Tag: recession

  • Judiciary’s role in exiting recession

    Judiciary’s role in exiting recession

    Mr Adekunle Ogunba (SAN) is an insolvency practitioner of repute. A holder of Masters Degree in Law from the University of Lagos (UNILAG), he is involved in major receivership actions. He shares his views on how to improve justice administration with JOSEPH JIBUEZE.

    In award of punitive cost

    The cost that is being awarded, such as N2,000 or N5,000 in this day and age is not realistic. With all due respect, some of the judges are a bit timid. It’s only a few judges that will award N100,000 against a counsel that frustrates a case. We can come up with a strategy in which N1million is awarded for frivolous adjournments. And if you lose a case in the long run, what costs are awarded? You hear N20,000 for a case that has taken about five years. There should be a way to penalise people who deliberately abuse the system by filing frivolous cases. There should be a guideline. It can be called Cost Implementation Rules or Cost Awarding Process and Rules. The cost awarding system is obsolete. It is not in tandem with reality. If a cost of N5000 is awarded against a party seeking adjournment, it cannot even fuel the other lawyer’s car, let alone the litigant’s. We should have a system where the cost of an adjournment is calculated. If witnesses come from Abuja to Lagos or from outside the country, and the trial is frustrated by the adversary party, he should be made to pay when the cost is proven. One way  to solve court congestion, which will dovetail in our economic progress, is the cost. It’s a veritable tool that can be used. We should put a system in place that if your case is found to be frivolous, you are sanctioned heavily to serve as deterrent for others who want to come and pollute the system.

    On the judiciary’s role in exiting recession

    When cases are not moving fairly well, foreign investors are scared; people who invest money within the system are afraid of the dispute resolution mechanism if it is not proactive to meet the justice of the case. So, within that context, I think the judiciary has an ambulatory role to play. The judiciary cannot make economic decisions, but it can intervene if there are disputes. To that extent, the judiciary has a role to play.

    On anti-corruption war scaring investors

    I don’t believe that government’s anti-corruption fight is discouraging investments. In fact, it is encouraging investments. It shows that the economy is being cleansed and you can come in and do clean business. So, I disagree with that parochial view. Do we now say that people who have stolen should be given a slap on the wrist or something? In fact, the converse is  the case because once foreign investors see our economy as “anything goes,” we are doomed. So, with the anti-corruption fight, we will be seen to be addressing our problems. I think that suggestion is diversionary and should not even be considered.

    On stripping EFCC of its prosecutorial powers

    I think that every process, every institution, every organisation, every individual that resists reforms or is averse to genuine criticisms is not even good for our system and economy. We are all here to make the system work better. I may not be right in my criticism but it might engender the party being criticised to wake up to its realities and, may be, to be on top of its game, as it were. So, within that context, I think the statement by the NBA President was just twisted out of context. And I think there are examples in what he has said. So, I don’t think it was right for the EFCC to throw ad hominem darts at the president for making such a statement. To now say there are vultures in the NBA, I think that  is rather unfortunate. It is addressing the person and not the issue. The issue is: with the corruption cases that the EFCC is saddled with, are they on top of it? If there are statistics that they are doing well, then they can continue. But if there are reasons for the system to be reviewed, you don’t look at the person calling for it and call them names.

    On funding of judiciary

    I am an advocate of the fact that our judges are not well paid. I’ve said it severally. I also know, for a fact, that some of our judges are overworked. If you look at Lagos State for example, there are not even enough judges for the cases. If you look at the population ratio, if you do the statistics like they do in policing – how many policemen per person? – you will find the statistics very shocking for the judiciary. And that is why you go to court and you find 50 cases in a day for one judge. He’s a human being like me and there’s little you expect him to do in that circumstance. He’s not a magician. So, I think one way to insulate the judiciary is proper funding, with the judges being well remunerated so that they can effectively and happily perform their roles. And again, litigants and lawyers should limit filing frivolous cases in court because you’ll find out that many people now take advantage of the municipal factor of congestion of courts to file frivolous cases, knowing that it will take years to unravel and the punishment for that is minimal.

    On judges writing in longhand

    Even our court system is obsolete. Our judges write longhand in 2016. And you don’t expect much from such a system. I’m granting this interview, you are not writing. It’s being recorded; it’s not so in our judicial system. If you cough, the judge writes it down. And that is not supposed to be.

