Okonjo –Iweala Fires Prof Charles Soludo , says he is self serving with an article deficit of facts, logic and honour
Nobody has ever spoken this way to our revered Prof Charles Soludo, but Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala replies him word for word, reports www.odogwublog.com
1. For
anyone who has not read Professor Charles Soludo’s article in the Vanguard
(online version) on January 25 2015, I would encourage them to do so. It is
littered with abusive and unbecoming language. It shows how an embittered loser
in the Nigerian political space can get so derailed that they commit
intellectual harakiri by deliberately misquoting economic
facts and maliciously turning statistics on their head to justify a hatchet
job. We hope all the intellectuals in the international circles in which
Professor Soludo has told us he flies around in will read what a Professor of
Economics has chosen to do with his intellect.
2. In
this one article Soludo has shamelessly pandered to so many past leaders that
Nigerians are asking one more time – what position is Soludo gunning for now?
He claims in his article that he has had his own share of public service, yet
he has failed twice in his attempts to be Governor of Anambra State and Vice
Presidential candidate of various parties. There is definitely an issue of
character with Prof. Charles Soludo and his desperate search for power and
relevance in Nigeria. Nigerians should therefore beware of so-called
intellectuals without character and wisdom because this combination is fatal.
3. But
let us turn to the main subject of Soludo’s discourse. So much of what is
written is outright nonsense and self-seeking aggrandizement that need not be
dignified with a response. It is totally remarkable that Professor Charles
Chukwuma Soludo, the man who presided over the worst mismanagement of Nigeria’s
banking sector as Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria between May 2004 and
May 2009, can write about the mismanagement of the economy.
4. Nigerians
must be reminded of his antecedents as CBN Governor, and even prior to that, as
the Chief Economic Adviser to the President. The consolidation of the banking
sector was a good policy idea of the Obasanjo Administration but Soludo went on
to thoroughly mismanage its implementation leading to the worst financial
crisis in Nigeria’s history. So what did Soludo do?
5. After
consolidation, the regulatory functions of the Soludo-led CBN were very poorly
exercised. As Governor, he failed to adequately supervise and regulate the now
larger banks – an anomaly in Financial Sector Supervision. In fact as every
Nigerian knows, in his time there was very little separation between the
regulators and the regulated which is a violation of a key requirement of Central
Banking success. This led to infractions in corporate governance in many banks
as loans and other credit instruments running to hundreds of billions of naira
were extended to clients without following due process, and several of these
loans could not be paid back. This massive accumulation of bad debts or
non-performing loans as they are called in the banking sector meant that our
banks were ill-positioned to deal with the global financial crisis when it hit.
6. In
fact, the banking sector was brought to its knees and required a massive
bailout by Nigerian tax payers. This bailout was done by his successor (now
Emir of Kano) who cleaned up all the bad debts and transferred them to the
newly-established AMCON, from where they are managed today. So let it be noted
for the record books that Soludo’s single-handed mismanagement of the banking
sector led to an incredible accumulation of liabilities that will cost tax
payers about N5.67 trillion (being the total face value of AMCON-issued bonds)
to clean up. Let it be noted also that this amount, which is more than the
entire Federal Government 2015 Budget, constitutes the bulk of Nigeria’s “contingent liabilities”
mentioned in Soludo’s article. It is only in Nigeria where someone who
perpetrated such a colossal economic atrocity would have the temerity to make
assertions on public debt and the management of the economy.
7. Let
us now look at some of the points he makes. Luckily, Soludo has told us that he
has been busy travelling internationally, hobnobbing with his global partners.
