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Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness - Politics (5) - Nairaland

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Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by mikolo80: 12:31pm On Jan 23, 2016
omohayek:


The true mark of cluelessness is blaming Kemi Adeosun for two areas of policy over which she has no control. It takes real ignorance to blame the finance minister for an FX policy which is actually set by Godwin Emefiele, the head of the CBN; she also had no hand in the NSE's difficulties, as the CEO of the Nigerian Stock Exchange is a man named Oscar N. Onyema.
you're trying to reason with imbeciles. you better just leave them in their stupidity

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by mikolo80: 12:34pm On Jan 23, 2016
Tochaigh:
If emifiele was standing right in front of me, with a loaded beratta in my hand. I will send that motherfucker straight to hell.

AhhAhh! Must buhari be so effing slow. Emifiele should have been sacked like yesterday!!!
rule of law unfortunately. I don't know why Jonathan bequeathed us this nonentity. how e take become oga for zenith
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by ferhyntorlah(f): 12:36pm On Jan 23, 2016
The brouhaha you guys are engaged in is none of my business. All I'm after is for Nigeria into diversify her economy and not depend on oil.

We need to encourage local production of goods, thus increasing exports!

The era of free money from oil is OVER!

The masses are on PANASHARP!
The era of Panadol is OVER!

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by grandstar(m): 12:38pm On Jan 23, 2016
Kikero112:


To clarify....

Emefiele said back in November 2015 that (Sauce:http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/11/why-we-ignored-calls-for-naira-devaluation-by-cbn/)

The simple idea behind devaluation is that it will make your import more expensive while your export is cheaper.



“Our major export commodity which accounts for more than 80% of our income is crude oil and here is crude oil that the price is determined, we don’t have a control over it. So, if we devalue, it has no impact directly on our major export, and what is supposed to be the non oil export, we are not producing effectively.


“It means that for the industry which is also import dependent, they have to pay higher prices for those goods which will translate to higher inflation.”


You see the problem.....and that is why CBN is not interested in devaluing the Naira.

At least back in 1989....when we did devalue the Naira....we had some form of an industry. And it did not work back then.
You say you don't want to devalue but its 300 to one. You don't devalue because you want to but because you have to. Its not a matter of whether you like that 1+1 = 2 but you simply have to do it.

The currency has devalued to 300 or don't you know this? Why are people digging their heads in the sand. If he had devalued it officially ,the rate would have converged between 230-250

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by light004: 12:39pm On Jan 23, 2016
sdindan:
hmmmmm!
I wish Buhari can read or understand English well.
Everybody is wailing even foreign media.

It's so painful, when you have insulted the former office holder calling him all sorts of names and promising Nigerians that you are coming to deliver them from your self-created doom. Now, you are in power, you lose steam and keep blaming everybody but yourself. The nation today is worse off than you met it rather then admit your failings you are busy dealing with perceived enemy who are bold enough to look you in the face and speak the truth.

Now, the world is laughing at us wondering how in the hell in the 21st century we elected a dictator to power. Today, majority of Nigerians are suffering like never before, freedom to speak freely is being restricted, people are harassed and intimated when perceived as opposition. Just in 2014, Nigerians took all this for granted and call the man who gave them all these liberty as clueless and incompetence. I believe now, the mean of these words are coming home.

So sad!!!

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by umehmj(m): 12:39pm On Jan 23, 2016
well, as for me and my household, we are enjoying heaven's economy. he has given me and my family peace, joy and progress round and about. BTW!....


....what happened to buhari's campaign promises of equating the naira to a dollar? oh i remember. blame the last administration.

2 Likes

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by InvertedHammer: 12:39pm On Jan 23, 2016
/
He is right.

Anything that doesn't involve perpetual servitude to IMF and World Bank is "height of foolishness".