    On why some parties delay cases

    If you owe a bank, for example, certain millions of naira and you know that you can tie the bank perpetually in court for, maybe, five, 10 years, without paying the money, then the incentive to behave irresponsibly is there. You’ll just go to court and get all manner of injunctions. In fact, we have seen that in some cases, at the time the cases are being resolved, the bank is moribund, which is not good for our overall economy.

    On his new legal year expectations

    I think our judges need to be well remunerated; the condition of service should be made more attractive to serve as an incentive for judges to work harder. More judges need to be appointed, because our judges are overworked. The judiciary needs to be funded. If you look at the antecedent of the funding for the judiciary, you will see that the budgetary allocation kept dwindling year-in-year-out and it affects the overall performance of the judiciary as a separate arm of government. The judiciary hardly now builds new courtrooms; some of the courts that are in existence in some of the various jurisdictions are obsolete. The high court in my own state, the one in Ijebu Ode for example, has been there for many years; the society has been changing but it is the same old system. And how do we expect a 1960 court to perform a 2016 assignment? So, that is one major problem that we do have.

    On making instant pronouncements

    I think also the system of making pronouncements instantaneously on issues when arguments are raised and deferring the reason till later should be taken advantage of not only by the Supreme Court but also by the lower courts so that we can quickly decongest the courts. The truth is that when you argue an application before a judge, he has a fair idea where the pendulum will swing but he is not allowed to say it but will defer it till a later time. But if the system can be made in such a way, we will all be better for it.

    On way out of conflicting verdicts

    Most of our cases are not electronically reported. If the Court of Appeal in Ibadan gives a judgment, there’s no way of knowing it instantly. But that is not to say that some judges don’t deliberately give conflicting judgments. A high court judge is not tied to the decision of his fellow brother. He’s at liberty to disagree. But if you look at the PDP case involving similar parties for instances, there might be some deliberateness. I’m not saying that is so. That is what needs to be investigated. Sometimes there’s conflict unwittingly. There needs to be a harmonisation. Once there’s a decision of the Court of Appeal, it should be immediately circulated. You don’t say because a judge has read it in a newspaper, he’s supposed to take notice of it. The facts might be different. There should be a platform by which decisions are immediately circulated so no judge can claim they are not aware.

    On budget padding

    Some of us who are professionals cannot afford to come out because I have no house to sell to give somebody to vote for me because I want to serve. When you bring it home to the Dogara issue, that is why he would say he would not resign because it had almost cost him a hand and a leg to get there. There are no principles. In other climes, allegations that are not even up to that – being seen in a disco house, engaging a prostitute – would be seen as improper conduct and the person would throw in the towel. Once our political office holders start doing that then we’d be better off.

  • Recession: Why Buhari won’t go for quick fixes, by minister

    MINISTER of Information, Culture and National Orientation Alhaji Lai Mohammed has said the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration will not go for a quick fix solution to take Nigeria out of the recession.

    He said the Federal Government would not rely on quick fixes which, in the long term, will hurt the economy more.

    The minister, who spoke to The Nation in Abuja, said  in addition to diverting the economy from oil production, the government would also expand its revenue base without increasing taxes on the people.

    “We cannot go for quick fixes because it won’t help the economy, there are things we could have done but in the long term it won’t help the economy, for instance people are saying why can’t government bring in food items, you cannot in one breath be asking people to go back to farm and there will be a glut because those food will come cheaper than the ones you produce here and what is going to happen is that you will not be able to continue with your agricultural reforms,” the minister said.

    Alhaji Mohammed said: “Our problem was that we relied heavily on just one product, and any problem with that single source of income was bound to have disastrous effect on the economy.

    “When you have an economy, which is reliant on just one product, it means that any failure in that product will lead to reduction in your revenue, reduction in your foreign exchange, it will affect all import-related services, it will cripple your industry, your ability to manufacture because you have less revenue you can’t even bring in raw materials and your machinery, even duties collected by the Customs will be affected, so until you fix that, what you need is how do I get more foreign exchange, how do I get more revenue? That is the solution and that’s what we are doing.

    “What we have done is to expand the revenue base without necessarily increasing tax, for instance most countries in the world depend on tax, Nigeria is one of the worst example where only few pay tax, this year alone, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has added 700,000 new companies into the tax net, that is a huge step. We have also resolved that not less than 30 per cent of our revenue will be invested in infrastructure.”

