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Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Islie: 9:57am On May 30, 2019
Long lines of lorries stretch like tentacles from Apapa port, the largest in Nigeria. Drivers doze in their cabs, feet flung over dashboards; some sling hammocks beneath the chassis. Musa Ibrahim, an ebullient trader, says he has been queuing for two days. He gestures at empty buildings. “Most of the companies you see here they done close,” he sighs, writes The Economist.

The Nigerian economy is stuck like a stranded truck. Average incomes have been falling for four years; the IMF thinks they will not rise for at least another six. The latest figures put unemployment at 23%, after growing for 15 consecutive quarters. Inflation is 11%. Some 94 million people live on less than $1.90 a day, more than in any other country, and the number is swelling. By 2030 a quarter of very poor people will be Nigerians, predicts the World Data Lab, which counts such things.

Nigeria’s engine was already sputtering when President Muhammadu Buhari took the wheel in 2015. The price of oil, which makes up 9% of GDP and more than 90% of export earnings, had crashed. But “Baba Go Slow”, as Nigerians took to calling him, made a bad situation worse. Instead of letting Nigeria’s currency slide, which would have stoked inflation, policymakers rationed dollars to maintain the naira’s long-standing and artificially high peg to the dollar. To do so the central bank refused to release foreign currency for a long list of imports, ranging from toothpicks to shovels. Without dollars for equipment or supplies, factories closed and workers were laid off, leading to a recession in 2016.

The central bank confused things further by introducing several exchange rates. One was an official rate of 305 naira per dollar. Its main use seemed to be to allow the bank to brag about how strong the currency was since it sold almost no dollars at that absurd rate. Its second rate was used to funnel artificially cheap dollars (about 320 naira each) to favoured importers. Naturally, there were not enough of these dollars to go around, so most Nigerians (especially those buying toothpicks) had to pay as much as 500 naira on the black market. The gap between most of these rates has converged of late at about 360. But having so many rates puts off investors.

The government thinks the answer to the “dollar shortage” is for Nigerians to make and grow more and import less. To this end, it has slapped import taxes on rice and fertiliser and is giving tax breaks for a huge new oil refinery.

There is little sign of the kind of export-led industrial revolution that has lifted incomes in Asia. This is not only because the naira is overvalued. It is also because the state has spent decades neglecting basic public goods, like roads, schools and electricity. “In Nigeria if you set up a business you have to build your infrastructure, you have to build your power plant, you have to build everything,” says Abdul Samad Rabiu, the chairman of the BUA Group, a conglomerate. Eghosa Omoigui, who manages a tech fund, compares running a business there to “running a nation state”.

Where urgency is needed, Mr. Buhari offers only caution. Few are holding their breath for any more drive in his second term, which began on May 29th. “We are trying to avoid shocks,” explains Adeyemi Dipeolu, his economic adviser: sharp currency movements or hikes in electricity tariffs would be felt by ordinary Nigerians. Yet officials are postponing a crisis, not averting one. Consider borrowing. The debt-to-GDP ratio is 28%. But Nigeria collects so little in tax that interest payments swallow about 60% of federal revenues.

“We don’t have a debt problem, we have a revenue problem,” insists Udoma Udo Udoma, budget minister in Mr. Buhari’s first term. The government plans to raise funds by selling off some of its share in joint-venture contracts with oil companies and might hike taxes on luxury goods. Revenues are rising, but fall far short of budget targets. Some of the gap is probably being filled by running up an overdraft with the central bank, which now holds more assets than the entire banking system.

Public finances would be healthier if the government raised the price of fuel, which is imported by the state oil company and sold on at a loss. Last year this subsidy was worth at least 0.5% of GDP—as much as the government spent on health care. Politicians are scared to end the subsidy. An attempt to do so in 2012 led to massive protests. Although the government has expanded school-feeding programmes and is working on a safety net for the poor, most citizens get few benefits from the state. Oxfam, a charity, ranks 157 countries on their commitment to reducing inequality, based on social spending, taxes and labour laws: Nigeria comes last.

