Minister of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has clarified that his
comment on the economic situation being out of the control of President
Muhammadu Buhari was misrepresented.
He was reacting to a story in THISDAYLIVE of this Saturday, March 12th
2016 entitled ”Economy Gone Out of Buhari’s Control, Says Lai Mohammed”.
This was contained in a statement by Mr. Segun Adeyemi, Mohammed’s Special
Assistant (SA) on Information and Culture.
Although he described the report as a “complete misrepresentation of the
comments” made by the minister, with Lai Mohammed denying making them, a
playback of the recorded interview shows Mohammed said the situation was
beyond the government’s control – considering the various forces at play.
“It is pertinent to state that at no time during the entire two-hour
(radio) programme did the Honourable Minister say or suggest that the
economy has gone out of the President’s control,” the SA’s statement said.
“Honourable Minister’s comments on the economy during the programme goes
thus: ”Again, we have not been very fortunate with our economy in the
sense that we came in at a time when there is global collapse in the
prices of commodities ranging from oil.
”Unfortunately for us, we have inherited an economy where the mainstay of
the economy, crude oil, crashed from an all high of $100 to about $30 and
that of course means that automatically the source of our foreign exchange
was affected. 80 percent of our foreign
exchange used to come from crude. Today we have lost 70 percent of that
amount so that is the major reason.”
“While indeed this Administration inherited a disastrous economy, it has
decided to turn the disaster into blessing by diversifying the economy
away from oil, thus widening its base and weaning the country of its
addiction to oil.
However, the relevant portion of the statement from where our story
derived is somewhat different. Below is the excerpt beginning with the
question by the interviewer.
Q: The free fall of the Naira in the last three weeks has been very
discomforting and a lot of people are asking a lot of questions and some
people even say wow, it has never been so bad. Has government been able to
discover (the source of) this untoward development?
Lai Mohammed: I think it is clear why the naira is today in a free fall.
You see, what are the factors that determines the exchange of the naira?
It is your export and import; your trade balance and the general economy.
Unfortunately we have not been fortunate in any of these, which is about
70 percent of all our total earnings. Before now, oil was selling for
about N100 per barrel; today it is about N30 per barrel. And if you look
at the cost of production, it has remained about the same.
We have lost about 70 percent of all our income and not only was oil
responsible for all our income, it was also responsible for about 90
percent of all our foreign exchange, which makes between 90 -80 percent of
our source of foreign exchange.
And naturally there will be more pressure on the Naira and less dollars
and more naira chasing the dollars and now look at the balance of trade –
it is negative. What do we do with trading and how much did we buy from
Britain, for instance, and how they buy from us,. Unfortunately, it is
negative. We take more from them than they take from us. If a country
suddenly loses about 80 percent for its source of forex, clearly that
currency will be in trouble.
The only way out is what the government is doing, which is strengthening
the economy, diversifying it, plugging all the loopholes and making sure
that only the essential things are imported. It will be extremely
difficult, no doubt, but we are also in a state of emergency economically.
You see, take for instance, your earnings reduced from N100 to N30 per
month, something will have to give way…like relocating to a smaller house
and I mean this is a reality.
The fact that the government is even still managing this situation, I give
credit to the government, because the situation is completely beyond their
control, and this is where people have been mischievous…
Today we live in a global community, Nigeria cannot determine the price of
oil or gas. And that is why the presiident has gone spending countless
nights lobbying, rallying other oil-exporting countries on how do we
stabilize the oil price….
The programme was aired on FRCN’s Radio Link
ThisDay