    The minister said investment in infrastructure over a longer term would re-engineer the economy. He cautioned that diversifying the economy will not happen overnight but the Buhari administration will ensure that measures are put on ground to provide palliatives.

    “Even when you say you want to diversify the economy, it can’t happen overnight, if you grow cocoa, cashew or coffee it takes time, that’s why in the meantime what do we do? It is a function of the resourcefulness of this government that despite the fact that we have lost about 60 per cent of our revenue due to drop in oil prices and oil production, if you look at what we have achieved in the last 16 months you will be amazed.

    “Take for example in 2014, N400  billion was voted for housing, in 2015 nothing was voted, in 2016 we have budgeted N 35 billion. Let us look at actual spending, in 2015, only N12 billion was invested in roads, this year we have invested N197 billion in roads, housing and power.

    “We have paid to contractors on road about N240 billion, about 9,000 workers have been recalled and they have moved to about 12 sites but there are two issues, when you owe somebody about N70 billion and you pay them 10 billion they won’t move to site, but it is this second tranche of payment that is making then see that this government is serious because for about three years they didn’t pay them anything.”

    The minister said the government would improve the economy and using its resourcefulness to intervene on many occasions.

  • Recession is best opportunity for  self discovery, says  Ahmed

    Recession is best opportunity for self discovery, says Ahmed

    Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed has urged Nigerians to see the  economic recession as the best opportunity for self and national discovery.

    Ahmed spoke when the Emir of Borgu in Niger State, Muhammed Sani Dantoro, visited him at the Government Lodge in Ilorin, the state capital.

    Ahmed said developed countries, including the United States of America, Germany, Canana, Spain and Ireland, have had recession and came out of it stronger, adding that nothing should make the Nigerian experience different.

    Ahmed suggested that to hasten the recovery, diversification of the economy through agricultural development is the panacea.

    “We must take advantage of God given opportunities. This is the best time to do it. When you are in a recession, take advantage of yourselves and move on as a country,” he said.

    He called for agricultural development synergy between Borgu Emirate in Niger State and Baruten and Kaiama Local Government areas of Kwara State in the drive for the diversification of national economy.

    “It is becoming clearer that except we imbibe an agricultural economy which is expected to translate into being able to feed ourselves and to create wealth, the desired economic growth may not be achieved.”

    Emir Dantoro said his visit was to strengthen the bond between the people of Borgu Kingdom and their kith and kin in Kwara State.

    The Emir urged the governor to use his good offices in ensuring that the federal roads such as Wawa-Kaiama road which connect the communities receive necessary interventions from the federal government.

    He also urged the political class to ensure that national unity was not jeopardized as “the unity of this country is paramount for national development”.

  • Recession: NASS hands 20 points resolution to Buhari

    Recession: NASS hands 20 points resolution to Buhari

    The National Assembly has sent a 20-point  agenda to the executive arm of government as its contribution to the  resolution of the current economic recession, according to Senate President Bukola Saraki.

    He told State House correspondents at the end of the 56th Independence Anniversary at the Presidential Villa, Abuja yesterday that, the National Assembly has already started implementing four of the resolutions concerning it.

    He said: “Already, as you have seen, we have sat down to address the important issue which is the economy. We have come out with about 20 points to the executive that we think they should do.

    “We also have about four for ourselves. And we have started doing it already. The last session, we started addressing some of these issues that we are sure will make us come out of this recession in a short while.

    “We will start preparing for 2017 budget to ensure that there will be release of funds that would be spent to do that.”

    Saraki said that tough as the recession is, the problem is not insurmountable.

    “I believe that we can do it. Like I said earlier, we have stayed united; we have stayed focused, determined and hard working. It is not something that we cannot achieve. The potentials are there. We will weather it.”

    On the issue of the Niger-Delta, he said that the National Assembly will be favorably disposed to looking at the appropriation for the amnesty programme in the 2017 Budget.

    “This is what we are looking at. We understand the challenges and we will play our own role to ensure we get out of it,” he said.

    Saraki said that the recession notwithstanding, Nigeria has achieved a lot over the last 56 years, saying: “people will wonder what we are celebrating. As a country, we have stayed united. We have taken up a lot of challenges and we have come out better.

    “I believe we have the capacity and the expertise to do it this time around. People just have to believe in the country and we will get there.”

