From left: Former governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Prof. Chukwuma Soludo and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the 4th APC Progressive Governors’ Forum lecture in Kaduna yesterday |
Former Central Bank
governor Prof. Chukwuma Soludo has asked President Muhammadu Buhari’s
government to stop blaming the past administration for the poor state of the
economy.
Daily
Trust report continues:
He
said the government should rather begin to think out of the box.
Nigeria
would have avoided a recession, he said, adding that one year of the blame game
is enough, and that the government should blame its failures instead.
However,
Vice President Yemi Osinbajo retorted that the criticism was inevitable because
the level of corruption under the past administration had not been experienced
in any country in the world.
Both
spoke at the 4th Lecture Series of the Progressive Governors’ Forum in Kaduna
yesterday.
Soludo had also scored the economy low saying the Nigeria Capital Market was still in coma with trillions of naira lost in assets, nominal exchange rate on free-fall with crude capital controls and more than 100 percent of Capital expenditure borrowed.
Soludo had also scored the economy low saying the Nigeria Capital Market was still in coma with trillions of naira lost in assets, nominal exchange rate on free-fall with crude capital controls and more than 100 percent of Capital expenditure borrowed.
“Aggregate
revenue to the country has imploded while there is import compression and
falling customs revenue; income has fallen due to poor tax administration while
public sector employees are owed months of salary,” he said.
The
Former CBN governor also faulted the manner President Buhari is fighting
corruption which he said only aims at the symptom and not the ailment.
“I
don’t believe the way we are fighting corruption is the way we should go about
it. We are only fighting corruption on the surface; we have to fight it from
the systemic level.”
But Prof. Osinbajo in his response said the administration was not blaming the past administration for the sake of finger pointing but due to the realities on the ground.
He said the level of corruption that took place during the past administration was to the level that had not been experienced in any country in the world stating that in one sector alone US$15 billion was found to have been stolen.
But Prof. Osinbajo in his response said the administration was not blaming the past administration for the sake of finger pointing but due to the realities on the ground.
He said the level of corruption that took place during the past administration was to the level that had not been experienced in any country in the world stating that in one sector alone US$15 billion was found to have been stolen.
The
vice president said in a situation where the external reserve of the country
was about US$30 billion it was shocking that a whopping US$15 billion could be
missing in one sector alone.
“Where
you find US$15 billion stolen in just one sector, you know that it is a major
problem in the country where our eternal reserve is 30 billion,” he stated.
Soludo had earlier advised the APC governors on how to tackle the economic challenges facing their states. He stressed that economic growth in Nigeria and the states would not be inclusive if the states do not break the dynasty of poverty, maximize the comparatives and competitive advantage they have.
Soludo noted that 11 States in the North which have the highest rate of population growth and are affected by desertification are the ones suffering from the worst form of poverty in Nigeria.
Soludo had earlier advised the APC governors on how to tackle the economic challenges facing their states. He stressed that economic growth in Nigeria and the states would not be inclusive if the states do not break the dynasty of poverty, maximize the comparatives and competitive advantage they have.
Soludo noted that 11 States in the North which have the highest rate of population growth and are affected by desertification are the ones suffering from the worst form of poverty in Nigeria.
He
said; “55 million people in 11 states are under serious threat (Adamawa;
Bauchi; Borno; Gombe; Katsina; Jigawa; Kano; Kebbi; Sokoto; Yobe; Zamfara) and
these account for 40% of Nigeria’s land: These are also the POOREST States in
Nigeria while crop yields in these states have dropped by 20 percent. The
collapse of oil price is a great opportunity and blessing for Nigeria as
it offers ample room for the states to improve on their revenue from the less
than 5 percent of GDP they currently record.”
He
said it would be the first time Nigeria would be expected to transform its
economy without external conditionalities.
He
recalled that in the previous administrations, economic policies were being
monitored and teleguided by the super powers and other multi-lateral
organizations.
He
however said the APC government must have the discipline to see those
programmes to logical conclusion.
Soludo
said the way out of the poverty cycle for the states will be to develop the
education sector so that the children of the poor will be given same
opportunity with others to participate in the economy.
He
advised the APC governors to move from an election winning coalition that only
wanted to grab power to a governing team.
With
the control of the federal government and 23 states in the country the APC has
no excuse to fail, he said.
“The
APC should go back to its manifesto and instigate framework that will engender
the atmosphere for growth as Nigeria cannot develop with the current structure
where institutions are created only to share from the federation account,” he added.
“APC
needs to come clean with Nigeria, explain to Nigeria’s the agenda and steps it intends
to take within the timeline to get there. Be the change that we want to see.
When we communicate change, symbolism is important. Nigerians have given you a
mandate of change, now deliver the change that you promised,” he stated.
Governor of Kaduna State, Nasir El-Rufai in his welcome address noted that Nigeria is facing economic crisis saying the problems are due to past and present missteps adding that Nigeria needs a fundamental shift from how things were done in the past.
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