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Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy - Politics (3) - Nairaland

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Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Agentsmith002: 6:02pm On Oct 28, 2017
iluvpomo:
In related news, North Korea just won the U17 World Cup ... so happy for Kim Jong Un
. so you too watched the match? north Korea beat Nigeria 7-0

chaii
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Nobody: 6:03pm On Oct 28, 2017
[s][/s]
presidency:
Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy.

Around the middle of 2014, when the price of crude oil fell dramatically, Nigeria’s finances became challenged. This is not hard to explain: We’ve historically depended on crude oil for as much as 70 per cent of government revenues and 90 per cent of foreign exchange earnings. The outcome—pressure on government finances—was by no means unusual. A similar fate befell most oil-rich countries around the world.

Where Nigeria possibly stood out was in the fact that during the preceding three years—when oil prices were in excess of $100 per barrel—the previous administration did little in terms of saving and investing for the future. Our sovereign wealth fund—which was established in October 2012 with just US$1 billion—did not receive any further inflow during the oil price boom. Instead, billions of dollars were squandered through corrupt oil and defense contracts.

It is a terrible thing for a country to fall on hard times without a savings buffer. But there was nothing unexpected about our downturn. It was the inevitable result of the choices we made or didn’t make during the years of boom.

What is remarkable—yet not talked about as much—is the way we have worked so hard to exit the recession, reset the economy and reposition Nigeria for a brighter future for present and future generations of Nigerians. President Muhammadu Buhari and his administration are laying the foundations for the kind of economic growth that makes a real impact in the lives of citizens.

The downturn has inspired unprecedented levels of fiscal responsibility, in line with President Buhari’s determination to fight Nigeria’s endemic corruption.

Shortly after taking office, he issued a presidential order mandating the immediate implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) system, consolidating thousands of government accounts scattered across banks into a unified system that is transparent and easy to centrally monitor and track. Under the old system, it was common for government accounts to be converted into personal use, but under the TSA this is impossible. Also, the proliferation of accounts encouraged several questionable practices.

Budgetary reform has also taken a lot of our time and attention. We are pioneering the use of software to prepare our annual budgets, which allows greater transparency and the ability to track changes.

We have insisted on using biometric verification in the deployment of our social investment programme, which includes a job scheme for unemployed graduates; a school feeding scheme for primary school pupils; a conditional cash transfer scheme targeting a million of our poorest citizens; and a micro-credit scheme for artisans, farmers, and traders. In the past, social investment payments would have been made as cash handouts.

A similar insistence on biometric verification for the federal payroll has resulted in the detection of tens of thousands of bogus beneficiaries—or “ghost workers,” as we often refer to them in Nigeria—and savings running into billions of naira every month. The tighter rein on public finances allowed us invest $500 million in our sovereign wealth fund during a recession.

We are pursuing unprecedented cooperation with foreign governments and powers, as part of our transparency and anti-corruption drive. For the simple reason that a disproportionate amount of public funds looted in Nigeria end up in the United Arab Emirates, Nigeria has signed bilateral agreements with the UAE government on extradition, exchange of information, and repatriation of stolen public funds.

One strong demonstration of our political will has been a whistleblowing scheme we launched months ago that empowers citizens to report public corruption. The impact in terms of recoveries has exceeded our expectations: In two high-profile examples, $43 million and $9.8 million in looted cash were recovered from apartments in Lagos in the south and Kaduna in the north respectively.

A lot of the work we have done since President Buhari came to office in May 2015 has been focused on dismantling the old ways of doing things, rebuilding them, and empowering and fortifying our institutions with technology to block loopholes, discourage abuse, and prevent a relapse into the destructive ways of the past.

The new Nigeria we seek will not happen without this kind of foundational reform that imposes on us new ways of thinking and of doing things. The early results are already being seen. A concerted focus on agriculture has seen our rice imports from Thailand dropping by 90 per cent between 2015 and 2016 and being replaced by locally grown variants.

