may help to close the gap, it added.

    Moody’s rates Nigeria’s debt at Ba3, three levels below investment grade, with a stable outlook.

    Oil prices have slumped 45 per cent in the past six months, eroding foreign-currency reserves and forcing the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to devalue the currency for the first time in three years. The naira fell 1.3 per cent to 182.35 per dollar on the interbank market as of 4:10 p.m. in Lagos, the commercial capital yesterday.

    Nigeria’s government debt, which is “very low” at 13.2 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), will probably increase to 14.6 per cent in 2015, Moody’s said.

    As a proportion of government revenue, debt is set to rise to 130 per cent from 121.8 per cent, it said. Both ratios are low compared to market peers rated Ba3, according to Moody’s.