    On his part, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said: “I think it is a time for a lot of hope and expectation. I think that in the next few years, we will demonstrate the real capacity of our country in everywhere. We will prevail.”

    Former Chief of General Staff, Ebitu Ukiwe said that the future will be rosy for Nigeria if the path of righteousness is followed and the problems corrected.

    “There are many ways of sharing or understanding what the future could be. If we follow the path of righteousness and correct all the nagging problems, the future will be rosy.

    “But if we continue allowing all the problems all over the place, disrupting the society with the worst of crimes and so on, the future will be bleak.

    “But I choose to believe that we can make the future much better that what it is now,” he added

    Another former Chief of General Staff, Gen. Oladipo Diya said: “Nigeria is moving ahead. As we go ahead, we’ll encounter all problems. We’ll fix the problems; we pray to God that the strength of Nigeria should be sustained. We should remain united and happy.”

  • Cleric blames families for recession

    The current recession is basically down to lack of proper family finance skills, President of Living Home Foundation, Pastor Bisi Adewale, has declared.

    Most families, he pointed out, are badly run financially putting the entire nation in economic meltdown.

    Adewale neither the former administrator nor the current one should be blamed for the economic hardship.

    Rather, he said, Nigerians should look at how family finances are being run.

    Adewale, who spoke last weekend during the fourth edition of the Lagos Singles and Marriage conference, described Nigerians as rain spenders.

    Many families, according to him, “don’t save for when will be in needs.”

    This, he said, attributes for why many families complain of seemingly hard times.

    Adewale said: “Recession is personal and we can overcome if we check the way we spend money.

    “Expensive schools for children and high- rent houses are uncalled for at this point in the nation as this is not the time to impress anybody and suppress your pockets.

    “Ministers of the gospel, who go about in expensive cars, in this recession period show that there is something wrong.

    “They should not sell our national assets. Let them sell their planes and all those government assets.

    “Government officials should cut their spending and couples should plan their finances.

    “If all these can be done, we will see that Nigeria is not in any recession.

    “Recession is personal and can be overcome if families check the way they spend money.”

  • Recession: NASS offers 20-point resolution to Buhari

    Recession: NASS offers 20-point resolution to Buhari

    To overcome the economic recession in the country, the National Assembly has sent twenty point resolutions to the Executive arm of government.

    The Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki disclosed this to State House correspondents at the end of the 56th Independence anniversary at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Saturday.

    According to him, the National Assembly has already started implementing four of the resolutions concerning the legislature.

    “Already, as you have seen, we have sat down to address the important issue which is the economy. We have come out with about 20 point resolutions to the executive that we think they should do. We also have about four for ourselves. And we have started doing it already,” Saraki said.

    “At the last session, we started addressing some of these issues that we are sure will make us come out of this recession in a short while.

    “We will start preparing for 2017 budget to ensure that there will be releases of funds that would be spent to do that.”

    Though he agreed that things are tough in the country, Saraki said that the problems are not insurmountable.

    “I believe that we can do it. Like I said earlier, we have stayed united, we have stayed focused, determined and hard working. It is not something that we cannot achieve. The potentials are there. We will weather it,” he said.

    On the issue of the Niger-Delta, he said that the National Assembly will be favorably disposed in looking at the budget of amnesty Programme in the 2017 Budget.

    “This is what we are looking at. We understand the challenges and we will play our own role to ensure we get out of it.

    “We have been able to achieve a lot for the country. I am sure in present times, people will wonder what we are celebrating. As a country, we have stayed united. We have have taken up a lot of challenges and we have come out better.

    “I believe we have the capacity and the expertise to do it this time around. People just have to believe in the country and we will get there,” the Senate President

  • Recession boosts ‘Made-in-Nigeria’ items

    Recession boosts ‘Made-in-Nigeria’ items

    Nigerians are fast adjusting to the present economic realities. Many consumers, who, hitherto used foreign made goods, are now looking inwards in order to cushion the effects of the hard times.

    In the view of Mr. Isaac Onukwuba, a director at the National Orientation Agency (NOA), the craze and love for foreign made goods and services by Nigerians would compound the hardship in the country.

    According to him, the present economic downturn could be reversed if Nigerians produce, patronise, sell and consume locally made goods and services.

    Onukwuba said this while commenting on Made-in-Nigeria utility vehicle called “Transform Nigeria Vehicle,’’ manufactured by Innoson Motors in Nnewi, Anambra State.

