Vice President Osinbajo and economic patriotism
As the Head of Nigeria’s Economic Team, I sympathise with the Vice
President YemiOsinbajo because he is leading a team that inherited a
broke economic system. An economic system that is seeing greater
deepening economic stress and crises.
I want to encourage the Vice president by reminding him that the
hallmark of great leadership is by staying engaged with the people; if
you don’t communicate with the people, you empower them to think
negatively. People need to be talked to while coming up with policies
that will benefit them as quickly as possible.
In the land of my fathers, there is a popular saying that if you
appear last and you still make the same mistakes of your predecessors,
then you are worse off than your predecessors. This sadly explains the
current situation in the country or how do you explain the high level
of hopelessness pervading the country since the emergence of this
government. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) came out on Monday
18th July, 2016 to tell Nigerians that inflation has risen to an
11-year high of 16.5%. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) which measures
inflation, rose by 0.9% in the month of June compared to 15.6% the
previous month. This according to NBS was the fifth consecutive month
that the headline index will rise.
There is an unemployment rate of 2.1%, exports has dropped to 34.6% and
imports declined by 7.8% all in this year’s 1st quarter.
So many factors can be attributed to this increase amongst which are
continued appetite for imported items and related products, energy
prices and lack of clear government economic policy direction. It is no
more news that the feeling of despondency in the country is pretty high
and the people are no longer smiling; they have since run out of
patience.
Mr Vice President, our problem is that we are a poor nation that
refuses to accept the fact. We are rich in resources but lazy in ideas
that are productive. The economy was already in bad shape before the
emergence of this current administration but then governance and
government is continuum. This current government inherited both assets
and liabilities; with this, one can halt the rot and chart a path to
move forward.
Change is always a journey and never a destination; fiscal federalism
is one such construct. Equity is a signpost. Clear articulated economic
diversification is a signpost. The best chefs in the world start from
ingredient selection, they understand that everything must align to get
the right dish. The Vice President is a God fearing man and a man of
integrity, but then integrity alone does not deliver results. Results
are delivered through a team and through the right process. We really
do not need economic superstars. What we need right now are those that
can and would be allowed to deliver to us all.
The Finance Minister appearing before the Senate the other day said
the economy is “technically in recession” whatever that means. That is
not true. The economy is inRECESSION. Our country is bleeding; things
are tough right now, probably the toughest in 16yeas. The middle class
is eroding fast, we are not creating jobs, the private sector is
contracting, salaries being owed for months and people are losing jobs.
If you have a job you should be thankful.
In an era like this, you put your best foot forward; you can play
politics with some positions but some you should never. The Nigerian
economy needs a quick recovery and resetting or else we go the way of
Greece and Venezuela.
Mr Vice President, there are sufficient materials to lead our economy
back to the path of recovery but some of them have been sacrificed on
the altar of politics, ethnic slant and trust, nepotism and zero sum
game of winners take all.
Please, you need help, kindly look outside of your environment and
source for economic experts that will help the economy to the path of
recovery.
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