Believe any agent of economic hitmen at your own peril
Failure to save for the rainy days got Nigeria where she is today. Middle East nations developed their countries and built up huge reserves. Nigerians partied and looted their revenues. Other countries with huge reserves tapped into it to balance their budget pending the normalization of the oil market. Nigeria? Well, one cannot eat his cake and has it. They resort to what they know best - borrowing.
/
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by Dee60: 12:40pm On Jan 23, 2016
Financial Times may have their arguments but they also just exhibited the HEIGHT OF INTELLECTUAL ARROGANCE. In the matters of Economics no one knows it all. China made their own plan, and India too, in spite of the FT, and they have been able to bail themselves out.

FT knows nothing about the environment here and cannot have answers to Nigeria's problems.

Britian and AMerica are so advanced that you may leave its market to market forces. Not Nigeria! Have they ever seen an economy where the governor of a state can pocket the income of that state? Or where a security adviser can pocket/share budgetteary allocations that should have been used to equip the Army?

What market forces? FT should just admit its ignorance and come down from their lofty heights and high horses.

Devaluation is risky at the moment because it will translate immediately into rise in Petrol prices. Remember we still import Petrol, and you need dollars to fund its import. Imagine that a devalued Naira will mean that Petrol will sell for N150 pump price. Will that not lead to crisis?

CBN has only just said that excessive importation for just anything from toothpicks to human hair is the reason for the pressure on the naira. So, they have curtailed the quest for just anything.

Dangote is smarter than all of FT put together and he once said that restricting import with the list of 41 items is the best economic drive he has seen in Nigeria. Now, we have to make our own ceramic tiles, put on our own Ankara, eat local eggs instead of cheese! Why cant we consume what we can produce?

Nigerians have to change our unbridled taste and appetite for products simply because they are made in 'Other Countries'! When whites come to Africa/Nigeria, they come to make cheap money to take back home. When Nigerians go to their lands, we take boroowed dollars to go and shop for just anything.

Devaluation has only a short term benefit to any economy that is largely consumptive and not productive. If Naira sells for 300 at the official market today, the so called 'smart investors' will rush in funds, scoop the market and walk away to pile pressure for further devaluation!

The average Indian puts on clothes made in India. Why cant we wear Ankara, even to work? Imagine the millions of jobs that will create, and imagine the savings on forex!

True, we cannot isolate our market, but the fact remains also that we cannot contine with unbridled appetite for anything made by 'Uncle Sam'!

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by ferhyntorlah(f): 12:40pm On Jan 23, 2016
tsdarkside:

all hail our goverment!!!....the naira should be for nigerians not for the ol world....

we must stop dashing our hard-earned naira to foreighners...

nigeria has to build out the nigerian-army....

if you realy try to go financial-independence,they will start making plans against you like they did with gadhaffi...

china did it right...first build your army,before restructuring your economie....

Nigeria needs to learn from Malaysia, China, Singapore, India and other countries classified with her in the 60s how they turned their economy around, esp China and India since we share similar population size.

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Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by MrSegunAdewole: 12:43pm On Jan 23, 2016
[s]
Gbawe:


You guys are simply shameless !!! Awful and highly prejudiced human beings the lot of you !!! Hate for others, 24/7, guide how you think and talk and this is why you can never see or appreciate the obvious. Look at how you ungraciously insult a lady who deserves respect, by dint of her hard work and achievements in life, when it is you who is actually a "stark illiterate" talking ignorantly and using terms, eg "fiscal policy" , you and your fellow co-travellers in hate do not understand. no one, and I repeat no one, can perform miracles for the actual situation Nigeria is in. An intelligent and objective person will even admit it will get worse before it gets better because:

(1) Nigeria is a mono economy with her main export being oil which is responsible for 80% of Nigeria's income and a big portion of the foreign exchange we receive. Because of an indolent and singular focus on oil income by the PDP, the Party that has led us for 16 years since 1999, the Nigerian economy is not diversified at all and, of all major oil exporters worldwide, the most vulnerable to the drastic fall in oil price.