    The NOA director said buying and selling made-in-Nigeria products and services should be done with the highest sense of national pride because “this is our own”.

    He explained that this was the only way Nigerians could gain from the rest of the world.

    “Promoting Made-in-Nigeria is the surest way of making Nigeria and Nigerians survive the current situation.

    “Those countries where we run to get all these imported products applied the same principles to build their economy,’’ he said.

    Like other chambers across the country, the Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI) has called on local industrialists and other stakeholders in the manufacturing sector to step up production forwards boosting the nation’s economy. Mr Jude Igwe, the Chairman, Organising Committee for the forthcoming 11th Abuja International Trade Fair, gave the advice at a news conference recently.

    “Experience has shown that our economy can no longer be sustained by that and that, is why the chamber has, after careful consideration, chosen the theme: `Make it in Nigeria’ as very apt. We must make it in Nigeria if we must find our way out of the current economic challenges. There are no two ways,’’ Igwe said.

    In the view of the Managing Director of Innoson Group of Companies, Dr Innocent Chukwuma, adequate investment in technological advancement would pave the way for local manufacturers and as well proffer lasting solution to the realisation of the present economic struggle in the country.

    The Innoson boss, who spoke during a day visit to the Centre for Basic Space Science (CBSS), University of Nigeria, Nsukka, observed that for any country to become an exporting nation, it has to patronise locally made goods to boost local production and the country’s economy.

    The decline in technological advancement in rural communities were the causes of the present economic challenges in the country, he said, stressing the need for local manufacturers to collaborate with government research agencies and universities, in order to actualise the vision of the present administration in the country for Nigerians to patronise locally made goods.

    Echoing similar sentiments, Mrs. Oluremi Tinubu, senator representing Lagos-Central Senatorial District while speaking at the ongoing Made in Nigeria Festival, MaIN Fest 2016, said the patronage of locally-made goods is key to growing the economy.

    The CEO of Konga.com, Shola Adekoya, speaking during a Panel Discussion titled: ‘Doing Business in Nigeria,’ said: “Where we are today isn’t acceptable to us as a nation and as a people. The rest of the world is moving on and we’re being left behind. We also need to keep in mind that there are new ways of doing things and we have to begin to leverage on them as government agencies, parastatals, and businesses to achieve desired results.”

    The Konga boss further stated that for a nation to make great progress, human and infrastructural developments are necessary.

    “The development of a nation is important, as it’s not just about discussing the issues plaguing the country, but focus should be on fixing them. As technology moves, we need to begin to rethink our policies and strategies so they align with technological advancements.”

    Speaking  Konga doing business in Nigeria, he said: “When Konga began no one believed that e-commerce could be successful in Nigeria but staying focused on our mission as the engine of commerce and trade in Africa, we are empowering indigenous MSMEs across the nation to reach a wider market across the country. Konga is helping MSMEs match with the fast changing technology by providing a platform that showcases their products to the entire world at just a click.”

    The Federal Government is on the verge of kick-starting a campaign on made-in-Nigeria goods, a move designed to encourage Nigerians to patronise locally-produced goods and services.

    This is part of the measures being adopted by the government to conserve foreign exchange, stimulate economic growth and create jobs.

    The government has also hinted of plans to commence the implementation of the National Industrial Revolution Plan (NIRP).

    Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, made the disclosure in Abuja recently while inaugurating the Joint National Planning Committee for the 22nd Nigeria Economic Summit (NES#22), scheduled for 10th to 12th of October, 2016, to be anchored by the Nigeria Economic Summit Group (NESG).

    The NESG prides itself as Nigeria’s most influential and leading private sector think-tank with a mandate to promote and champion the reform of the Nigerian economy into an open, globally competitive economy.

    Shedding light on the proposed summit, the minister said it will essentially be used to galvanise support from stakeholders on the need to commit to structural and fiscal changes required to strengthen the Nigerian economy.

    “It starts with changing our orientation in consumption pattern by shifting our mindset and preference for anything imported and foreign made to patronising made-in-Nigeria products,” he said.

    While acknowledging that there was a degree of truth in this, he pointed out that “we must challenge ourselves to do better”.

    “By encouraging patronage, we are challenging our manufacturers to invest in the technology required to upscale our quality. We are therefore calling on all our economic agents (government, corporate organisations and individuals) to re-orientate to Nigerian made goods and services first, before considering imported products,” Udoma stated.

