A former
governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Charles Chukwuma Soludo, on
Tuesday renewed attacks on the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan
after
he had accused the reigning government of inefficient management of the
economy. The former CBN boss has gone ahead to categorically tell the President
that the amount stolen from the nation’s coffers out surpasses the federal
budget.
The
professor of Economics, who had earlier vowed to suspend his comments about the
country till the general elections are over, broke his vow by issuing a lengthy
piece released on Tuesday, where he noted that waiting till the end of the
elections would make him susceptible to misrepresentations.
Jonathan
had while granting an interview to Thisday dismissed Soludo’s allegation that
N30 trillion was missing from the federation’s account by insisting that the
amount could not have been stolen. But the former governor of the apex bank in
his Tuesday article stood his ground.
According to him, “I had earlier stated that I would
not make further comments on the issues until probably after the elections but
since Mr. President has decided to join the fray, I am constrained to make a
further brief clarification.
“ThisDay
quoted Mr. President as saying that ‘Soludo said that under Ngozi’s watch they
stole N30 trillion’ but that since the sum of the federal budget over the last
four years was less than N30 trillion, such an amount could not have been
‘stolen’.
“I
believe that the pressures of office and the hectic electioneering campaigns
have not allowed him time to read my articles or that his staff have not
explained the contents to him hence he totally missed the point in his
comments.
“It is
evident that the monies I referred to are ‘off-budget’. These are monies that
did not make it to the budget. I find it funny that the government deliberately
avoided the issues raised above but instead has sought to divert attention by
focusing on the ‘federal budget’.
“Let me
state for the record that I believe that the amount of resources that are
either stolen from the economy or out-rightly mismanaged by government far
exceeds the federal budget per annum. Ours is about a N100 trillion economy,
and I will be shocked if the government pretends that it does not know that
currently about 10% of the GDP falls into a ‘black hole’ on annual basis,” he
said.
Soludo
berated the idea of government basing its success on the assessment of foreign
organizations like the CNN and World Bank, saying that not all projections of
those organizations are accurate.
Lamenting
that what he finds “particularly disconcerting as a Nigerian from the comments
I read is the fixation to validation from the World Bank,” he quoted President
Jonathan as saying, “we asked the minister how her colleagues at the World Bank
saw the accusation”. To this, Soludo said he shook his head in disbelief.
He
furthered that “It is instructive that no one asked what Nigerians thought or
‘how Nigerians saw it’ but rather what was important to government was the
impression of the World Bank. If this is the mindset of our leaders, then
ordinary citizens have real cause to worry.
“Well, I
have read several editorial comments of Nigerian media and they do not agree
with the ‘impression’ of the World Bank official. I read a similar comment by a
high government official stating that World Bank officials and CNN had told
them that government was doing well and therefore who else could question them.
“But
neither the World Bank nor CNN conducts comprehensive independent surveys on
the economy – they comment based on the data they are given – and their
subjective opinions cannot substitute for hard facts.
“The
World Bank is not a statistical agency. I can provide a long list of countries
that World Bank reports praised as ‘star performers’ and they slumped into deep
crisis almost immediately after.
“Check
out the World Bank and IMF reports on the US and other countries’ economies
shortly before the unprecedented global financial and economic crisis in 50
years (the Great Recession of 2008/09). Actually for many countries once they
start getting such ‘praises’, then perceptive officials begin to worry.
“Nigeria
is probably the only country where its government officials quote the World
Bank while ignoring data from its own statistical agency,” the erudite scholar
averred.
Soludo fires President Jonathan on Missing N30 Trillion
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Rating:


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