For some of us who were ardent supporters of the
Buhari/Osinbajo campaign team during the electioneering period, our faith in
the team’s ability to swiftly turn around the socio-economic situation of the
country is fast dwindling for reasons not so far-fetched.
Secondly, no clear strategy has been presented for the
transformation of key sectors. The education sector is yet to witness any shift
in its direction, the president recently sacked and appointed new Vice
chancellors into 13 of the nation’s recently established universities, a move
that has set tertiary education back by decades. We are back to the era when
universities suffered from absolute government control, a direct opposite of
what is required to produce leading centers of research and academic
excellence. The health sector is still
moribund; there has been no form of swift change in the efficiency of our
healthcare institutions. Our government hospitals are still a no-go area. To
make it worse, president Buhari was in the UK for a five day vacation in
February 2016, a visit that was rumored to have been a medical visit, though
denied by government officials. Medical visit or not, this is not a departure from
the past. When will the president begin to visit Obudu cattle ranch or any of
the several resorts scattered across Nigeria for such short vacation? And when
will our Leaders be checked up by medical experts on Nigerian soil? The body
language from the Buhari presidency doesn’t seem to show that an end to this
medical tourism is anywhere in sight.
The realities in the power sector are even more heart
breaking than all others combined. While electricity output greatly improved in
major cities after the swearing-in of the president in 2015, a situation that
was commended by several stakeholders to be a direct result of the power of a
strong-willed government to influence operational efficiency even without
issuing orders; the power situation has since fallen to a record low of 3,720
megawatts as at December 2015, now picking up gradually in the first quarter of
2016 to just above 4,000. As at the time of writing this, Babatunde Fashola is
yet to tell us clearly how we will improve the power sector other than through
tariff increase, and what he intends to do differently from past ministers.
From his public statements, it appears Fashola intends to maintain the current
status quo with government interference in the power sector, a direct
contradiction to what his stance was when he was governor when he advocated a
complete overhaul of the laws regulating electricity such that independents can
generate power without having to connect to the national grid! Same goes for
other sectors like rail, maritime, agriculture, ICT, etc. What exactly is the
transformation roadmap for these key sectors almost one year after?
Thirdly and lastly, the economy is crumbling! While we know
that the Buhari government inherited a badly damaged country economic wise, we
expect that there will be a clear economic blueprint by now. We have waited for
11 months and have yet seen no blueprint for the economy going forward. The
capital market, the banks, manufacturing sector, and worse of all our currency
are all groaning under the pains of the economic crisis we have found ourselves
in! To make an already bad situation worse, our government seem to be swimming
towards the same direction that crumbled giants like China and the old Soviet
union before they transformed – Big government! The Buhari administration seems
to be swimming strongly towards big government in an age where the world is
moving towards smaller governments and bigger private sector-led economies! The
president is romancing with the idea of rejuvenating the long dead Nigerian
Airways, continued control of the power sector and railways, overbearing
influence on the education sector, the police, and a strong government control
of the naira!
The Naira has become the symbolic representation of all that
is currently wrong with the Nigerian economy in recent times, commodity prices
have shot through the roof due to the free fall of the naira in the parallel
markets and the ban of over 41 items from the FOREX markets. The way the Buhari
government is managing the FOREX crisis shows a clear case of cluelessness on
the part of the economic management team and the lack of a strategic direction
for fixing the economic rot that has led us to where we are. The president and
his team seem not to have realized that the currency is a direct function of
the performance of the market economy. The more you produce, the more demand
for your currency. The more demand for your currency, the stronger your
currency becomes in the FOREX market! President Buhari must be made to
understand, as a matter of urgency, that in a real market economy, a currency’s
exchange rate is not “regulated” by the government. We cannot continue to subsidize the banks at
the expense of the ordinary citizens! We cannot continue to make a few richer
and impoverish the majority! The banks and a few other powerful corporations
and individuals buy at the CBN rate and in turn sell at the parallel rate. Who
then is the government benefiting?
What is required urgently is a massive drive towards private
sector involvement and a leaner government. We expect by now to witness
absolute privatization of the power sector, transport sector, infrastructure
development, oil and gas industry, etc. Government needs to declare a systemic
closure of its borders to enhance production of certain commodities, which will
ultimately lead to total closure in the mid to long-term. All forms of subsidy
on consumption and importation should be immediately scrapped, be it petroleum
subsidy, rice subsidy or Naira subsidy (CBN control of the naira). These
trillions of naira can be used to subsidise production instead, with a very
strict and controlled framework to ensure whatever support is granted goes into
production processes and not diverted into bigger imports as witnessed in the
rice importation rackets under the GEJ regime. It is absolutely ridiculous that
we are the world’s second largest importer of rice after China, with a
population of about 10% of China, and despite our massive arable land of over
78% of our land mass. Nothing says we cannot produce what we eat, and even
export to China!
We need some semblance of a military-like approach in the
transformation of our borders, seaports, and airports to prevent the ridiculous
way contrabands get smuggled in with ease. We need an authoritarian, private
sector-style leadership in the sanitization of all our military and
para-military organizations, ministries, departments and agencies. We cannot
expect to adopt the slow and often futile democratic process in achieving a
total turn-around of our key sectors. No third world, highly corrupt nation has
ever achieved such with democratic style, from our neighboring Ghana under J.J.
Rawlings, to Singapore under Lee Kuan Yew, to China starting under Hua Guofeng;
but most importantly under Deng Xiaoping and other Post-Mao Chinese leaders.
Democratic principles can be used to regularise the polity after having achieved
socio-economic stability through private-sector type authoritarianism,
certainly not before.
Generally, privatisations are driven by the desire to
increase competitiveness and efficiency and the belief that the powers of the
market place can achieve this better than state control. Moreover, given the
antecedents of government’s participation in goods and services production in
Nigeria, and the long history of crisis bedeviling these public enterprises,
privatisation is the only logical way to go. A leaner government that will be
strategically focused on regulation, taxation, corruption war, social welfare,
security and diplomacy is what we need. Any attempt to increase the already
overbearing government involvement in the economy is destined to fail! As it
stands, our total non-petroleum exports is a mere $3 billion dollars which is
less than 1% of our over $530billion GDP. This poses bigger trouble for the
country’s currency in the nearest future if not quickly arrested by the
measures earlier described. No amount of currency control can save a
“production-less” economy. The best controls government can exert on the
economy or the currency are controls done through effective fiscal policy,
economic policy, and monetary policy. That is where it stops, the market should
be left to determine the outcome of economic indices within the framework of
those policies.
A leaner government will give government free time to focus
on social welfare initiatives like education and healthcare, which rank amongst
the highest sources of intellectual and FOREX flight from our country. Some of the schools and health institutions
under the federal government should be concessioned immediately to well
qualified institutions/organisations with the mandate to carry out systemic
transformation of our schools and healthcare institutions. Government can then
in turn provide education subsidies from the billions already generated from
the 2% education tax being imposed on Nigerian companies to cushion the effect
of the inevitable increase in the fees of such schools. Healthcare insurance
can also be provided to indigent citizens in the form of obamacare or
strengthen our existing National Health Insurance Scheme. A handful of legacy
institutions can be left under government control, but must be granted full
autonomy to govern its affairs the way similar leading institutions operate
globally.
The Buhari some of us voted for was the Fascist Buhari we
all knew, or read about, not this Buhari. Our president needs to rescue himself
from this alter-ego of a self-proclaimed democrat who intends to please
everybody and may end up pleasing nobody. Our president needs, as a matter of
urgency, to rescue our crumbling economy from his new school Buharism
ideologies!
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