(2) The SME sector, the lifeblood of the biggest economies in the world, is moribund in Nigeria and unable to provide any sort of appreciable stimulus to help us in a very difficult period caused by a 75% drop in the worth of our main export.

(3) Recovery will be much more painful and slower because we failed totally to plan for this stage. The previous government, despite selling oil at record price of $110.00 per barrel for an appreciable period, failed to save completely.

(4) critical infrastructure, eg transport and power, cannot provide short term stimulus as tools of diversifying the economy because they are simply inadequate courtesy of the PDP that has had really poor impact on improving the infrastructures that aids the growth of the SME sector, movement of goods and services and general socio-economic growth.


There are more consideration but they would be too complex for you "stark illiterates" who ignore real global challenges other economies are exposed to and struggling with to be blaming one woman merely because she is finance Minister and Yoruba. There is not much Adeosun can do because , primarily, Nigeria is a mono economy that lived by oil and must 'die' by oil for now and till we steady the ship painfully and slowly. Forget all the big words you guys are using with the hope such will impress or confuse anyone. This economic downturn started under GEJ. The article below is from 2014 when oil sold for $68.00 per barrel.

The experts, i.e global economist, stated that we should forget any hope of a quick recovery under those conditions so what do you empty barrels and ethnocentric charlatan expect Adeosun to do in 2016 when oil is $27.00 per barrel and we are all facing the revelation that Ali Baba (GEJ) and his forty thieves (Dasuki, Metuh, Anenih, Allison-Madueke et al) have stolen Nigeria blind especially the desperate looting of 2015 in the attempt to steal the elections? Do you not see below when a knowledgeable analyst, commenting in 2014 when oil was $68.00 per barrel, admits that "the governments options are limited" and that “We’re a substantial way from the economy even starting to think about being able to recover,”. Do you and your fellow charlatans know better than the analyst who made those informed comments?

furthermore, you shameless and wicked guys really have mouth to talk considering the callous and worthless GEJ you blindly gave 100% electoral and vocal backing to, along with his appointees like NOI and Allison-Madueke et al, is, to a large extent, responsible for the mess we are in today. You are all really shameless and it is obvious you do not mean well for Nigeria and are only interested in settling ethnic scores and vendetta over GEJ's election loss and this is why you cannot give Buhari and his appointees your support when they have the worst set of economic condition any Country in the world currently can be saddled with. You are all truly unrelentingly wicked enemies of Nigeria's progress.


http://www.wsj.com/articles/nigerias-tumbling-currency-a-victim-of-falling-oil-prices-1417535209


[/s]
Rubbish

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Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by ferhyntorlah(f): 12:43pm On Jan 23, 2016
Kikero112:


Basic problem with devaluing the naira is that while it will make imports expensive....which is a good thing.....it would also make locally manufactured goods expensive....because most of them are made with imported raw materials.

Fact is....we are so import dependent....that devaluing the naira just won't help us.

So true.
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by ojuu4u(m): 12:44pm On Jan 23, 2016
Briefly, wats hapning to u knw i biliv u knw its product of wat u did yesteryear and wat u are doing today the result wl be coming years to come, so for now u cant blame adeosun,
2. U said its frm souce. Those economists are outsiders hence they based theories on asumptions, dnt take them hook, line and sinker



03. CBN is autonomy agency, it contros monentry policy of govt while finiance ministry contro fiscal policy of govt and the ansrable to president, meanwhile their perfomances reflect on NSE.

1.Making a reference to him as "my brother" has got nothing to do with ethnic affiliations but rather as one human to another.
2. The economic policies being brandished by this administration has all been synonymous with cluelessness.
3. I am afraid your responses are coming


The message was delivered exactly "as is" from the source.


PS: note that the CBN is inder the ministry of finance, and also the NSE thoigh private
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by chinchum(m): 12:45pm On Jan 23, 2016
Kikero112:


Thanks to the fact that until 2014.....we had sustained high oil prices....and were budgeting at a lower benchmark.

The problem was that we did not save the surplus.

