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Stop This Borrowing Madness - Politics - Nairaland

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Buhari Approves Borrowing From World Bank, China / FG To Cut N1.84tn Borrowing Through TSA Recovery / Adeosun Explains Nigeria’s Borrowing Plans To Fund Capital Projects (2) (3) (4)

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Stop This Borrowing Madness by rottennaija(m): 1:12pm On Jul 07, 2015
www.vanguardngr.com/2015/07/stop-this-borrowing-madness/

THE way our state governors are clamouring for bailout from
President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB) shows that some of our
political leaders are yet to come to terms with the emerging global
oil economy.
Anybody looking for funds to “carry on as usual”appears not to
have realised that the present depressed crude oil prices represent
the beginning of a new era of whittled-down crude oil power. If
crude price should rise in answer to our prayers, it will simply boost
the production of shale oil, which is still relatively more expensive to
extract than the conventional crude.Therefore, the low crude prices
distressing us today have actually slowed down the “shale
oil”onslaught.
But with the hectic pace of development of the shale oil technology,
its competitiveness will progressively improve. And many nations
presently importing oil,have the potential to become “shale” oil
producers. In fact, many of them are racing to join the United States
which used to be the biggest importer of the Nigerian crude, until it
attained its “shale” breakthrough. There are evenprospects of the
US going beyond oil self-sufficiency to become a shale oil exporter!
Already, we hear of ships laden with Nigerian crude in the
international oil market, looking for buyers, even at a discount.
The verdict is therefore clear: Our crude oil revenue going
forward,will not even be as high as what we are lamenting today.
The chilling situation we all knew would one day come, but did not
expect,at least for 30 more years – i.e. Nigeria without its crude oil
power – is here! Crude oil is becoming a mere commodity.
If therefore we start piling up debts today in an attempt to bridge the
current revenue shortfall, what will the upcoming generations use to
repay the debts? If both federal and state governments are already
crying about debt burdens today how will our upcoming
generations (with the crumbled crude oil revenues) be able repay
them? The state governments that are piling up debts today are
simplycreating an economic gun powder for their upcoming
generations! Even the banks giving out such loans today might as
well start sharpening their disaster management skills – because
massive loan defaults may be looming!
The burning task before President Buhari is therefore to urgently re-
engineer the nation,to be able to survive with its tumbling oil
revenue! I shall make an elaborate submission on this re-
engineering. But for now, let me single out one aspect of it, because
of the way our politicians seem to be rushing to pile up more debts
– that is deflating the monstrous cost of this democracy, including
government’s bizarre expenditure structure.
The real culprit is our bloated governance cost.Our democracy can
give us world-class governance even from a fraction of what we
now regard as diminished revenue. Take the federal government as
an example. In 2001, all our democratic institutions had come in
place; yet, the federal government budget for that year (by the
Appropriation Act 8 of the National Assembly) was less than N1
trillion, out of which 56% was budgeted for capital projects.
Government budgeted only N0.4 trillion for its “recurrent”
expenditure(what it would spend on its officials and other
overheads, rather than on capital development
projects).Remarkably, by our 2014 budget, the recurrent component
had ballooned to N3.6 trillion, gulping 76% of our total budget of
N4.7 trillion, and leaving a paltry 24% (orN1.1 trillion) for capital
development projects. The 2015 budget is even worse.
Of what good therefore is “more revenue” to Nigerians, if it is only
24% of what comes in that can go into development? Does
government exist for itself, rather than for the people?
The problem is not “revenue”; it is what we are doing with it. For
example, the total budget for our National Assembly in 2001 was
only N15.5 billion. But by 2014 appropriation, it had shot up to a
whopping N150 billion that is 10 times the 2001 figure! What on
earth is the justification for that? Has there been an increase in the
number of elected Senators and members of the House? Similar
questions are begging for answers across the entire system.
As another example, I reviewed the data published by the Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on federally collected revenue, for the period
1961 to 2010 (the data stopped at 2010) and found the results very
shocking: In the 29 years from 1970 to 1998, the total federally
collected revenue (oil and non-oil) was only N3.6 trillion. However,
because of the unprecedented oil price surge that started with this
democracy in 1999, we amassed a whopping N24.8 trillion in the
next eight years,from 1999 to 2006 (the Obasanjo years), and a