    Justifying the need for the theme, the NESG secretariat said the theme ‘Made in Nigeria’ would be used to embody the imperative to commit to the structural and fiscal changes required to strengthen the Nigerian economy.

    The long term goals is to help reinvigorate moribund industries and services that have shown potentials in the past and curtail the growing demand for foreign exchange for consumption rather than capital products and equipment.

    Giving further insight on the Summit, the NESG secretariat said the event will begin with Ministry of Budget and National Planning Day and a plenary focusing on policy dialogue and macroeconomic environment.

     

  • Recession as opportunity to reverse resource curse

    And, sadly, it came to pass. It is well predicted that most countries blessed with natural resources, even in the best of times, perform worse economically than countries not so endowed; and that, when times are tough, countries that are dependent on natural resources come to an assured grief. There is a popular name for this strange but common condition: resource curse. It sounds metaphysical, it seems counter-intuitive even, but it is a position supported by enough evidence. And there can’t be better evidence than this: a Nigeria that is in the choke-hold of economic recession right after 15 years of consistently high oil prices and over N70 trillion of oil revenues earned by the federation.

    A recession might be a dramatic inflection point, but the brutal fact is that our country has never really been in sound economic health. A long spell of rising oil prices in much of our over four-decade addiction to oil had put us on a permanent high, masked the hollowness of our economic well-being, blind-sighted us to the dangers dancing in plain sight, and induced a costly work-avoidance in our leaders. Now that we are at this terrible pass, it will be tempting to just focus all our energy at getting growth back to positive zone. Without a doubt, getting out of recession should be the first order business. But doing only that will show us up, again, as a people eternally incapable of learning. This should be the time to finally wean ourselves of the unhealthy dependence on crude oil for most of our exports and government revenues; a time to reset the foundations of our economy and even of our politics; a time to get a permanent cure for what deeply ails us.

    Clearly, natural resources do not come embedded with supernatural curses, as the positive experiences of Norway, UAE, Malaysia and Botswana have shown. But it is also clear how natural resources end up as blights, and not blessings, just as it is clear what to do to reverse the curse. So the problem is not lack of knowledge. The problem is that resource-endowed countries either do not do enough to prevent the sad prophecy from fulfilling itself or do not do enough to ‘cure the curse’ after it has manifested. And these countries fail to take both preventive and curative measures because countries blessed with natural resources are prone to certain risks and disposed to certain choices that create delusions, dependencies and distortions, which inexorably turn natural resources to impeders, rather than enablers, of development.

    One known risk is that the prices of natural resources fluctuate. This creates revenue instability for countries that depend on resource rents to fund their budgets. Since this is known, the sensible thing would be for such countries to save enough when the prices are up as insurance against when the prices are down, and to use the windfall to create other more stable streams of income and to invest in the productive capacities of their people. But most resource-dependent countries rarely do that, as a surge of easy money induces the delusion of everlasting riches. Such countries get unreasonably high when prices of their natural resources are high and set themselves up for an inevitable fall when prices inevitably tumble.

    Three episodes in four decades of our history provide good illustration. In 1972, a barrel of crude oil sold for a yearly average of $1.82. By 1974, oil price leapt to $11 per barrel, then to $29.19 in 1979, and then to $35.52 in 1980. But by the time the price of oil marginally dropped to $29.04 in 1983, our economy was already in trouble. It is important to look at the figures again: we were not in trouble when oil was $1.82 in 1972, but we were in a deep mess 11 years later when oil was $29.04.

    A second episode: at the outset of democracy in 1999, oil sold for less than $20 per barrel (in actual fact, our Brent sold for a monthly average of $15.23 in May 1999). In the 15 years between 1999 and 2014, oil prices rose steadily (except for 2008/2009), soaring to almost $150 per barrel at a point. However, by the time oil prices fell just below $100 in September 2014, we were on the way to distress district, close to the dark place we were just 30 years earlier. It is important to underscore this again: when oil was selling for $20 per barrel we got by but when it started selling for a little below $100, it was another season for weeping and gnashing of teeth, with most states and even the federal government struggling to pay salaries. What happened with the two episodes is that we got deluded into thinking high prices would last forever, we stretched public finances to breaking point, and we saved little for the rainy day.

