The Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI), on Sunday, said the economic reforms of the President Bola Tinubu’s administration were based on a clear plan to salvage the economy.
Dr Omoniyi Akinsiju, Chairman of IMPI, in a statement, said years of populist macro-economic policies had sunk the country to a level that it had to change course or be doomed.
“We have observed with interest the criticisms that continue to trail the reforms implemented by President Bola Tinubu’s administration. Of particular interest are two opinions that gained some traction.
“One of the critics finds the reforms to be a: ‘wreckage of the past 15 months, from which the country is reeling.’
“The other viewpoint, an editorial, brands the ‘government as insensitive and strategy-deficient.’ It also sees the government as incompetent to perform its primary duty of delivering welfare and security to the people.’
“These attacks on the ongoing reforms are natural if viewed from the relatively narrow and subjective context of the steep change in the country’s cost of living,” said the group.
It said the reality of the nation’s current macroeconomic situation was a consequence of its past.
“When the premise and predicates of the nation’s economic trajectory are reviewed and aggregated, the apparent conclusion will be that we are where we are because this affliction of economic malaise at this point is predetermined.
“Since 1972, the Nigerian economy has been characterised by an unpredictable circle of bust and boom.
“In layperson’s terms, it means that one moment, we are deemed rich and able to buy whatever catches our fancy, and everybody, including the media, is happy. The next, we are flat broke.
“We lament the difficulties encountered in sating our basic needs, whining and criticising the government in power as the source of our decimated existence,” said IMPI.
IMPI cited similarities between Nigeria and Venezuela, another oil-rich country to drive home its position.
It said: “Like Venezuela, oil has taken Nigeria on an exhilarating but dangerous boom-and-bust ride.
“Again, like Nigeria, decades of poor governance have driven what was once one of Latin America’s most prosperous countries to economic and political ruin.
“In 2008, crude oil production in Venezuela was the tenth-highest in the world at 2,394,020 barrels per day, and the country was also the eighth-largest net oil exporter in the world.”
It said Venezuelan leaders implemented the wrong macroeconomic policy between 2000 and early 2010 when Venezuela’s economy, like that of Nigeria, was booming due to a prolonged period of high and rising grain, metal, oil and gas prices.
“Between 2000 and 2015, government spending in Nigeria, like Venezuela, was deeply pro-cyclical.
“Instead of saving at least some money for bad times during the good times – as Norway, Saudi Arabia, and virtually all other oil exporters have done – Nigeria established the Excess Crude Account (ECA) by fiat in 2004 without legislative backing.
“In May 2007, the ECA had up to $20 billion. Still, like the Venezuelan government, which ran double-digit fiscal deficits as the economy boomed, spending far outpaced income from taxes and other revenues.
“Both countries were on record for raising their external debts six fold to finance these unnecessary shortfalls,” said the statement.
While Venezuela saddled the state-owned oil company with over $100 billion in obligations, IMPI said the Nigerian government depleted the ECA by more than 80 per cent, from $20 billion to $2.4 billion.
The IMPI, quoting a World Bank report, said like Venezuela, which lost $300 billion to corruption through its foreign currency system, Nigeria incurred a loss of N13.2 trillion implementing its foreign exchange subsidy policy between 2021 and 2023.
The policy group noted that it was against this backdrop that the Tinubu administration introduced reforms targeted at preventing the country from going the path of Venezuela.
[…] Orientation, Ahaji Mohammed Idris, says President Bola Tinubu is committed to alleviating the suffering of […]