IT is belaboring the issue when we continue to say there is hunger in
the land. That Nigerians are finding it difficult to meet their
obligations. That most Nigerians walking the streets are weigh down by
the burden of how to exist from day to day, feed their families and if
so (un)lucky, their extended families and aged parents. It is also a
notorious fact, to borrow from the ‘learned profession’, that more
Nigerians are attempting suicide.
An act that is totally alien to the
Nigerian culture. Indeed, it is very rare to see a Nigerian attempting
suicide, we so much ‘enjoy life’ that the country was at one point
dubbed a country of the happiest people in the world. So what went
wrong? Why is it that Nigeria, populated by happy-go-lucky individuals
who enjoy life to the fullest, became a country of despondent, depressed
people who feel the best way out of their situation is to commit
suicide?
From the information gathered so far, reasons given by those who took
the easy way out have always been the economy. They said they could no
longer cope. A man who was rescued from the Mile2 rivers was heard
blaming the president before he jumped into the waters. Another man who
took his life in Aboru, a suburb of Lagos also claimed that he decided
to end it because he could no longer cope and would not watch while his
children languish in want. The story goes on.
Unfortunately, what those who commit suicide failed to understand is
that suicide is a cowardly act. It is the easy way out. It is unmanly
and most importantly, it creates more problems, especially for the
people left behind, than solving any.
The situation thus brings me back to the Nigerian economy that has
totally unmanned so many men. That has made fathers the object of
ridicule in the family. That has made it difficult for fathers to
exercise authority over their family and made them object of ridicule in
the eyes of their children. Today, most fathers’ blood pressure has
shot up because the school holiday is gradually ending. The children
must go back to school and that signals another round of school fees
payment. How would the father who could not even drive out his car or
move out on account of not having money cope?
To the Nigerian economic managers. How competent are they? Are they
doing the right thing? Frankly speaking, it is a difficult question to
answer. Going by the layman’s measurement of a good economy, it does not
look so. Prices of goods are rising. Essential things are moving beyond
the reach of the common man. We have been told that our mono economy
and over reliance on oil has brought us to this sorry pass. But former
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor and the Emir of Kano, Sanusi
Lamido Sanusi holds a different view at a lecture he delivered in Kano
during the 15th meeting of the Joint Planning Board and National Council
on Development Planning. In that lecture which he entitled, ‘Nigeria in
Search of New Economic Growth’, the Emir put a lie to the claim that
the drop in prices of oil led to the economic recession. His reason is
hinged on the fact that the contribution of oil to the nation’s Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) is insignificant.
“Those making noise about oil should stop making noise about it. People
should stop being afraid, because oil is not critical. It is just a
working capital. We sell it. We get the dollars that we use to import.
If you can find another source of working capital, we can do without it.
It is 15 percent of GDP.
When I was governor of Central Bank, the economy was growing at 37
percent. The oil sector was not adding anything to GDP growth. The
growth was coming from agriculture, services and trade, which is also
very revealing. If we are now saying we are in a recession, because of
the collapse in oil price, we are not being sincere.
You can’t be in recession, because a sector that is 15 percent of your
GDP has declined. What happened to agriculture, trade, services and
health?”
The Goodluck Jonathan administration had been blamed severally by the
present administration, that it frittered away the money generated from
oil sales, but one can argue conversely that the money frittered away
only constitute 15 percent of GDP assuming the entire money was stolen.
This should not have brought Nigeria to the present situation
and nobody has come out to dispute the Emir. Thus going by his premise,
the government should just shut up and face its job squarely and get us
out of the economic morass we are in.To buttress the Emir’s assertion,
Nigerians have equally argued that when President Olusegun Obasanjo took
over in 1999 after several years of military adventure and misrule, oil
was only $9 per barrel. He put his hands on the plough and the work
began. Nigeria paid off its debt burden. It was then that GSM technology
eventually birthed notwithstanding what is being said that he only came
to birth what the military government had conceptualized. Is that not
the essence of governance- continuity? He recovered our money stashed in
different parts of the world from the mindless looting of our treasury
by the late Gen. Sani Abacha.
He did not make the recovery of Abacha loot the cardinal programme of
his administration to the detriment of other areas the way this
government is doing. He did not dwell in the past or blame the rulers
before him for all the country’s woes. He knew he had a big task ahead
of him and he embarked on it. Obasanjo did not say the overall
development of the country was hinged on the looted funds. He brought in
technocrats who helped to galvanise and sustain the economy.
But what do we have today? Technocrats or pretenders to that title. Why
has it become so difficult to do anything after more than one year of
taking over the reins of governance? Even if the Jonathan administration
had mismanaged the economy, what has this government been able to do to
correct the problem? Has the problem not worsened under the present
administration’s watch? It is therefore obvious that there is problem of
competence in this government. I wish I am proved wrong, but the
overall picture presently does not give indication that competence is at
work. We are only assailed with rhetorics. Priorities are wrong.
Thorough understanding of the economic issue seems lacking and no
attempt is being made to bring those competent to do the job on board,
rather, anti-corruption agencies are sicced on them.
It is poor judgement and lacking in perspective and not getting the
priority right that would make a state governor spend about N120million
to buy about 3000 coffins and distribute to mosques in his state. What
is at the back of the governor’s mind? Is that the priority in his
state? Is he expecting more of his people to die when other parts of the
world are thinking of how to sustain live? Did it not occur to him that
economic independence also leads to long life and this could have been
achieved if he had given out the money to individuals in his state to
trade with. It would have helped in improving the quality of life in his
state.
The present trend must be reversed. President Buhari should come to the
realization that Nigerians are disenchanted in spite of the contrary
report he must have been getting from those who surrounds him which has
manifested in their utterances in recent time. The government should
also realize that those who criticize do not really hate the
administration, but are only interested in improvement and how things
could be better done.
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