For Nigeria to prosper, the state could harness the vim of its 200m citizens. Instead it ignores them, except when politicians need votes. People have come to expect nothing from government, says Chika Okeke, who owns a small stationery shop in Lagos: “you struggle yourself.”


https://www.independent.ng/nigerians-got-poorer-in-buharis-first-term-the-economist/

17 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Paperwhite(m): 9:58am On May 30, 2019
Nothing new! With a president that had F-9 in Maths & Economy? A government in whose finance minister said "recession is just a word." sad

Meanwhile next level upgraded version of the voodoo Buharimonics have commenced while the Ajala president have directed his next globe-trotting trip to Morroco.

75 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by baliyubla: 10:03am On May 30, 2019
”The Nigerian economy is stuck like a stranded truck. Average incomes have been falling for four years; the IMF thinks they will not rise for at least another six. The latest figures put unemployment at 23%, after growing for 15 consecutive quarters. Inflation is 11%. Some 94 million people live on less than $1.90 a day, more than in any other country, and the number is swelling. By 2030 a quarter of very poor people will be Nigerians, predicts the World Data Lab, which counts such things.”

Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan and Somalia would be child’s play when the dullard is done with Nigeria.

73 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by globemoney: 10:14am On May 30, 2019
What happened to their prediction that Atiku would win? Fake news

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by yanabasee(m): 10:28am On May 30, 2019
Buhari doesn't know the meaning of economy.... He's after his integrity.....

Before we wail further.... Let's wait first, Atiku is coming!!

45 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by kings09(m): 10:32am On May 30, 2019
The Economist is ipob - sarrki

The Economist is an enemy to d state -

56 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by aare07(m): 12:55pm On May 30, 2019
B
Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by nony43(m): 12:55pm On May 30, 2019
Just look at were this dullard brought us to

9 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Nobody: 12:56pm On May 30, 2019
Issorite
Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by BruncleZuma: 12:56pm On May 30, 2019
Who cares anymore?!

2 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by ashten407: 12:56pm On May 30, 2019
angry
Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by dokyOloye: 12:56pm On May 30, 2019
Is this news?
Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by obaival(m): 12:57pm On May 30, 2019
Happy sit @home

6 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by BlackfireX: 12:57pm On May 30, 2019
Is a lie,


Is all fabricated concoction of lulalubu , a lacuna, a gantos in the viva villating of this beautiful entity called Nigeria.
Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Bacteriologist(m): 12:57pm On May 30, 2019
H
Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by sheller(m): 12:57pm On May 30, 2019
what do u expect from a gworo chewing president..dt can't even mange his cow

18 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Automatic3444(m): 12:58pm On May 30, 2019
grin bubu mr integrity

2 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by AstralBody: 12:58pm On May 30, 2019
Me don tire to complain,na seldom look me dey na angry angry angry

6 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by rusher14: 12:58pm On May 30, 2019
The same The Economist that made failed predictions on the 2019 election?

2 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by vengertime: 12:59pm On May 30, 2019
As I said earlier, this old 419 President really suck us dry.

Nigeria is in trouble

25 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by emsheddy(m): 1:01pm On May 30, 2019
E-rats will come and heap insults on this analysis. God please make Bubu second tenure better oh. We can't continue like this Lord

11 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by northvietnam(m): 1:02pm On May 30, 2019
I think Atiku and PDP have brided this people, they are the new wailing wailers, enemies of the state

Or maybe they are working for Ipob

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by LastSurvivor11: 1:02pm On May 30, 2019
Zombies right now!!

14 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Automatic3444(m): 1:02pm On May 30, 2019
This from a man who plan is planless, focus is focus less, direction is direction less grin

7 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Kayouzka(m): 1:03pm On May 30, 2019
Things would get better
Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by AyakaDunukofia: 1:03pm On May 30, 2019
It serves them right. Afterall what you seek is what u gonna get.

5 Likes

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Houseofglam7(f): 1:04pm On May 30, 2019
Ofcourse undecided

1 Like

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by Nobody: 1:04pm On May 30, 2019
Islie:







https://www.independent.ng/nigerians-got-poorer-in-buharis-first-term-the-economist/




When the righteous rules, the people rejoices. But when the dullards rule, soaking garri and gnut becomes luxury

1 Like

Re: Nigerians Got Poorer In Buhari’s First Term — The Economist by sevo(m): 1:04pm On May 30, 2019
And then poorer-er in next lebel

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