As oil has let us down, we have started to do what we should have done decades ago: Invest in agriculture and mining. Throughout the recession, agriculture recorded healthy growth. As we emerge from the recession, its impact is certain to multiply and position Nigeria for a prosperous future.

The most important elements of any reform effort tend to be the least flamboyant. We are confident that in the months and years ahead, Nigerians and the world will see the full impact of the foundational resetting that the Buhari administration has been focused on since 2015.

There is of course a lot of resistance to reform, by vested interests within and outside the system. But we are not fazed. The work of reform goes on. To borrow a phrase from the Nigerian novelist, Chinua Achebe, it is morning yet on Creation Day. Not very long from now, Nigerians and the world will look back on the recession we have just emerged from, and realize that it was the turning point in Nigeria's journey to true growth and greatness.


By The Hounorable Minister Of Finance,
Kemi Adeosun.

Source: http://www.newsweek.com/nigeria-economy-recession-muhammadu-buhari-693620







[s][/s]

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by chukzyfcbb: 6:05pm On Oct 28, 2017
Skmoda360:
wetin this one dey talk?.....this woman is not making any sense at all.......which time Nigeria came out of recession?.....In her dreams i guess?
It was announced officially that we were in recession . Likewise its been announced officially that we are out of recession.

so what are you talking about? If you want to rant about hunger in the land, then you do not know what recession means in the first place

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by EmekaBlue(m): 6:06pm On Oct 28, 2017
if u believe this rubbish..ur mumu never do

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Heltinking(m): 6:07pm On Oct 28, 2017
Indeed
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by iluvpomo(m): 6:08pm On Oct 28, 2017
Agentsmith002:
. so you too watched the match? north Korea beat Nigeria 7-0

chaii
yes oh, despite the score line, our “young” boys tried oh
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by kereman1: 6:14pm On Oct 28, 2017
adasina d ass wipe
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by kereman1: 6:14pm On Oct 28, 2017
adesina d ass wipe
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Nobody: 6:18pm On Oct 28, 2017
How was your abroad's medical vocation madam minister


Lie lie minister of APC Buhari's corrupt government official.

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Awoleesu(m): 6:21pm On Oct 28, 2017
Who is Presidency? #peeringatOPmonicker
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by NwaIgboBoy(m): 6:24pm On Oct 28, 2017
Buh I fail to see tinx been transformed here.........I HATE NIGERIA!!!
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by anuoluwapo884(m): 6:24pm On Oct 28, 2017
origima:



U may be right ,i may equally meet u for my next meal but understand that Governance is not moi moi.it is not easy as most of us assumed. It is not even easy to lead only our wife talk of our town union.


What's this one saying it's not easy to transform but it's easy to loot.. looting everywhere even during GEJ regime which looting was much economy still cool and going calm a bit not the one this clueless old soldier is running abeg shift if you don't have a good point to raise
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by lilytender: 6:24pm On Oct 28, 2017
FarahAideed:
Nonsense stop cooking up figures , Nigeria is not out of recession till Buhari goes back to Daura..No nation deserves such lackadaisical style leadership

But you believed the figures that Nigeria is in recession. Good luck to you. If you want someone like Goatluck Jonaddaft, them you can make him the president of Biafra.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by FarahAideed: 6:29pm On Oct 28, 2017
lilytender:


But you believed the figures that Nigeria is in recession. Good luck to you. If you want someone like Goatluck Jonaddaft, them you can make him the president of Biafra.

I believed because I felt it , I saw jobs getting lost, I saw the buying power of the naira slump, I saw double digits inflation. I have not seen a reverse and prices are still increasing , the naira still slumped this week and you want me to believe cooked figures..Well since you have vowed not to have sense I have mine intact

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by sinola(m): 6:30pm On Oct 28, 2017
presidency:
Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy.

Around the middle of 2014, when the price of crude oil fell dramatically, Nigeria’s finances became challenged. This is not hard to explain: We’ve historically depended on crude oil for as much as 70 per cent of government revenues and 90 per cent of foreign exchange earnings. The outcome—pressure on government finances—was by no means unusual. A similar fate befell most oil-rich countries around the world.

