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Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. - Politics - Nairaland

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Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by AmbOlaoye1(m): 5:48am On Jul 25, 2016
Simon Kolawole: Buhari didn’t inherit a healthy economy from Jonathan. Let’s get that straight

Economy Jul 24, 2016

If you were a lover of reggae music in the 1970s, you would certainly know “Time Hard”, a hit song by The Pioneers, the Jamaican three-man band. “Everyday,” they sang, sonorously, “things are getting worse.” That song was released in 1972. At the time, Nigeria was producing two million barrels of crude oil per day and selling at an average price of $1.8 per barrel. We were not yet oil-dependent, so the revenue was basically a bonus. By 1974, oil was selling for $11, six times the 1972 price, and our stomach ballooned. We became helplessly hooked on petrodollars. The only song Nigerians could be singing was: “Things are getting better.” The Pioneers would not sell.

But their song still became very relevant in the early 1980s. Average oil price fell from $34 in 1981 to $32 in 1982 and $29 in 1983, meaning serious trouble. Oil boom had sent us into an expenditure overdrive and overkill. We had taken on massive projects, importing recklessly and accumulating debts like medals. Our foreign reserves began to sink as we struggled to import basic food items, such as rice and milk. President Shehu Shagari tried to stay afloat through a “stabilisation plan” that cut spending, reduced imports and hiked duties. After the 1983 elections, the government could no longer pretend. The economy went berserk. Things fell apart.

This is 2016 and the symptoms persist. In fact, our economy has been on a downward spiral since late 2014 when oil prices started plunging. It became more pronounced in 2015, and it appears we are now breaking records as we wake up everyday. Are The Pioneers singing in the background? The naira is officially at its worst since it replaced the pound as national currency in 1973; oil production has plunged from 2.2mbpd to probably its lowest in 10 years; FX reserves are going south; inflation has gone wild; and we are just awaiting figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) to confirm that we’re officially in a recession — first since 1987.

There are four points I would like to highlight as we discuss the state of the nation this morning. One, we cannot deny the fact that the crash in the price of crude oil is what got us into our current gridlock. We classically got carried away by the recent oil boom and failed to learn our lessons. Now history is mercilessly repeating itself. Two, Buhari did not inherit a healthy economy, contrary to whatever the critics say. Three, Buhari may not have been quick enough with his response to the economic crises since he assumed office, but there are no easy answers. Four, and this is the one that scares me silly, we may be in for a prolonged drought.

Here we go. My first point. If Buhari inherited crude oil price at $80 per barrel, with production levels remaining at over 2mbpd, the story would certainly be different. We have to face that fact without sentiments. The exchange rate, both official and parallel, could still be below N200/$1; our reserves would be still be fairly healthy because of the war chest; and — with subsidy — petrol would still be less than N100 per litre. Prices would stabilise. Foreign investors would likely remain attracted to us and the stock market would be bubbling. In other words, the relative growth we have enjoyed over the years owed largely to high oil prices.

Indeed, President Goodluck Jonathan was unable to build robust reserves in the time of boom — and this is very significant. Under President Olusegun Obasanjo, the highest price oil sold for was $60, and production was less than 2mbpd for the most part. He parted with $12 billion to settle foreign debts, and still left FX reserves of $43 billion, out of which $9 billion was excess crude savings. Under President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, oil went up and down, hitting $147 per barrel at some point, and sinking to $31 at its lowest. With that, Yar’Adua raised FX reserves to $62 billion by September 2008 — the highest in our history.

This is where the Jonathan team loses the argument. Oil sold for between $70 and $120 during his first four years in power (2010-2014) before the downward slide to $50 in 2015, when he left office. If our reserve management was anything like what we had under Obasanjo and Yar’Adua (when, by the way, Professor Chukwuma Soludo was the CBN governor), Jonathan could have left at least $100 billion in the reserves. If Buhari had inherited such a hefty kitty, the naira would not be gasping for breath today. Clearly, our failure to build an FX war chest in the time of plenty exposed us to the infectious diseases we are battling with today.

Why couldn’t Jonathan build robust reserves? One, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, former finance minister, kept crying that Nigeria was bleeding from oil theft. Nobody listened. Over 400,000 barrels were being stolen daily. Two, NNPC failed to remit billions of dollars to CBN coffers. The man formerly known as Malam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, then CBN governor, raised the alarm. We didn’t listen. Three, governors opposed crude oil savings, saying it is unconstitutional. Four, we maintained an artificial value for the naira for long, insisting we had “robust reserves”, but our appetite for imports was more robust. We failed to curtail the appetite because we were awash with dollars.

