'VOODOO' ECONOMIC POLICIES: Sanusi warns Buhari to retrace his steps
· Says Govt. creating forex billionaires
· Cautions against ‘unlicensed drivers’ of the economy
· Faults FG’s borrowing to pay salaries
The Emir of Kano, Alhaji Sanusi Lamido Sanusi II, known for saying his
mind very frankly on various national issues, has reviewed the
economic policies of President Buhari and warned that the government
was moving in the wrong direction.
He said the Buhari administration was being run by “voodoo economists”
who were running the Nigerian economy like unlicensed drivers behind
the wheels of a brand new car so it would be idiotic to expect that such
unqualified drivers would not crash the economy.
Sanusi, a former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), warned
of an impending economic doom in the country if President Buhari
continues with the current economic policies which he described as
anti-investment and detrimental to national development.
Sanusi spoke in Kano on Wednesday during a lecture he delivered at the
second day of the 15th Joint Planning Board and the National Council
on Development Planning organised by the Ministry of Budget and
National Planning, in collaboration with Kano State Government.
His words:
He said: “The first thing I would like to say is that there are many
voodoo economists parading around and many of them are not economists,
they are demagogues.’’
Sanusi, who delivered a lecture titled: “Nigeria - The Search for a New
Growth Model”, declared that while the immediate past administration
of Jonathan created “oil subsidy billionaires”, the Buhari government
was churning out “forex billionaires.”
He said: ‘’If this government continues to behave the way the last
government behaved, we will end up where Jonathan ended. You may not
like it, but that is the truth. Any system that allows you with one
telephone call, you make N1 billion without investing one kobo, that
system is wrong. It is unsustainable, no matter how you think about it
positively.
“We created billionaires from oil subsidies in the past. We are making
the same mistake with forex subsidy,” he said in an apparent reference
to the dual exchange rates in operation at the CBN.
“As an Emir, I can sit in my garden and make phone calls to access $10
million at N197 per dollar and then sell it off at nothing less than
N300,” he said.
After taking an overview of the economic policies of the Federal
Government, Sanusi concluded that nothing has really changed under the
administration of President Buhari – while his government continues to
blame the previous administration of Jonathan for its current woes.
Sanusi lamenting that the incumbent administration had not learnt from the mistakes of those before it.
Sanusi’s knock on the economic policies of the government came a day
after the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) and other members
of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) had accused the incumbent
administration of grounding the economy.
The OPS operators asserted that the economic policies of the
government had led to massive job losses, closure of over 272 companies
and trapping of $10 billion overseas.
Sanusi advised the members of President Buhari’s economic team to
retrace their steps and formulate policies that can grow the economy,
pointing out that the current economic situation is forcing untold
hardship on Nigerians.
According to him, the current economic policies and their inconsistency
do not favour businesses and investments in the country. He advised
the Federal Government to embrace the Lagos State Government’s model to
bail the country out of its current economic woes.
He lamented the overdependence on oil, pointing out that more
investments in agriculture, power sector, manufacturing and
infrastructural development and attractive incentives to investors will
enhance the growth of the nation’s economy.
The eminent monarch and economist accused the government of making the
same mistakes as its predecessors and refusing to listen to the wise
counsel of concerned Nigerians.
He continued: “I just saw that we are always blaming the past
administration, but we have also made mistakes in this administration.
The problem is that there is nothing we are facing today that we do not
know how it happened. That is the truth.
“We made mistakes, many of them deliberate. We ignored every single
warning. Not building roads, not building power plants and other
necessary infrastructure that can boost the economy and the
development of the country.
“We are spending 30 to 40 percent of every Naira we earn servicing
debts. The new borrowings were simply recycled into much higher
recurrent expenditure. The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was growing
largely due to consumer items.
“In 2010 when I was Governor of the Central Bank, the government
increased minimum wage to N18, 000. I protested but they went ahead
and borrowed money to pay. In 2012, as Governor of CBN, I said that this
is an unsustainable wage bill. We need to reduce the size of the
public service, which fell on deaf ears.
“I believe we have started retracing our steps and we have to retrace
our steps. If a policy is wrong, it is wrong and it has to be changed,”
he stated.
Sanusi urged Nigerians to bury ethno-religious sentiments and put
heads together in salvaging the economy, adding that, ‘’those who are
clamouring to break up the country because of oil should desist from
that agitation as oil would soon be nothing. The world is already
developing alternative sources of power, like solar energy, bio-gas and
a host of others.”
Taking up the drivers of the nation’s economy, Sanusi described them as
unlicensed drivers who are behind the wheels of a new car.
Sanusi said: ‘’If you take a brand new car and hand it over to a driver
who doesn’t have a license to drive it and you are involved in an
accident, you can’t say you are surprised, unless you are some kind of
idiot.”
He urged the government to revisit its borrowing style, as he said:
‘’The funny thing is that you did not stop borrowing; all you have to
do is borrow the right amount and apply them to the right purposes. It
doesn’t matter whether it is consumption spending or investment demand.
GDP will grow.
‘’We made a choice of what we wanted. Do we want votes and popularity
or we want palliatives. So long as people are getting high minimum
wages, they will keep quiet about all the ills in the economy that we
have been talking about,” he said.
Sanusi said that those who are advising the government not to devalue the naira were benefitting from it.
According to him, ‘’We are not devaluing because if we do, the poor
people will suffer, the people profiting from this are the people
telling the government that if you devalue people will suffer.
Meanwhile, they all bought the dollar at N179 and price their goods at
N300.The poor pay the price of a devalued currency, while the rich skim
off the profits.’’
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