It is obvious from this article that from the rarefied heights at which he is
flying he is completely out of touch with what is happening with the management
of this economy. Take his comments on the mismanagement of the economy and the
imposition of the austerity measures. The present fall in OIL PRICES
, a global phenomenon over which Nigeria has
no control, has given every charlatan the opportunity to attack the economy,
and by extension the managers of the economy
8. It
is true that the economy grew well during the second-term of former President
Obasanjo as a result of the reforms supported by the President and implemented
by the Economic Management Team. Please note that the FINANCE
Minister
under whose leadership that good performance took place, including massive
unprecedented debt relief, is still Finance Minister today. But thorough
examination of the facts on performance under the Jonathan Administration will
also reveal that at a time when global economic performance was mediocre, with
GDP growth averaging about 3 percent per annum, Nigeria’s GDP growth –
averaging about 6 percent per annum – is indeed remarkable. Even more
interesting is the fact that the oil sector did not drive this economic
performance but the non-oil sector (Agriculture, Manufacturing,
Telecommunications, the Creative Economy, and so on), which shows that the
current Administration’s diversification objective under the Transformation Agenda is working. Transformation equals
diversification
9. This
current government managed to control inflation, which he Soludo, was not able
to do during his time at the helm of monetary policy in Nigeria. When he left
the Central Bank in 2009, inflation – which hurts the poor and vulnerable in
the society the most – was above 13 percent per annum. Now, inflation is at
single-digit, at 8 percent per annum. What about EXCHANGE RATES
? Well this administration again managed to
stabilize the naira exchange rates, such that between May 2011 and the end of
2014, official exchange rates against the dollar rarely moved out of the N153
to N156 band. It is only with the recent dramatic fall in oil prices and the
consequent impact on our foreign reserves that the exchange rate has become
quite volatile. The drop in oil price has been heavy and rapid impacting all
oil producing nations significantly. Nigeria is no exception and appropriate
fiscal and monetary policy measures are being put in place to manage this
situation.
10.
In fact, history will recall that careless remarks by Prof. Soludo
(then Chief Economic Adviser to the President) hypothesizing a possible naira
devaluation, condemned the naira to a free fall towards the end of 2003. Ray
Echebiri, in his 2004 article in the Financial Standard, wrote that not even
the assurances given by the then CBN Governor, Mr. Joseph Sanusi or President
Obasanjo that any plans to devalue the naira existed only in the head of
Professor Soludo could halt the fall of the naira from N128 to the dollar in
the official market to about N140 between September and December 2003.
11.
It is true that our foreign reserve accumulation is less than what
it should be but the reason for this has been fully given, not as excuses but
simply as fact: lower oil production and crude oil theft along with the refusal
to save in the Excess Crude Account (ECA) are the reasons. Contrary to what
Soludo said, oil production under President Obasanjo was higher than current
levels. Quantities produced averaged 2.4 million bdp, 2.22 million bpd, and
2.21 million bpd in 2005, 2006, and 2007 respectively but has declined now to
between 1.95 and 2.21 million bdp due to vandalism of the pipelines and the
resulting “shut-ins” to fix the problem. It is true that had production been at
the previous levels and had there been willingness to save we would have had
more money in the ECA and also in the reserves. But the overriding setback to
savings is that the State Governors felt it was their constitutional right to
share the money. Please recall that even as we speak the States have taken the
Federal Government to the Supreme Court on this issue
12.
Soludo’s claim that 71 percent of Nigerians live below the poverty
line is misleading and disingenuous. He uses 2011 statistics on poverty by the
NBS to support his argument while ignoring more recent figures. But as stated
in the Nigeria Economic Report 2014 by the World Bank, poverty rate in Nigeria
has dropped from 35.2 percent of population in 2010/2011 to 33.1 percent in
2012/2013. By the way, the reason why our poverty numbers have been so wrong is
that the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), under Soludo’s supervision as CEA
and Vice-Chair of the National Planning Commission, departed from the
international standard method of poverty measurement. Is he now ignoring the
right economic statistics to wilfully manipulate information?
13.
No doubt we have a problem with unemployment in this country and
we must deal with it. Indeed this Administration is dealing with it and stands
proud of what it has accomplished so far and is pushing hard to accomplish much
more. As a first step, the Administration, through the office of the Chief
Economic Adviser to the President and the NBS, worked hard to determine how
many jobs we need to create in a year. What you don’t measure you cannot make
progress on. Why didn’t Soludo do this when he was CEA?
14.