Our aggressive spending during the last oil boom is coming back to bite us. Instead of spending the oil wealth to deepen and regenerate the economy, we ran amok, bloating the civil service and turning political appointments to a sub-sector. The governors were hiring jets every minute to attend political meetings. Nigerians were buying jets like pure water. How many people were sending their children to foreign schools in 1999 compared to, say, 2014? We believed we had all the forex to buy the world. We totally savaged the economy. This is not about Jonathan alone — it was a national pastime: from councils and states to the colossal federal government.

My third point. Though Buhari did not inherit a wonderful economy, his ideological hangovers prevented him from acting on time to stem the tide. It’s like cancer. If you leave cancer stage one untreated, it gets bigger, and moves to stage two. Untreated, it gets worse and moves to stage three. And, finally, it gets to stage four where it has spread to other organs. The economy was probably at stage two when Buhari took over, but he felt chemotherapy would be too painful for the masses that elected him into office. Now the cancer is spreading and killing jobs and shredding the naira and shrinking the economy. That is the consequence of delayed adjustment.

My fourth and final point. Since we are still hopelessly sold to oil, and production is getting smaller by the day as a result of militant activities, I think The Pioneers will have to do a remix of “Time Hard”. Things will get even worse before they get better. You don’t transit from oil economy to industrial/service overnight. If we couldn’t do it in 40 years, I don’t expect us to do it in one year. Or even four years. Except oil recovers miraculously, this carnage will continue. Sadly, the bad situation is worsening because of socio-political tensions: the herdsmen, the Niger Delta militants and Biafra. Meanwhile, APC, the ruling party, is enmeshed in a civil war.

Where do we go from here? I honestly pity President Buhari. Despite shifting ideological grounds on the exchange rate and fuel price, the economy is still nowhere near recovering. The truth is that we are in a bad place and there are no easy ways out. It is a peculiar mess. The tasks he must face squarely now are critical. One, how do we first stabilise the economy and stop this bleeding? Two, where is the recovery road map so that the average Nigerian can hope for light at the end of the suffocating tunnel? Three, how do we ensure that if there is another oil boom, we will utilise it intelligently and finally escape from what I call the “petropathetic” syndrome?

It is very easy to point accusing fingers at Jonathan for mismanaging the economy or Buhari for not finding a quick fix, but maybe we should begin to look at the mirror as well. With oil boom, we were living false lives, holidaying in Las Vegas and holding weddings in Dubai with unearned or dubiously earned income, pretending to be rich when it was all a bubble. Now the bubble has burst. We can see clearly now. As Buhari seeks to reform the economy, we too must discipline our appetite and endure the inescapable pains of adjustment. Without another oil boom, recovery is going to be slow and painful. But in due season we shall reap — if we faint not.

AND FOUR OTHER THINGS…

DRUMS OF WAR

The Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC) has issued an ultimatum to Niger Delta militants to cease attacks on Yoruba communities — failing which the brigandage will become “an eye for an eye”. In recent times, suspected militants have been unleashing havoc, unchecked, on coastal communities in Lagos and Ogun states, shooting and looting, raiding and raping, killing and kidnapping. The OPC threat, unfortunately, is not the solution. The basic reason there is a government is to provide security for lives and property, and it will be tragic if people have to resort to self-help. That’s a perfect recipe for civil war. Ominous.

OUT OF ORDER

Alhaji Ibrahim Idris, the acting inspector-general of police, has ordered the arrest of the killers of Chief Lazarus Agaie, the traditional ruler of Bokkos, Plateau state. Really? Do the law enforcement agents need any order before they unravel crime and apprehend the suspects? I thought that’s their primary duty! When VIPs are kidnapped, we are usually informed that the IG has “ordered” that the perpetrators be arrested. This “order” business must be unique to Nigeria. Should we assume that many murderers and kidnappers are yet to be arrested because the IG has not “ordered” the police to do so? Curious.

STUDENT AFFAIRS

The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has done the unusual — they have finally spoken about a matter concerning Nigerian students! They recently asked the federal government to reverse the policy on post-UME tests. I was very happy that for once, NANS is talking about student issues. In the last 17 years, they have been busy defending or promoting politicians. They have been endorsing, dishing out awards to, passing votes of confidence on politicians — and visiting state houses. Very lucrative stuff. I totally forgot that it was an association set up to fight for the interest of university students! Hilarious.