    But there is a third episode: oil prices tumbled from a high of $147 in June 2008 to $38 in December 2008. Yes, the dip was short. But we survived that slump largely because we had reserves in excess of $60 billion, which tied us over that bust time. Interestingly, the savings were largely accumulated at a period when oil never rose above $70 per barrel, when our oil supply was constrained on account of militancy in the Niger Delta and when $12 billion was paid to get debt forgiveness. But crude oil per barrel sold for an average of $77.38 in 2010, $107.46 in 2011, $109.45 in 2012, and $105.87 in 2013. However, by the time oil prices slipped to yearly average of $96.29 in 2014 and $49.49 in 2015, we did not have the kind of cover we had six years earlier not just because we didn’t save enough but also because we had also over exposed ourselves, as will be illustrated shortly. If the time between the first and the third episodes is long enough to induce amnesia, the space between 2008 and the onset of the current slide in oil prices is short enough to remind us of the risk we are constantly exposed to. But we failed to learn.

    Another known risk that turns natural resources to curses is that resource-rich countries are prone to corruption, low levels of accountability, and high incidence of profligacy. Because of the nature of resource rents, it is easier for those in authority in extractive economies (as opposed to tax economies) to corner and capture public resources and expend them anyhow. Beyond the predisposition to graft and the wastefulness, resource rents concentrate and consolidate public resources in a few hands, nurture a ruling elite more interested in private gains than the common good, foster a rentier, patronage, and predatory political ethos, fuel intense competition for power, conflicts, poverty and inequality, inverse the relations between citizens (the principals) and those in authority (the agents), and distort the interaction between state and society. All these conduce to opaque and unaccountable management of the revenues from natural resources. Even before the ongoing revelations and probes, reports by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) had provided more than ample evidence of the mind-boggling mismanagement of Nigeria’s main source of revenue.

    The other well known risk that resource-rich countries are exposed to is a dependency condition called the Dutch Disease. It manifests this way: massive inflows of foreign exchange on account of the high price of a natural resource raise the comparative value of the local currency and turn the economy into a high-cost one. This means that other sectors, like manufacturing and services that the country can earn foreign exchange from become uncompetitive and are crowded out; and imports also become cheaper, eventually knocking off local industry. A double but dangerous dependency is thus created: the country depends solely on the natural resource for foreign exchange; and depends on imports for almost all its needs. While consistently high prices will mask the trouble, onset of low prices will burst the bubble. This is where, sadly, Nigeria has found itself today. The 1,851% increase in the price of oil between 1972 and 1980 infected us with the Dutch Disease, so much so that we depend on crude oil for 85% of government revenues and about 95% of exports. And we import almost everything, including, shamefully, refined petroleum products (which constitute about 40% of forex demands.)

    This composite picture should show why Nigeria is in trouble today: little savings from a long boom time, and a 75% plunge in the price of a product that accounts for more than 80% of government revenues and foreign exchange in a country where so much revolves around government and in an import-dependent economy; fall in monthly forex earnings from $3.2 billion to about $400m sometime this year; decline in oil production from 2.2 million bpd to a little over one million bpd; and the growth in monthly import bill from N148.3 billion in 2005 to N917.6 billion in 2015 (519% increase). While it can be validly argued that recession could still have been averted, the oil and dollar dependence created a downward spiral: fall in the value of the Naira, cost-push inflation (since most things including industrial inputs are imported), drop in disposable incomes, which is compounded by the fact that most states are owing salaries, and the resultant negative impact on demand and ultimately on production. True, oil and gas sector now accounts for only 9% of our GDP, but our unhealthy dependence on it for government revenues and foreign exchange imbues the sector with a disproportionate heft. This we need to fix in a systematic and sustainable way.

    We can easily spend our way out of this recession or bump up production in high growth areas. Oil prices and production may even rise again, making the get-out-of-recession task easier. But all these will not cure us of the oil curse. Hopefully, the present pain will permanently bury doubts about the need for a robust stabilization fund and the imperative of strengthening transparency and accountability mechanisms like NEITI. But we also need to permanently puncture the lie that we are a rich country just because we have oil. It is a trite fact that the wealth of nations is not buried under the soil. Countries become rich when their people and their companies produce value-adding, highly-sought, cutting-edge goods and services. But beyond fixing the defective structure of our economy, we also need to reinvent our politics. A governance model that is defined by extraction, sharing and consumption surely cannot lead to development. And by the way, development doesn’t happen: it is created. Rahm’s Rule should thus be our article of faith: “you never want to let a serious crisis to go to waste.” The crisis of this recession has thrown a massive opportunity our way, the opportunity for a total reset. It will be a shame if, again, we fail to seize this chance to heal our country.