Where Nigeria possibly stood out was in the fact that during the preceding three years—when oil prices were in excess of $100 per barrel—the previous administration did little in terms of saving and investing for the future. Our sovereign wealth fund—which was established in October 2012 with just US$1 billion—did not receive any further inflow during the oil price boom. Instead, billions of dollars were squandered through corrupt oil and defense contracts.

It is a terrible thing for a country to fall on hard times without a savings buffer. But there was nothing unexpected about our downturn. It was the inevitable result of the choices we made or didn’t make during the years of boom.

What is remarkable—yet not talked about as much—is the way we have worked so hard to exit the recession, reset the economy and reposition Nigeria for a brighter future for present and future generations of Nigerians. President Muhammadu Buhari and his administration are laying the foundations for the kind of economic growth that makes a real impact in the lives of citizens.

The downturn has inspired unprecedented levels of fiscal responsibility, in line with President Buhari’s determination to fight Nigeria’s endemic corruption.

Shortly after taking office, he issued a presidential order mandating the immediate implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) system, consolidating thousands of government accounts scattered across banks into a unified system that is transparent and easy to centrally monitor and track. Under the old system, it was common for government accounts to be converted into personal use, but under the TSA this is impossible. Also, the proliferation of accounts encouraged several questionable practices.

Budgetary reform has also taken a lot of our time and attention. We are pioneering the use of software to prepare our annual budgets, which allows greater transparency and the ability to track changes.

We have insisted on using biometric verification in the deployment of our social investment programme, which includes a job scheme for unemployed graduates; a school feeding scheme for primary school pupils; a conditional cash transfer scheme targeting a million of our poorest citizens; and a micro-credit scheme for artisans, farmers, and traders. In the past, social investment payments would have been made as cash handouts.

A similar insistence on biometric verification for the federal payroll has resulted in the detection of tens of thousands of bogus beneficiaries—or “ghost workers,” as we often refer to them in Nigeria—and savings running into billions of naira every month. The tighter rein on public finances allowed us invest $500 million in our sovereign wealth fund during a recession.

We are pursuing unprecedented cooperation with foreign governments and powers, as part of our transparency and anti-corruption drive. For the simple reason that a disproportionate amount of public funds looted in Nigeria end up in the United Arab Emirates, Nigeria has signed bilateral agreements with the UAE government on extradition, exchange of information, and repatriation of stolen public funds.

One strong demonstration of our political will has been a whistleblowing scheme we launched months ago that empowers citizens to report public corruption. The impact in terms of recoveries has exceeded our expectations: In two high-profile examples, $43 million and $9.8 million in looted cash were recovered from apartments in Lagos in the south and Kaduna in the north respectively.

A lot of the work we have done since President Buhari came to office in May 2015 has been focused on dismantling the old ways of doing things, rebuilding them, and empowering and fortifying our institutions with technology to block loopholes, discourage abuse, and prevent a relapse into the destructive ways of the past.

The new Nigeria we seek will not happen without this kind of foundational reform that imposes on us new ways of thinking and of doing things. The early results are already being seen. A concerted focus on agriculture has seen our rice imports from Thailand dropping by 90 per cent between 2015 and 2016 and being replaced by locally grown variants.

As oil has let us down, we have started to do what we should have done decades ago: Invest in agriculture and mining. Throughout the recession, agriculture recorded healthy growth. As we emerge from the recession, its impact is certain to multiply and position Nigeria for a prosperous future.

The most important elements of any reform effort tend to be the least flamboyant. We are confident that in the months and years ahead, Nigerians and the world will see the full impact of the foundational resetting that the Buhari administration has been focused on since 2015.

There is of course a lot of resistance to reform, by vested interests within and outside the system. But we are not fazed. The work of reform goes on. To borrow a phrase from the Nigerian novelist, Chinua Achebe, it is morning yet on Creation Day. Not very long from now, Nigerians and the world will look back on the recession we have just emerged from, and realize that it was the turning point in Nigeria's journey to true growth and greatness.


By The Hounorable Minister Of Finance,
Kemi Adeosun.