HIJAB SAGA

Honestly, I never knew that Muslim pupils were not allowed to wear hijab in public schools in some states until these court cases started showing up. All my life, I have been seeing female students wearing the hijab and “Deeper Life” scarves, and I have never objected to it. Indeed, it looks so normal to me. I’ve never lost my appetite or sleep because of the way people choose to dress to express their faith. Can somebody please educate me on how hijab is a catastrophe? I would like to implore all agitated parties to allow sleeping dogs lie. Precarious.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Hiploko(m): 5:51am On Jul 25, 2016
I guess he didn't inherit a healthy one too from same Jonathan in 1984.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by LORDOFAFONJAS: 5:53am On Jul 25, 2016
what is wrong with this AFONJA?
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by edbor(m): 6:10am On Jul 25, 2016
And the bad economy wasn't visible during Jonathan administration or is my eye paining me?

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Nobody: 6:12am On Jul 25, 2016
a very useless thread.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by blackpanda: 6:16am On Jul 25, 2016
Yea the people above me wont bother to read because of personal and political bias. Once u mention jonathan, they can just collapse! grin


Fact remains, jonathan was wasteful and fully supported the corruption of his govt. I mean, how can a sitting president come out and say "stealing is not corruption". That is a green light to thieves to loot as much as u can

But of cos wailers keep suffering from selective amnesia.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Lilprincey(m): 6:16am On Jul 25, 2016
angels09:
a very useless thread.
Seconded
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by duduade: 6:17am On Jul 25, 2016
In fact Buhari didn't inherit a Country...
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Lilprincey(m): 6:18am On Jul 25, 2016
Jonathan is no more the president, leave the man alone and lets focus on buhari administration that is takinq us even more backwards..

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Hitback2back: 6:27am On Jul 25, 2016
APC and blames games are like

Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Nobody: 6:30am On Jul 25, 2016
True talk brother. But Buhari really goofed by putting the nation on an autopilot for about 7months. No budget and people to work in appropriate parastatals. Too bad. we will get it right i believe.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Tenkobos(m): 6:30am On Jul 25, 2016
blackpanda:
I mean, how can a sitting president come out and say "stealing is not corruption". That is a green light to thieves to loot as much as u can.
The thing tire me my brother, and I still don't understand how an adult can give his vote to a man who swore that Abacha never stole. I honestly don't.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by bentlywills(m): 6:40am On Jul 25, 2016
2 years now Apc re still blaming

Shame on you

We voted u to make the unhealthy economy healthy but u killed the economy instead


Keep on blaming
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by eleko1: 6:40am On Jul 25, 2016
True talk/post. only Igbos go disagreed. They hate the truth/support thieves. In a saner country, their fake "Azikwe" from Otuoke shud be cooling in Kuje now.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Nobody: 6:42am On Jul 25, 2016
same way Faashola, Fayemi, Hell Rufai should PR holders in kirikiri maximum prisons

eleko1:
True talk/post. only Igbos go disagreed. They hate the truth/support thieves. In a saner country, their fake "Azikwe" from Otuoke shud be cooling in Kuje now.
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Midegee(m): 6:44am On Jul 25, 2016
edbor:
And the bad economy wasn't visible during Jonathan administration or is my eye paining me?
No, not only your eyes, your brain too

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by eleko1: 6:48am On Jul 25, 2016
angels09:
same way Faashola, Fayemi, Hell Rufai should PR holders in kirikiri maximum prisons

Forward ur petition to EFCC. We all knw about the baba keresimesi from otuoke dashing obas money.U nor hear say Fayose scammed Jona.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Nobody: 6:51am On Jul 25, 2016
NO NEED
eleko1:
Forward ur petition to EFCC. We all knw about the baba keresimesi from otuoke dashing obas money.U nor hear say Fayose scammed Jona.
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by KingRex1(m): 7:00am On Jul 25, 2016
Yea he could have acted fast n save the economy to an extent, but he kept blaming Jonathan just as you are right now.. My friend will you write an article proferring credible solutions and stop ranting!