     

    • Adio is Executive Secretary of the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI)

     

  • We’re already walking out of  recession, says finance minister

    We’re already walking out of recession, says finance minister

    Finance Minister Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, yesterday said Nigeria was already walking out of the economic recession following some positive measures the Federal Government had taken.

    Mrs. Adeosun added that the recovery plan was to invest more in infrastructure and stop wastage in governance.

    The Minister, in an interview with reporters after the closing ceremony of the 2016 National Council of Finance and Economic Development (NACOFED) conference in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, noted that the economic recovery process would be driven from the local, state and the Federal Government levels.

    “We are investing more in capital expenditure than we have ever invested. We are sorting out infrastructure; we are stopping wastage and so the sign of recovery is already there.

    “We are already getting out of recession because of the actions the Federal Government is taking. If you are in a problem, the day you start to step towards progression, you are already getting out of it; we are getting out of it.

    “Agriculture and solid minerals are already starting to grow and so they are responding to our policy initiative and we are expected to continue in that direction.”

    “Nigeria is getting out of the trouble that we have found ourselves. We are turning things around and I believe everybody is united and everybody that was here (conference) represented the 36 states of Nigeria and this recovery will be driven from the state and local governments,” she said.

    According to her, the diversification of the economy from oil to agriculture and solid minerals is yielding positive results.

    She urged the Finance Commissioners from the 36 states and other stakeholders at the conference not to see economic recovery as the Federal Government’s responsibility, but rather join hands to save the economy.

    “There are no Federal people; everybody lives in the states. So having everybody together working in the same direction is very important and I want everybody to be included,” Mrs. Adeosun said.

  • How to pull economy out of recession, by Skye Bank chief

    How to pull economy out of recession, by Skye Bank chief

    The Group Managing Director of Skye Bank, Mr. Tokunbo Abiru, has encouraged Nigerians to patronise made-in-Nigeria goods as one of the ways to reflate the economy and save the nation from the present recession with its attendant challenges.

    Mr. Abiru spoke while delivering a paper at the Made-in-Nigeria Summit titled: Empowering the Made in Nigeria (MAIN) Economy: Fostering Innovation and Leveraging Entrepreneurship which is holding at Eko Atlantic City, Victoria Island, Lagos schedule for between  September 26 and October 1.

    Mr. Abiru stressed the need for Nigerians to patronise made-in-Nigeria goods and services as a way out of the present recession.

    He said: “This will help to boost local production, create more employment thereby prevent capital flight, which will eventually lead to the export of goods made-in-Nigeria to other countries and earn foreign exchange.

    “When we patronise locally made goods, we are invariably contributing to enhanced operations of local manufacturers and entrepreneurs; create more jobs; improve quality of products and ultimately stimulate local consumption that impact the local economy.

    “When the local small medium enterprises (SMEs) are empowered through enhanced patronage of products and services, it enables such players to meet their obligations to the larger society – through payment of taxes, sourcing raw materials, contributing to the growth of linkages and providing job opportunities for skilled and unskilled labour.”

    Over the past five years, MSMEs’ contribution to the gross domestic product (GDP) has grown steadily at a compound annual growth rate of 3.51 per cent to 51 percent in 2014.

    Renowned rating agency, Agusto & Co estimates that MSMEs will account for around 56 per cent of GDP by this year, largely due to the growth in wholesale and retail trade MSMEs.

    Mr Abiru used the occasion to share with the participants the bank’s contribution in the area of innovation and support to entrepreneurship.

    He noted that in a bid to support its customers in exploring the opportunities of the e-commerce age, Skye Bank currently has an e-commerce portal called Yes Mall. The portal provides free business enrolment platform for entrepreneurs to showcase their products to an online community which they ordinarily would not have reached. He stated that the testimonials from beneficiaries of the platform has been encouraging as the bank provides immense online shopping experience covering products and services.

    Other dignitaries at the event are  Minister of Works, Power and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola,  Director, Sahel Capital, Ndidi Nwuneli,  President of the Nigerian/British Chamber of Commerce, Prince Dapo Adelegan,  Executive Vice Chairman, Sahara Energy, Mr. Tonye Cole, among other panelists.