Home Articles & Opinions STATE OF THE NATION: DANGERS OF FALSE EXPECTATIONS AS NIGERIA GROAN UNDER DEBT BURDEN

STATE OF THE NATION: DANGERS OF FALSE EXPECTATIONS AS NIGERIA GROAN UNDER DEBT BURDEN

by Our Reporter

BY: IFEANYI IZEZE

“The first responsibility of a leader is to define reality. The last
is to say thank you. In between, the leader is a servant”- Max de
Pree.

But under the current dispensation in the country, the first
responsibility of our President is to blame every other person that was
in government before him for failures of his government to register a
single significant impact on the socio-economic lives of the ordinary
Nigerians since 2015. The last, as he displays daily, is to remain deaf
and dumb. In between, he is there as lord over all.

Just few days ago the United Nations reawakened Nigerians to the brutal
reality of how poorly the Gen. Mohamadu Buhari administration has
managed the nation’s economy with a damning verdict that 98 million
Nigerians live in multi-dimensional poverty.

Like it’s typical of the head of State and his handlers, they didn’t
make any comment about the scary statistics coming from the United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Perhaps, one reason they didn’t
mind to comment on the report is because it is factual – Nigerians in
the past four years indeed live in multi-dimensional poverty.

False pretences of knowledge about complicated economic indices have
become all too common defining characteristics of this government. Who
are the ordinary Nigerians going to believe, government or the evidence
of their own eyes? If what the government says has little or no relation
to what people feel or can see all around them, why won’t they believe
the UNDP report?

Under Buhari, Nigeria has grown its debt portfolio by N9.61tn;
statistics available from the Debt Management Office (DMO) have shown.
In essence, the nation’s debt is about where it was in 2005-06, just
before Nigeria benefited from massive debt relief as part of a program
coordinated by the Paris Club, IMF, World Bank and the African
Development Bank under the Obasanjo administration. To have squandered
the debt reduction in just four years and have no tangible economic
progress to show for it is beyond disappointing to say the least.

Only recently, the United Nations declared that 43 percent of our
nation’s Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has taken flight to other
countries. Unemployment has gone out of proportion and there is no hope
in sight.

But typical of a team that lacks capacity for anticipatory actions, the
Federal Government has been running from pillar to post in a vain bid to
stabilize the economy. Unfortunately, all conceived palliatives applied
to save the nation’s declining economic indicators have merely
scratched the surface of the problems leaving the mass of Nigerians
desperate, confused and hungrier.

Without doubt, Nigerians would unanimously agree that the Federal
Government’s casual response to the nation’s rising economic
challenges depicts gross insincerity and/or incompetence on the part of
those that administer the economy.

With external debt standing at more than $10 billion and our internal
debts at more than $15.4 billion, it should bother every concerned
Nigerian that Buhari is driving the country into economic wilderness.
This should be a cause for concern for all well meaning Nigerians, more
so when the Federal Government responses to these rising economic
challenges have, at best, been casual and at worst deceptive.

As said by Ike Brannon, a Senior Fellow at the Jack Kemp Foundation and
President of Capital Policy Analytics, a consulting firm in Washington
DC, “Nigeria’s biggest economic problem, though – and the issue
that requires real political acceptance from Buhari’s new government
– is the country’s growing public debt. Since assuming office in
2015 President Buhari’s governments have added considerably to the
nation’s debt, which now exceeds $85 billion.

“Compounding Nigeria’s debt problem is the nation’s significant
contingent liabilities. Recent arbitration awards have exposed the
government to billions of dollars of liability – most prominently a
case involving a private contractor, Process & Industrial Developments
(P&ID), whose gas processing project collapsed after the Nigerian
government failed to carry out its contractual commitments. The P&ID
tribunal award alone represents over $9 billion, and it owes another
company another $2.3 billion over a failed hydro-power project.

“There is some evidence that Nigeria’s high debt servicing costs,
along with concerns over the rule of law, is causing investors to become
concerned with investments in Nigerian debt.

“It is a mystery why these contingent liabilities and the concomitant
decline in investor confidence and divestment in the country’s most
critical sector are not taken more seriously in Abuja.”

Can you imagine that the federal government is proposing to spend N2.14
trillion for debt servicing with 80percent of this amount set aside for
servicing its domestic debt component?

Emblematic of this casual, non profound approach to the management of
the national economy is the Central Bank’s now traditional monthly or
bi-monthly dole of hundreds of millions of dollars to cronies of the
powers that be under the pretence of stabilising the disabled economy.
This has only created a bunch of sit-home overnight mega billionaires
whose only job is to sweep every dollar coming in and divert same to the
parallel market.

The amount of money being borrowed and supposedly pumped into the
economy is being aggressively removed by agents of the CBN and people on
the corridors of power in Abuja. So we are just wasting money making
very few government-people superrich without addressing any of the
obvious problems nakedly staring at the nation.

Now, the 2019 budget was anchored around revenue projections of N6.97
trillion for the 2019 fiscal year. From the oil sector, the federal
government is expecting revenue of about N3.73 trillion which is about
50 percent, while N710 billion will come from the proceeds of government
equity in Joint Ventures.

This figure was derived from two presumptions: oil price benchmark of
US$60 per barrel; and daily oil production target of 2.3 million barrels
per day minus condensates. In all, both presumptions are at best clearly
over-ambitious and near unachievable.

Since the beginning of this year, oil price has oscillated between $61
to $66 per barrel, showing that the benchmark price of $60 was on the
edge leaving almost nothing to add to the Excess Crude Account, now
almost completely ravished by the gang in government.

Serious issues with the daily production quota cap of 2.3 million
barrels per day used by the federal government in the fiscal plan have
also been raised by oil experts who believe the assumption was
outrightly over-optimistic and it remains to be seen what actually gave
the government such morale.

As we were told by the government officials, Nigeria currently produces
about 1.8million barrels per day, which according to some experts in the
oil sector, is believed to be a more realistic production estimate. So
in all, the oil revenue projections are at best overly optimistic which
means, to be able to fund the budget, we must again borrow either from
outside or from within.

Despite all these, in its propaganda style administration, the
government claimed it had been spending more on infrastructure than
other administrations in the past. They said they invested in
infrastructure. The question is: which infrastructure? The power supply
situation has remained disgraceful, the roads are near-impassable, the
education sector at all levels is yearning for serious attention in
funding. How many can one count! Is there any sector of our economy that
is doing well?

You borrowed all these money and there are no meaningful investments for
them; we are still importing fuel, importing food, no jobs and no
electricity, the roads are still terrible. So where is all the monies
being borrowed going to? Where do you look in this government that you
don’t see gloom and distress?

Without an honest and frank government acceptance of the situation,
Nigeria’s chances of escaping its self-inflicted debt trap are
vanishingly small. It is clear there is no hope for this country under
the current administration’s management of our resources as all they
have shown us they know seems to borrow, borrow and borrow! How long can
we survive this as a country? God bless Nigeria!

(IFEANYI IZEZE: IIZEZE@YAHOO.COM; 2234-8033043009)

You may also like