Source: http://www.newsweek.com/nigeria-economy-recession-muhammadu-buhari-693620

Talk is cheap.....until I see the effect on food commodities in the market

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Agimor(m): 6:30pm On Oct 28, 2017
I disliked theoretical economics. She's there saying the economy has improved while the prices of goods and services are on the increase daily.
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by origima: 6:31pm On Oct 28, 2017
anuoluwapo884:



What's this one saying it's not easy to transform but it's easy to loot.. looting everywhere even during GEJ regime which looting was much economy still cool and going calm a bit not the one this clueless old soldier is running abeg shift if you don't have a good point to raise

Ancestor, what was oil price when ur hero and his gang was milking u and the oil price when the old soldier is looting u.Be reasonable and stop reasoning out of prejudice

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by greatman247(m): 6:31pm On Oct 28, 2017
id911:
Madam Kemi, the reality on ground is quite different. Tell your Principal the absolute truth so that he will sit up and effect the needed change so that Nigerians will enjoy the benefits of democracy they sacrificed for.


Nigerians, let's wisen up and ATIKULATE for a prosperous future


ATIKUlate my ass. The man is even LATE.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by RealAAdekunjo(m): 6:33pm On Oct 28, 2017
we ate doomed for having these sets of people as our leaders ...... incompetent elements
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by LizzyAnn(f): 6:35pm On Oct 28, 2017
you are right ma'am,transforming the economy with Hunger,poverty and starvation.
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by hermosa7: 6:35pm On Oct 28, 2017
God bless Nigeria!
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by freemanq(m): 6:35pm On Oct 28, 2017
OK now contunu !!!!!!!
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by delishpot: 6:36pm On Oct 28, 2017
4kings:

I've been waiting na... sad


Hahahahaha, No be small o. I am still thinking of what to type.
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Miles300: 6:40pm On Oct 28, 2017
Lol fake !

Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by michoim(m): 6:41pm On Oct 28, 2017
This is true achievement
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by emi14: 6:41pm On Oct 28, 2017
Superficial economic reforms because of 2019. Nigerians will see the worst if Buhari is Nigerian president by 2020.
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by 4kings: 6:42pm On Oct 28, 2017
delishpot:



Hahahahaha, No be small o. I am still thinking of what to type.
Okay, mention me when you done.
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by delishpot: 6:44pm On Oct 28, 2017
4kings:

Okay, mention me when you done.


Deal! grin
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by positivetaught: 6:45pm On Oct 28, 2017
This APC administration keep recycling this fable of the last administration looting the country ironically this same APC claimed to have recovered trillions of the looted funds yet the same APC wants the whole world to believe that there is no money in the country,what an abracadabra of an administration!!.
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Nobody: 6:46pm On Oct 28, 2017
this love letter is for Buhari,all this grammar is lost on me madam, i just want people to get their jobs back,factories to reopen,dollar to be 150,rice to be 5k,infact i want it to be 2014.all this rambling ,your phonetics no dey work again
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by Skmoda360(m): 6:47pm On Oct 28, 2017
chukzyfcbb:

It was announced officially that we were in recession . Likewise its been announced officially that we are out of recession.

so what are you talking about? If you want to rant about hunger in the land, then you do not know what recession means in the first place
i don't wanna start a baseless argument with you....cuz you seem clueless about what is going on presently in the country..
Re: Nigeria Is Out Of Recession And President Buhari Is Transforming The Economy by MNDY(m): 6:49pm On Oct 28, 2017
The government should pump money into circulation in the country. Here where I stay, the prices of commodities (esp. food) have started to drop, but no money to buy them.

This government forced the people into serious farming activity, hence the drop in prices of food commodities after harvest.

I am beginning to feel that this government wants to start working (with all those moves she claims they have made) and make things better in this country and for its people as we approach elections; talk about campaign style.

Otherwise this woman should just shut up and this government should kuku tell us that this country has "spoiled" beyond repair and cannot be fixed, for fixing it was the job the people brought them for even as they now already feel betrayed.

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