If oil prices had crashed during GEJ's regime...say 2012....we would have had deficits.

And GEJ still borowed , inspite of that. Not exactly good economic practice.



Considering the fact that oil prices are at a six year low of $28 ...something which GEJ never had to contend with....the fact remains that we are an oil dependent economy, and when prices crash....we have to borrow to keep the books balanced. And while buhari should hurry up and diversify.....diversification takes a long time. GEJ's agric minister was a godsend(and his nomination to the big continental job was backed by both PDP and APC )....BUT he was only able to get us to no5 in cocoa production.....and nowhere in ground-nuts, cotton and palm oil.(Palm oil where we used to be no 1).

In other words.....the borrowing is not because of bad economic practice....it is because our hands were forced by the low oil price....and by PDP's failure.....and here I also bash OBJ and Yaradua....for not diversifying our economy when we had high oil price.(In other words....they repeated the mistakes of 1970's).Another reason is GEJ's failure to save (thanks partly to the governors....most of whom were from his party anyways)...but even if GEJ had saved ......he would have delayed the problem we face now till 2017.
Crude Oil price at 28usd/barrel is not at 6 year low, it is actually at 13 year low, year 2003 to be precise, somedays ago it was at 26usd actually. The differential of imports value and the export value is widening putting a strain on the Nations Naira. cbn governor is managing the situation, IMO, Emefiele's only sin is changing his cbn policies like a flash light in a short space of time, causing speculators to have a field day with the price of naira to a usd at the back market.

For those canvassing for devaluation of naira to from the current 197 to 230, i can bet the price at the parallel market will also slide from 300 to range of 330 at such news.
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by linearity: 12:46pm On Jan 23, 2016
DelGardo:
So they advocate that CBN should let Naira go on a free fall, and the wailers seem to like their suggestion. Cool.

I only hope they don't come here tomorrow to scream "Exchange rate is now N3,500/$!".
Nigeria does not have the international cloth to artificially hold the value of Naira and at the same time attract investments.

Also, keeping a two tier currency exchange is the worst policy, where only the exclusive rich have access to the juicy rate to make them richer as government subsidizes that rate, and the rest of us and the masses are again left with the worst rate making it nearly difficult to export anything and God crying out loud, if you Nigeria to start producing stuff, make is economically viable for them to export same.

Lastly, like you must have learned in secondary school economy class, the forces of demand and supply set prices in a free market and not some government policy.

Naira will not continue to slide if left to the demand/supply, there is always an equilibrium point that, it will start attracting investors.

In fact, US too the opposite approach and devalued their currency for almost 7 years from the start of the current recession. At a point the Canadian dollar was stronger that the US dollar and the Euro was almost twice in value compare to the dollar...now the Canadian dollar is half as valuable as the US dollar and euro is trading at per with the US dollar. Yes, there were pains when the dollar was made cheap, but it was done to attract investors, once investors were fully confident and fully invested, the currency was inflated and they are now happy and reaping the benefit of the risks they took.

By artificially holding the price of the naira, the government hopes that, they can hold out longer for Nigeria to improve again. Am sorry, nothing is attractive again, the oil have lost its lustral, I hear people shouting 'Agriculture! Agriculture!! Agriculture!!!' as the answer, as much as we must start investing in agriculture, we should understand that, it is not a miracle pile...it will take time to ramp up output to international commercial standards and that too needs mechanism farming, which is lacking in most of Nigeria, where manual labor is the bane of the trade. Also, after getting outputs to international levels, you have to start negotiating and looking buyers and signing deals...yes, it will happen one day, but because we have neglected Agriculture for so long, it will not be readily available as a cushion.
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by Nobody: 12:58pm On Jan 23, 2016
omohayek:


The true mark of cluelessness is blaming Kemi Adeosun for two areas of policy over which she has no control. It takes real ignorance to blame the finance minister for an FX policy which is actually set by Godwin Emefiele, the head of the CBN; she also had no hand in the NSE's difficulties, as the CEO of the Nigerian Stock Exchange is a man named Oscar N. Onyema.