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Justiyke4u: 7:07am On Jul 25, 2016
It's been over one year Jonathan left power. He did not inherit healthy economy from last administration that we agree but he said he is coming to fix it. This is new administration for crying out loud.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by otukpo(f): 7:10am On Jul 25, 2016
Even if he didn't inherit a healthy economy, his actions/inactions has killed the economy further.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by massive1019(m): 7:11am On Jul 25, 2016
tnk God m at d last statement

Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by taiosino: 7:18am On Jul 25, 2016
My friend go and read history! The same way Jonathan mismanaged the oil boom was the way shagari did, from widespread corruption, to a mono economy and fallen oil prices, sounds familiar?
Hiploko:
I guess he didn't inherit a healthy one too from same Jonathan in 1984.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by MadamExcellency: 7:20am On Jul 25, 2016
Let us hear word. Every reasonable Economist knows Buhari destroyed Nigeria and brought it to its knees.

Buhari is the only President in the world that wasted One trillion dollar political capital after his election. A political capital enough to transform Africa and set Nigeria on an irreversible part to greatness but alas what did he do? He created the widest and longest uncertainty that jeopardized our Market and forced the CBN to introduce the most foolish monetary policy ever in the history of the world.

He rejected every suggestion on how to move the country forward, only to implement same when the head is already down (off).

Buhari was never programmed to solve 21st century problem and he still believes that threat alone is the only workable template in SWOT analysis. (the fear of Buhari alone increase electricity / power to above 5 Giga-w
att)

Don't forget we were told that putting on hold his government for six months and traveling the whole wide world is beneficial to our Economic growth.

Buhari and Buhari alone should be blamed for bringing Nigeria Economy to its knees.

If I may ask, who in his right frame of mind will invest in a country where the President confirmed that its citizens, business community, banks etc are all corrupt except himself and his cabinet?

What Buhari's policy couldn't destroy, his utterances killed.

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by GoldenJAT(m): 7:23am On Jul 25, 2016
tell them... but they won't believe!

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by lukecent: 7:27am On Jul 25, 2016
Let's take this to be true.

But the APC lead govt knew the economy was bad during campaign and promised to improve on it.

After one year they re still blaming GEJ instead of doing sth about it

This govt is confused for all I care
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Jengem: 7:29am On Jul 25, 2016
But amaethief and fashole never allowed jonathan save the money na
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by phemmie06(m): 7:29am On Jul 25, 2016
But he promised to fix the nation why the complain. The same way Fayose received unhealthy economy in Ekiti
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by onatisi(m): 7:33am On Jul 25, 2016
He didn't inherit a good economy yet his senile brain was churning out fairy tale promises of creating 3million jobs in a year,5000 naira stipends to the poor,stable light in 6months.
He didn't inherit a good economy yet his senseless brain never deemed it fit to constitute an economic team early in order to formulate policies instead he wasted 7 solid months touring all over the world and wasting over 5 billion naira on those senseless trip.
So what would he have done if he inherited a buoyant economy
Buhari is synonymous with bad luck,poverty ,failure and pain. Let buhari become the president of america or china, he will turn them into beggars . Lets just admit the fact and truth ,the dullard deaf president is a capital gargantuan failure

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Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Hiploko(m): 7:36am On Jul 25, 2016
taiosino:
My friend go and read history! The same way Jonathan mismanaged the oil boom was the way shagari did, from widespread corruption, to a mono economy and fallen oil prices, sounds familiar?
we have had governments like those of Abacha, IBB, Abdulsalam,Yaradua etc. Why always Buhari?( Why always me) gerrarahia mehn!
Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Nobody: 7:39am On Jul 25, 2016
blackpanda:
Yea the people above me wont bother to read because of personal and political bias. Once u mention jonathan, they can just collapse! grin


Fact remains, jonathan was wasteful and fully supported the corruption of his govt. I mean, how can a sitting president come out and say "stealing is not corruption". That is a green light to thieves to loot as much as u can

But of cos wailers keep suffering from selective amnesia.
Your point exactly?
Buhari took over management of a stage 1 malignancy and under his watch, it has progressed to Stage 4 within a year!. How does that exonerate him from being a bad doctor and demonize the previously managing physician?
For the first 7months he sat down and thought of the best modalities of treatment, placing the patient on conservative care. For the next 7months he went on a PR spin, blaming the previously managing physician for poorly managing a stage 1 malignancy whereas the patient was deteriorating under his watch. One wonders what he would do for the next 7months, if the patient would even be alive for that long.
In all your getting, get wisdom.

2 Likes

Re: Buhari Didn't Inherit Healthy Economy From Jonathan, Lets Get It Straight. by Ausbongean: 7:40am On Jul 25, 2016
please what are the names of the governors that opposed crude oil savings, that says it is
unconstitutional. or are you afraid to name st. amachi becos he is now in APC minister.

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