further N25.7 trillion in four additional years, from 2007 to 2010 (the
Yar’Adua years,mostly).
1970 – 1998 3.6t (before this democracy)
1999- 2006 24.8t (the Obasanjo years)
2007 – 2010 25.7t (the Yar’Adua years)
We can all remember many of the achievements of the N3.6 trillion
of the first 29 years: the federal highways, refineries, steel plants,
power plants, fertiliser plants, dams, river basins, sea ports (in
Lagos, Port Harcourt, Warri, etc), NITEL’s telecoms network; federal
universities, colleges of education, and Unity schools; our old
capital, Lagos (including the massive 3rd Mainland bridge and other
bridges and flyovers, and the Ikoyi secretariat); and the new federal
capital, Abuja (including more secretariats, the massive Gwarinpa
estate said to be the largest in Africa, as well as other mass-housing
estates –constructed ironically by the much maligned Abacha
administration!)
Now, what on earth did we achieve with the massive N24.8 trillion
that poured into the country in the next eight years? Repair of
existing refineries? Build new refineries? More housing estates?
Power plants?Steel plants? Fertiliser plants? Where on earth then
did all that money go? The same questions can be asked of the
N25.7 trillion that poured in during the next four years, from 2007 to
2009!
There were two tragic achievements of those windfalls– poverty
and higher domestic debt! According to the figures published by
National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) our population in poverty soared
from 67 Million in 1996 to a bewildering 112 million by 2010! So
Nigerians became vastly poorer in 2010 than in 1996 – despite all
those massive windfalls!
The same sad story greets us from CBN’s data on our domestic
debt. In 1998,federal government’s domestic debt outstanding was
only N561 billion. But by 2007, it had shot up to N2.9 trillion; and
continued upwards, reaching N4.6 trillion by 2010. In other words,
not only are we hard-pressed to tell our unborn generations what
we did with the massive windfalls of 1999-2010, we even increased
the domestic debt burden on them by a whopping 712% during that
period! If government incurred such huge debts during that revenue
boom, is it with the tumbling oil earnings that we shall repay them?
What future are preparing for our unborn generations?
Since this democracy, our leaders have been preoccupied with
“more revenues” including massive borrowings, to fund this
expenditure monster. That’s why the monster has continued to
balloon unabated! There is therefore no justification for government
at any level, to further endanger Nigeria’s unborn generations, by
piling up more debts.
There was no single year from 1999 to 2010 that the
federalrecurrent expenditure did not increase – despite
government’sprivatisation and monetisation policies, whose
principal goal was to reduce this expenditure!
Any government at any level that wants to deliver democracy
dividends must start with the political will to attackthis expenditure
monster.Doing so will (far more) significantly boostits impact– than
leaving the monsterto chase “more revenue”! For example, assume
that PMBduring 2015 is able to increase revenue by 20% on the N4.7
trillion of 2014. This will bring an extra N0.9 trillion to the table.
Note however thatunless something has been done to our
expenditure structure, most of this(over 70%, about N0.7 trillion)
will go into recurrent expenditure, leaving a paltry N0.2 trillion for
capital development!
On the other hand, if he attacks the expenditure monster,and is able
to reduce it by the same 20%, from the N3.6 trillion in 2014 (which
by the way, is no rocket science), that alone will release N0.7 trillion
from recurrent cost tothe capital budget, boosting the latter by 64%!
The difference is clear!
! If we are lamenting the debt burden today, our future generations,
with crumbling crude oil revenue,will be even more hopelessly
unable to repay them!
Mr. Gabriel Zowan, a reform & governance expert, wrote from
Lagos.
Re: Stop This Borrowing Madness by mrpackager(m): 1:14pm On Jul 07, 2015
lemme sitdow first grin
Re: Stop This Borrowing Madness by eluquenson(m): 1:15pm On Jul 07, 2015
Even Greece as a country needs to borrow now.
Re: Stop This Borrowing Madness by donholy28(m): 1:19pm On Jul 07, 2015
Nna d news too long...I no fit finish am
Re: Stop This Borrowing Madness by atiakatata: 1:57pm On Jul 07, 2015
Just divide this zoo. The zoo is a criminal enterprise. People have seen the future and want to take the future in their own hands. divide this zoo
Re: Stop This Borrowing Madness by festytop(m): 2:09pm On Jul 07, 2015
Kudos 2 whosoever that wrote this article and also my thanks goes to the one who posted it.

The menace that is facing this country precisely is that all our leaders are thieves

After when they have dupe and steall all our revenue they will keep borrowing and all this unpaid debt from the past is affecting us presently

Instead of finding solutions to stop their grediness all what they can do now is leaving behind debt for their unborn generatiob

My people if only you can believe Nigeria can only be fair and not as better as we are expecting it to be angry angry

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