You are a dullard o, please elaborate on the duties of a Finance Minister. Once you have done, then you go apologise for your dumb thinking.

2 Likes

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by frankyychiji(f): 1:05pm On Jan 23, 2016
OkutaNla:


Don't mind those hypocrites. If that happens they will be first to remind us how much it was under Okonjo Iweala and Jonathan. They are confused and don't wish this administration well, irrespective of what it does.
See wailing...they warned you but you wouldn't listen. When you point an accusing finger at someone, the remaining four fingers point at you. Karma is a biatch mehn!

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by frankyychiji(f): 1:15pm On Jan 23, 2016
Chubhie:

We all have friends,colleagues,families who for some reasons beyond logic gets enchanted once sai baba is echoed yet face same harsh economic realities with us. maybe a sexy thunder can do the trick?

I know demdem is already getting excited with having a thunder romp.
...EdCure and Dropshot too grin
They are at daggers drawn in the other thread. EdCure is now a wailing wailer, Bubu's high-handedness has crippled his business, dropshot and OrlandoOwoh says he must be a beneficiary of Dasukigate grin , infact, Edcure thinks Buhari only takes advice from Northern Elders only grin!! The zombies around there are now wishing Edcure falls down and d...for criticizing their god after eating Aisha's rice!! grin grin grin

Kai! Walahi the roforofo fight no be here ooo

4 Likes

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by pasol4real(m): 1:16pm On Jan 23, 2016
Since i was born i have been looking for the true definition of CLUELESSNESS .
Now i have found it boldly engraved in this APC GOVERNMENT.
What a sweet discovery cheesy
EUREKA!!!!
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by Nobody: 1:16pm On Jan 23, 2016
APCLyingBastard:


And what exactly do you produce for export in your sophisticated region?

The oil you are condemning is the only solution your clueless govt and regions have to survive.


This is why I call you people ingrates.


If we in the ND where independent of your useless nation do you think by now we will still be exporting crude to buy refined Petroluem products?


.

I am actually from an oil producing state....and not from the SW.

And good afternoon to you too.

Abeg leave your flat chest beating when you discuss among your fellow roaches

The above comment was unnecessary and uncalled for. Be decent and respectful when discussing here please.
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by emmykk(m): 1:18pm On Jan 23, 2016
omohayek:


The true mark of cluelessness is blaming Kemi Adeosun for two areas of policy over which she has no control. It takes real ignorance to blame the finance minister for an FX policy which is actually set by Godwin Emefiele, the head of the CBN; she also had no hand in the NSE's difficulties, as the CEO of the Nigerian Stock Exchange is a man named Oscar N. Onyema.

she also has no hand in unchecked budget...abi

so what does she has hand in?

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by seunt4ut(m): 1:27pm On Jan 23, 2016
omohayek:


The true mark of cluelessness is blaming Kemi Adeosun for two areas of policy over which she has no control. It takes real ignorance to blame the finance minister for an FX policy which is actually set by Godwin Emefiele, the head of the CBN; she also had no hand in the NSE's difficulties, as the CEO of the Nigerian Stock Exchange is a man named Oscar N. Onyema.

Education is good. Majority of them repeat what they told them. They can't differentiate btwn Financial role and monetary role. When you see them running mouth just watch cause folks like these like to advertise their foolishness. And when they do you don't have to talk.

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by kaboninc(m): 1:28pm On Jan 23, 2016
NavierStokes:


1.Making a reference to him as "my brother" has got nothing to do with ethnic affiliations but rather as one human to another.
2. The economic policies being brandished by this administration has all been synonymous with cluelessness.
3. I am afraid your responses are coming across as bigoted from the way youtried to shift blames to emefiele and onyema and attempting to shield the finance minister from attacks.
4. My brother do not be intransigent and assert that I am incredible because of differing opinions. The message was delivered exactly "as is" from the source.