We need to create about 1.8 million jobs a year in this country to
cater for the new entrants into the labour market, but we also need to deal
with the backlog of the unemployed and the underemployed, e.g. those selling on
the streets. Dealing with this global challenge of unemployment is not an easy
task for any country, as can be seen from the experiences of developed
countries particularly in the euro area. But the Jonathan Administration is
making good progress, creating an average of about 1.4 million jobs per year by
driving quality growth in key sectors like Agriculture, where the bulk of new
jobs are being created, Housing, Manufacturing, Financial Services, and the
Creative Industries like Nollywood.
15.
In addition we have special programs to promote job creation among
the youth and these include:
·
Promoting entrepreneurship among the youth through the
“Nagropreneurs” program to support 750,000 youth farmers with grants and
training, and the YOUWIN program that is directly supporting up to
5,400 young entrepreneurs with grants, training, and mentorship and so far
beneficiaries are creating an average of 9 jobs each, for themselves and
others. About 22,000 jobs have been created by the first 2,400 youwinners.
·
Graduate Internship Scheme: that is reducing the vulnerability of
unemployed graduates by enhancing their employability. The Scheme targets up to
50,000 unemployed graduates in the 36 states of the Federation and FCT and
about 22,000 graduates have so far been placed by the program.
·
Community Services Scheme under SURE-P:
developed to empower young unskilled Nigerians, women and people with
disabilities. About 120,000 mostly young workers have been engaged across the
country
16.
On the issue of debt, Nigerians deserve to know the truth and we
have said it before. The truth is that the government borrowed in 2010 to pay
an unprecedented 53.7 percent wage increase to all categories of federal
employees as demanded by labour unions. The total wage bill rose from
N857 billion in 2009 to about N1.4 trillion in 2010, and as a result, domestic
borrowing increased from N200 billion in 2007 to about N1.1 trillion in 2010 to
meet the wage payments. Where was Soludo at the time? Why did he not react to
the borrowing then? Was it because he wanted to pander to labour in preparation
for his political career?
17.
It is noteworthy that since 2011, the Administration of President
Goodluck Ebele Jonathan has been prudent with the issue of debt and borrowing.
The Economic Management Team not only looks at debt to GDP ratio, where Nigeria
has one of the lowest numbers in the world at 12.51 percent but it looks at
debt service to revenues. That is why in spite of the rebasing and a larger
GDP, the administration has taken a prudent approach to borrowing. The prudent
approach helped to drive down domestic borrowing from N1.1 trillion in 2010 to
N642 billion in 2014. In fact for the first time in our nation’s borrowing
history we even managed to retire N75 billion of domestic bonds outright in
2013.
18.
Despite the present tough situation, we do not plan to go on a
borrowing spree but to keep borrowing modest at a level sufficient to help us
weather the present situation. We have already ramped up efforts to generate
more non-oil revenues for the government while cutting costs of governance.
Therefore, Soludo’s claim that this Administration is reckless with debt does
not hold true.
19.
Since Soludo seems so ignorant to what has been achieved by the
Jonathan Administration, let us present just a few examples of them here again.
This information is easily verified.
·
We are improving infrastructure across the country. For example, 22
airport terminals are being refurbished, and five new international airport
terminals under construction in Lagos, Port Harcourt, Kano, Abuja, and Enugu.
Soludo’s kinsmen in the South East now have an international airport in Enugu,
and for the first time in Nigeria’s history can fly direct from Enugu to
anywhere in world for which they are very grateful to this Administration. But
with Soludo being up in the air with his international travels, he has not
touched ground in the Southeast to observe this development for himself.
·
Various road and bridge projects have either been completed or are
under construction. Those completed include the Enugu – Abaliki road in
Enugu/Ebonyi States, the Oturkpo – Oweto road in Benue State, the Benin – Ore –
Shagamu highway, and the Abuja – Abaji – Lokoja dualization, and the Kano –
Maiduguri dualization. The Lagos – Ibadan expressway and the Second Niger
Bridge are under construction.
