Why economic reform is the key to solving Nigeria's corruption problem
On April 3, 2016, the Panama Papers release revealed that Nigeria’s
Senate President Bukola Saraki, ex-Senate President David Mark and
former Minister of Defense Theophilus Danjuma, had funneled assets to
offshore tax havens. This revelation was the latest in a string of
embarrassing setbacks for the anti-corruption campaign launched by
Nigeria’s president Muhammadu Buhari after his election victory last
March.
On April 9, Nigerian anti-corruption NGO CACOL (Coalition Against
Corrupt Leaders), condemned Buhari’s silence on the Panama Papers. These
criticisms once again fuelled speculation that Buhari’s strident
anti-corruption rhetoric is merely a cynical ploy to weaken the
opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP).
While the jury is still out on Buhari’s commitment to combatting
corruption, there is compelling evidence that Buhari’s anti-corruption
efforts are misdirected in their focus. Buhari has focused on holding
corrupt officials and ex-politicians accountable by demonstrating that
his campaign to improve the rule of law has no “sacred cows.”
However, Buhari is making a grave mistake by focusing primarily on the
political dimension of corruption and largely neglecting the economic
drivers of corruption in his reform efforts. Three characteristics of
the Nigerian economy are responsible for the frustratingly erratic
nature of Buhari’s anti-corruption campaign. These problematic aspects
of the Nigerian economy will be outlined below:
1) Buhari’s Naira Peg Has Allowed Some Businesses to Gain Unfair Advantages Over Their Competitors
The first characteristic is Buhari’s decision to peg Nigeria’s
currency, the naira, to an artificially high level relative to the US
dollar. Despite this peg, the prices of many imported goods in Nigeria
have doubled, crippling many small businesses. The firms that have
succeeded in these dire economic conditions, exacerbated further by low
oil prices, have been those with close connections to Nigerian
government officials. Emerging markets expert Walter Lamberson, in a
recent op-ed for the New York Times, notes that if business elites can
pay a 30 percent surcharge, the Nigerian central bank lends money to
their firms and not to their competitors.
Buhari’s monetary policy has also encouraged corruption by
strengthening Nigeria’s informal economy. His consumer good import bans
have been largely ignored by Nigerian business elites, who have defied
Buhari’s calls to invest in domestic production by purchasing the
goods they need at higher prices on the black market. These price
increases have created an inflation crisis in Nigeria, in spite of the
central bank’s insistence on a tight monetary policy. Many firms have
concluded that participation in the black market and the purchase of
illegally smuggled goods is the only way to guarantee their survival.
Small businesses lacking the means or inclination to engage in these
corrupt practices have collapsed due to a dearth of capital.
In order to ensure that Abuja’s monetary policy does not reward the
corrupt, Buhari needs to unpeg the naira. As markets have already
factored in the declining value of the Nigerian currency, the
inflationary effects of this move will be negligible. Unpegging the
naira will also play a vital role in decoupling the state from Nigerian
businesses, a process that will prevent predatory officials from
exploiting an economic crisis for their own enrichment.
2) Nigeria’s Foreign Debt Dependency Is Enabling Corruption
The second characteristic of the Nigerian economy exacerbating
corruption is Abuja’s dependence on foreign debt. Foreign debt has been
used as a vehicle for money laundering, as many Nigerian leaders have
siphoned oil money for personal gain, while using international credit
to invest in the country’s economy. The linkage between a loose fiscal
policy and predatory corruption reached its peak during the Second
Republic (1979- 1983). Reckless borrowing caused a debt crisis
ameliorated only by an increase in oil prices after the Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait in 1990. From 1958-1983, the Nigerian oil industry generated
$101 billion, with the vast majority of these profits being transferred
to the bank accounts of Nigeria’s political and business
establishment.
While Nigeria’s debt levels under Goodluck Jonathan remained low (just
18% of GDP and a budget deficit consistently under 3% a year), rapid
economic growth of over 7% a year masks the extent to which foreign debt
was used to offset graft. The disappearance of $20 billion from the
state oil company under Jonathan’s tenure and profits accrued by
politicians for incomplete building projects, was facilitated by
foreign debt swelling the public coffers.
Without a drastic change in policy, Buhari’s turn to Chinese renmibi
yuan-denominated bonds to close an $11 billion budget gap could result
in a new wave of corruption. Chinese funds should be borrowed to
finance specific projects that can be realistically completed
(especially in the investment-starved infrastructure sector) rather
than as a blank check that allows political elites to distribute credit
in any way they see fit. Making the Nigerian government’s use of
foreign debt more transparent will allow Buhari to balance economic
growth with aggressive anti-corruption measures, a combination that
previous presidents failed to achieve.
3) Nigeria’s Reluctance to Diversify Economically Is Encouraging State Graft
The third crucial economic driver for corruption is Nigeria’s
overwhelming dependence on oil revenues. A leaked 2012 report on
Nigeria’s oil and gas industry revealed that $6 billion is lost annually
due to oil theft, with a further $29 billion being lost from 2002-2012
due to a natural gas price fixing scam. As the government distributes
oil rents with less transparency than revenues derived from other
sectors, petroleum dependency is a compelling predictor of a country’s
corruption levels.
A rolonged period of low oil prices and rapidly slowing economic growth
gives Buhari a unique opportunity to transition Nigeria away from its
oil dependency. Buhari in an April 15 statement correctly noted that the
diversification of Nigeria’s economy is a “matter of urgency.” His
East Asian trip, which resulted in expanded Chinese investment in
Nigeria’s mining, agricultural and manufacturing sectors, is a positive
step. But Nigeria desperately needs to reduce its dependency on foreign,
especially Chinese imports, in these sectors by stimulating domestic
productivity. As long as the naira remains pegged, tangible progress
towards ending corruption through diversification is a mere illusion.
Nigeria’s anti-corruption campaign has been undermined by misplaced
priorities and an emphasis on political retribution rather than
structural reform. Transforming Nigeria’s business culture is an
essential step towards overcoming state predation. Buhari’s
willingness to undertake risky but vital fiscal and monetary policy
reforms will go a long way in determining the success or failure of his
anti-corruption campaign, and the legacy of his second stint as
president.
Samuel Ramani is an MPhil student in Russian and East European
Studies at St. Antony’s College, University of Oxford. He is also a
journalist who contributes regularly to the Washington Post, Diplomat
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