PS: note that the CBN is inder the ministry of finance, and also the NSE thoigh private is regulated by SEC and under the supervision of the ministry of finance. So his assertion isn't unfounded and you arguing the contrary is an indirect attempt to accuse madam finance minister of laxity in carrying out her duties.

No brother,

The CBN is a body on its own and supervised (their accounts only) by the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria.

The SEC is also a body on its own too.

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by ahaika23: 1:28pm On Jan 23, 2016
cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy When Cluelessness collides with illiteracy, you get a huge mess (Nigeria Economy)
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by Chubhie: 1:29pm On Jan 23, 2016
frankyychiji:
...EdCure and Dropshot too grin
They are at daggers drawn in the other thread. EdCure is now a wailing wailer, Bubu's high-handedness has crippled his business, dropshot and OrlandoOwoh says he must be a beneficiary of Dasukigate grin , infact, Edcure thinks Buhari only takes advice from Northern Elders only grin!! The zombies around there are now wishing Edcure falls down and d...for criticizing their god after eating Aisha's rice!! grin grin grin

Kai! Walahi the roforofo fight no be here ooo
SubhanAllah for sheik Edcure has seen the light. Never in our recent history has brothers been turned against each other the way Buhari and Apc has done.

Give me the link of this roforofo fight.LOL.
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by holaralph(m): 1:30pm On Jan 23, 2016
In 2008 the great recession hit america and it affects the world. Before the recession american Unemployment rate was 5% but rose to 10 late 2009 while the recession lasted for almost 2years, since Obama became president of american there as been a lot of economic measure put in place to avert the recession gradually america was able to survive the great recession gradually the employment rate start reducing from 10% to 5% presently. Can you people guess what, the people that are in the republican camp are never happy with the success of obama administrationyet they complain so much about the economic measures. That's America still complaining about economic measures if people in america that as a very structures economy plans can complain then am not surprise seeing people wailing. America as a democracy than spanned thru generations with great efficient plans for the selfless individuals. We can never compare nigeria to USA or other western world. Finally, I figure this out that any economic measure that an African country intend to put in place that doesn't favour any western country they will be the first to shout about it. Sooo am not surprise if financial times and other media wail......... PDP and APC will still continue to try their best as regards economic plans and measures.....My View once more

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by Nobody: 1:31pm On Jan 23, 2016
kaboninc:


No brother,

The CBN is a body on its own and supervised (their accounts only) by the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria.

The SEC is also a body on its own too.

Bro, please reply my last PM. Thanks.
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by Alezy(m): 1:35pm On Jan 23, 2016
dearpreye:

Bro, please reply my last PM. Thanks.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by seunt4ut(m): 1:35pm On Jan 23, 2016
Closedoor:


You are a dullard o, please elaborate on the duties of a Finance Minister. Once you have done, then you go apologise for your dumb thinking.

You Brilliant mind. Tell us who did the senate summon for weaken of Naira?

Duty of finance minister. Its main duties and functions are to: Prepare the annual fiscal budget and issue adequate regulations for its execution. Digest it and put it at the back of your flat head.

1 Like

Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by Nobody: 1:37pm On Jan 23, 2016
[quote author=Alezy post=42251384][/quote]

I don wait for your own oooo
Re: Financial Times calls Nigeria's economic approach the height of foolishness by onatisi(m): 1:38pm On Jan 23, 2016
chukwudi44:
That Kemi Adeseoun of a woman is the true depiction of cluelessness!!
don't blame Kemi adeosun , buhari never listens. What do you want Kemi adeosun to do ,if she advises the dullard and he tells her to shut up
When buhari nominated his ministers I raised this point that it is a different issue to appoint qualified intelligent brains into your cabinet and another issue allowing them to perform and do their job perfectly. All the ministers appointed so far have done virtually nothing because they don't and can't go beyond certain restrictions imposed on them by buhari and which is curtailing their actions

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