
Former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Charles Soludo has said that he has a fundamental disagreement with President Goodluck Jonathan’s management of Nigeria’s economy.
Soludo
stated this in an article titled “President Jonathan missed the point
on missing N30trn” which was published on online platform, Sahara
Reporters.
The former CBN governor addresses
Jonathan’s comment on the N30 trillion Soludo had said was stolen under
the watch of Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
Read the full article below:
My
attention has been drawn this morning to an article entitled: “Jonathan
Replies Soludo over “missing N30 trillion” claim”— extracting from Mr.
President’s interview as published by Thisday newspaper.
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”.
According to
the President, “it is all political”. 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.
For
me, President Jonathan is a gentleman and a friend but I have a
fundamental disagreement on his management of the economy. On the issues
at stake, 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. For the avoidance of doubt,
let me clarify as follows:
1. In my article
entitled “Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and the Missing Trillions”, I presented
some rough calculations covering: oil theft, money that ought to accrue
to stock of foreign reserves, unbudgeted oil subsidy payments, customs
duty waivers, leakages through the self-financing government
parastatals, unremitted sums by NNPC, etc.
I
concluded that section of my article by noting that: “I have a long list
but let me wait for now. I do not want to talk about other ‘black pots’
that impinge on national security. My estimate, Madam, is that probably
more than N30 trillion has either been stolen or lost or unaccounted
for or simply mismanaged under your watchful eyes in the past four
years”.
2. 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.
We have not
added figures based on counterfactual analysis such as the cost to the
aggregate economy of bad or misguided economic policy. For example, in
today’s Thisday newspaper, a headline news reports that “Aliko Dangote,
Africa’s Richest Man, Loses $7.8 Billion as Naira, Stocks Plunge” while
reporting that “In dollar terms, the devaluation has knocked more than
$40 billion off the value of Nigeria’s economy”. Of course, most people
predicted that oil prices would soon fall but we were caught unprepared,
and today, the parallel market exchange rate is N225 to the dollar.
Thus,
the kind of analysis in today’s Thisday is just one little example of
the kind of collateral damages–‘costs’ or ‘losses’– that mismanagement
foists on the system. To repeat, my article did not focus on the federal
budget: the mismanagement of the consumption budget and its
unprecedented debt accumulation (with low value-for-money expenditures)
are entirely different matters.
3. What I found
particularly disconcerting as a Nigerian from the comments I read is the
fixation to validation from the World Bank. According to Mr. President,
“we asked the Minister how her colleagues at the World Bank saw the
accusation”. I shook my head in disbelief. 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 mind-set 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 fifty 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!
A serious concern is that
while government relies on external validation (opinion) as ‘proof’ of
its performance, it is selective in the process—accepting the positive
ones and disparaging the negative ones. Our recent exchanges illustrate
the point. In my first article (26th January): “Buhari Vs Jonathan:
Beyond the Elections”, I argued that “the economy seems to be on auto
pilot, with confusion as to who is in charge, and government largely as a
constraint.
There are no big ideas, and it is
difficult to see where economic policy is headed to. My thesis is that
the Nigerian economy, if properly managed, should have been growing at
an annual rate of about 12% given the oil boom, and poverty and
unemployment should have fallen dramatically over the last five years”.
No one has credibly challenged the above, except what the Financial
Times of London described as a “furious response by the Minister”. But,
the influential Economist Magazine of London and New York Times agreed
with us. According to the Economist editorial (7th February, 2015):
“…
as Africa’s biggest economy stages its most important election since
the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, and perhaps since the civil
war four decades ago, Nigerians must pick between the incumbent,
Goodluck Jonathan, who has proved an utter failure, and the opposition
leader, Muhammadu Buhari….
The single bright spot
of his rule has been Nigeria’s economy, one of the world’s
fastest-growing. Yet that is largely despite the government rather than
because of it, and falling oil prices will temper the boom. The
prosperity has not been broadly shared: under Mr Jonathan poverty has
increased. Nigerians typically die eight years younger than their poorer
neighbours in nearby Ghana”. I gave the Government an “F” grade on
economic management, and the Economist described its performance as
“utter failure”.
The Economist also basically
agreed with me that the re-basing of the economy and its observed
‘growth’ have nothing to do with government policy. Again, government
has not credibly challenged the above or is the Economist’s view also
‘all political ’? Government simply waved it off. My point is that if
Government has to rely on the “impressions” of external bodies, then it
should be consistent and comprehensive.
4. In
conclusion, let me re-state that I firmly stand by my earlier
statements. These are weighty statements which I weighed carefully
before issuing. I appreciate that this is an election time and so
attempts would be made to trivialize, or either play politics with, or
divert attention from, them. In a serious society, we should have had a
good debate on these matters as they could provide some of the building
blocks in trying to pick the pieces after the elections.
Part
of our citizen duty in a democracy is to raise such issues and demand
for answers. In the meantime, I grant that our leaders are busy with
campaigns but these issues won’t go away until we have a transparent
resolution. Be assured that after the elections, we will be back with
even more questions!
Soludo had earlier stated that neither Jonathan nor All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Muhammadu Buhari was prepared to handle the problems facing the Nigerian economy.
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