·
Rail from Lagos to Kano is now functional, as is parts of the rail
link between Port Harcourt and Maiduguri. All these have brought transport
costs down. We recognise that more needs to be done in the power sector, but
bold steps (like the privatisation of the GENCOs and DISCOs) have been taken,
and our gas infrastructure is being developed to power electricity generation
·
In Agriculture,
over 6 million farmers now have access to inputs like fertilizers and seeds
through an e-wallet system, which is more than the 403,222 that had access in
2011. Rice paddy production took off for the first time in our history, adding
about 7 million MT to rice supply. An additional 1.3 million MT of Cassava has
also been produced and as a result, the rate of food price increase has slowed
considerably, according to the NBS.
·
In Housing, we
have put in place a new wholesale mortgage provider – the Nigerian Mortgage
Refinance Corporation (NMRC) – to provide affordable mortgages to ordinary
Nigerians, starting with those in the low-middle income bracket. This sector
will help the economy grow as we tap it as an economic driver for the first
time. Mortgage applications from 66,000 people are currently being processed
and 23,000 have already received mortgage offers
·
Our Manufacturing sector
is reviving with new automobile plants by Nissan, Toyota, etc. This is in
addition to the backward integration policy in key sectors like petrochemical,
sugar, textiles, agro processing and cement, which Nigeria is now producing
39,000 MT and exporting to the region.
·
The Creative sector is now a factor in our GDP, with
Nollywood alone accounting for 1.4 percent, creating over 200,000 direct jobs
and nearly 1 million indirect jobs. This is the first Administration to
recognise its importance and support its further development with a grant
program.
·
A new bank – the Development Bank of
Nigeria – will
soon be operational and this bank will help bridge the access to finance gap,
which is a major constraint for the private sector especially SMEs. The bank
will provide long-term (5 – 10 years) FINANCING
at
affordable rates for the first time in our nation’s history.
20.
This is the path that the government has been on before this fall
in OIL PRICES
. The response to the economic shock has
been spelled out to the Nigerian public over and over again, and the
Administration intends to focus on managing this crisis appropriately. This
year will be difficult. To say anything less to Nigerians will be untruthful.
It would have been better if there had been a bigger cushion of the Excess
Crude Account to manage this situation but despite this the nation can rise to
the challenge. More importantly, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan and the
Economic Management Team are seeing this as an opportunity to diversify the
revenue sources of an already diversifying economy. In fact let me at this
juncture use this opportunity to comment on Soludo’s appalling statement that
rebasing brings no policy value. Rebasing has enabled us to better grasp the
new diversified nature of our economy. This provides the basis for our present
drive to support different sectors with appropriate policy instruments to
enhance their development. Rebasing has also enabled the Administration to create
the platform from which to drive our work on increasing non-oil revenues. These
are areas of critical policy value.
21.
Soludo mentioned the issue of the Economic Partnership Agreement
with the EU, noting that this Administration has not been vocal or clear on its
direction with this agreement. On the contrary, the Administration,
particularly the Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Investment has been clear on
this issue but since Soludo has been in the air he probably has not been aware
of this. Just recently, the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment
reiterated again to the corporate sector that Nigeria has not signed and does
not propose to sign the EPA in its present form.
22.
The point is that this government has been pursuing the right
economic policies, and its efforts have been acknowledged nationally and
internationally. Let me say that there are objective ways to measure
performance. There are international institutions globally accepted to do this.
They have acknowledged this Administration’s good economic management up to the
recent crisis and even now.
23.
We cannot go by someone’s subjective view, driven by bitterness
and bile. We need to look to the truth and to professionalism. This is where
Professor Soludo totally fails. For the other gratuitous, political, and
personal attacks, we are sure that those mentioned will respond appropriately.
It is a sad day for Nigeria and the economics profession that someone like
Soludo, a former CBN governor should write such an article. If Soludo wants to
regain respect, he should return to the path of professionalism. He certainly
needs something to improve his image from that of someone whose sojourn into
National Economic Management ended in disaster for the banking sector, his
sojourn in politics, ended in overwhelming rejection by the electorate, and
more recently, his sojourn abroad, has put him out of touch with the reality of
the Nigerian economy.
Paul C Nwabuikwu
Special Adviser to the Coordinating Minister
for the Economy and Minister of Finance
Okonjo –Iweala Fires Prof Charles Soludo , says he is self serving with an article deficit of facts, logic and honour
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
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