Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,163,301 members, 7,853,393 topics. Date: Friday, 07 June 2024 at 03:47 PM

Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians (23952 Views)

Tinubu To Northern Lawmakers: I’m Healthy, Just Undergoing Therapy (Video) / PDP In Shock, As Uduaghan Defects To APC / Grazing: Miyetti Allah Expresses Shock Over South-East Governors' Decision (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (Reply) (Go Down)

Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Racoon(m): 12:33am On Sep 07, 2020
You campaign in poetry. You govern in prose. Former governor of New York-Mario Matthew Cuomo, now of blessed memory, said those immortal words 35 years ago.Poetry is relatively short and flowery; prose is much longer and less flowery.

Yoruba would render the same thing Cuomo said as “enu dun r’ofo” i.e. “it always looks easy to make a delicious meal with words of mouth”. Anyone can talk a good game.

When the All Progressives Congress (APC) was seeking to displace the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from Aso Rock Villa in 2015, poetry was the easiest part of the job. Five years on and the prose is damning.They are doing what they used to pummel the PDP for.

This year alone, we have witnessed what would other-wise be abominations to President Muhammadu Buhari: devaluation of the naira, increase in fuel price and a rise in electricity tariffs. VAT has gone up from 5 percent to 7.5 percent. Bank account holders are paying stamp duty for receiving deposits above certain amounts.

Air travellers have been slammed with a 100 percent increase in passenger service charge while Abuja-Kaduna train fare has been doubled as well. In their previous lives, Buhari and the APC would have led street protests against the PDP about the soaring cost of living. It seems the reality has finally dawned on Buhari that bitter pills are inevitable.


Many Nigerians have actually come to accept that the country is not really rich as assumed & tough economic measures have to be taken to save us from total collapse. This is not a very popular opinion, certainly, but the economic experts are not opposed to the shock therapy.

In fact, the few I have spoken with are praising Buhari for finally taking the hard decisions after five years in office. They think that if previous governments had chosen this path, we would have suffered the pains and be enjoying the gains by now.They believe the funds burnt on fuel subsidies, probably six trillion naira in the last 10 years, could have been better spent on roads, education and healthcare.

Mr Mustafa Chike-Obi, former MD of Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) who is not known to be a fan of Buhari, tweeted: “The gradual dismantling of subsidies by the Buhari Administration is well advised. It was unsustainable, and this policy adjustment though late in coming is the proper economic decision. We must not oppose good policies in the name of political opposition.”

Mr Atedo Peterside, also a known critic of Buhari’s economic policies, only said the federal govt “should get out of the business of making pronouncements on the price of petrol”. You are not likely to hear any liberal economist oppose the shock therapy.

Nevertheless, there are no easy ways out of these economic mess that we have found ourselves.Even before the devastation brought by COVID-19, we were struggling.We have relied on oil revenue for too long; shifting attention to the productive bases of the economy particularly agriculture & industry is never going to yield results overnight.It takes time.

We need policy consistency and massive private investment for us to attain a comfortable level in the non-oil sector in the long term.We rely too much on crude oil to fund our budgets. COVID-19 has now thrown the economy into its worst state since 2016. Something just has to give & adjustment pains are inevitable.


Definitely, the ordinary people will feel the pains of these reforms the most.Transport costs will go up.While electricity tariffs were not increased in residential areas classified as low income, prices of goods and services will certainly go up as a result of the affected sectors & the masses will feel the heat.Food costs will go up.All these are inescapable.

We cannot leave the vulnerable Nigerians in the lurch and think there would be no consequences.Conversely, the political elite would continue to enjoy the good of the land.Their privileges are always unaffected. That makes it very difficult to preach sacrifice to the people and assure them that there is light at the end of the tunnel.

Indeed, Nigerians have heard all that before.Buhari’s shock therapy is thus, not the ultimate solution.We need fiscal discipline at all levels of government.We need accountability.We need transparency.We need prudence. Government needs to trim fat.


While retrenchment is not an option at this time, at least certain excesses on the expenditure side can be scaled down.The pains of reforms would only be worth it if Nigerians begin to see good roads, decent hospitals, better education and higher standards of living in the years ahead.Unfortunately, Nigerians have heard the same unfulfilled promises for so long that they have developed immunity against hope.

Still, government needs to market reforms to the people in a better way and not assume that because Nigerians have been showing understanding and patience all along, there is nothing to worry about any more. You don’t implement these tough economic decisions without first trying to build support.

What are the palliatives to protect the poor? What is the level of engagement with the opposition? It appears the government has become complacent in this aspect. It seems the assumption is that Nigerians will take the changes without resistance. Indeed, the debate in the wake of the latest increase in fuel prices is why people are not protesting.

Many commentators have been asking why Nigerians are not kicking against the “shock therapy” a term used to describe a series of tough economic reforms suddenly introduced by a government particularly at a time of hardship or disasters.

The most common suggestion is that those who organised the protests against previous governments are now in power and can, therefore, not organise or even encourage protests against themselves. But it is not accurate to say those who organised the previous protests are now in government; some are actually outside government and are still very active in the civil society movements. Maybe they are not convinced there is a need for aluta.

Or could it be that Nigerians themselves have lost the will to protest? Could it be that people are more concerned now about how to eke out a living than going on the streets and singing solidarity songs? I am not really convinced by this argument.

I do not think anything has changed fundamentally about the attitude of Nigerians to the withdrawal of subsidies. The first response is always resistance to subsidy cuts. I think people still want cheaper fuel & cheaper electricity. I don’t think anything has changed about what Nigerians want.Maybe we are now so divided along political, ethnic and religious lines that finding a common mobilising force is harder.I can’t know.

Maybe there is something else.In my life so far, particularly since I started going to the bathroom by myself, I would say only twice have I witnessed an increase in fuel price that did not elicit street protests and strikes. The first was in January 1986 when Gen Ibrahim Babangida announced an increase in the prices of petroleum products. That was his first budget as military president.

I remember he also created a national emergency fund (not sure that was the name) in which civil servants were asked to contribute a part of their salaries. It was their “patriotic” contribution to save the economy which was in dire straits then as a result of low oil prices and foreign exchange crunch.

The second instance was when Buhari raised petrol price in May 2016. It was a significant leap from N87 per litre to N145. There were no protests, beyond media articles. The economy was down in any case.People were just ⁰wondering why there were no protests and my instinct then was that Buhari was enjoying a prolonged honey-moon.

Or, perhaps, Nigerians trusted him more with the management of the nation’s resources. He was seen as an honest man who would not steal or enrich himself. Some said if he increased fuel price, then it must be in the interest of the country, not because he was going to derive any personal benefit from it.The goodwill was there, I would say.

It is also possible that most Nigerians have bought into the logic of deregulation.I can’t say.Many may have come to see that they actually pay more for self-generated electricity, in addition to suffering the noise pollution.

So maybe those ones have no appetite for protest. Whatever the situation is, there are some facts we cannot dispute: our finances are in a bad place.Oil revenues are badly hit.We keep borrowing. We are spending our little revenue on servicing debts. And the reality too cannot be disputed: the load will disproportionately be on the heads of poor Nigerians.What will the government do about this? We need a clear statement and a re-assuring palliative plan.

AND FOUR OTHER THINGS…

P&ID RESPITE
Nigeria won a major victory in seeking to upturn the arbitration award to P&ID Limited over a failed gas processing contract.

We had reneged on a settlement in 2015 and had also gone asleep when the quantum award of $6.6 billion plus 7 percent interest was issued in January 2017. But following the fraud investigation by the EFCC under Mr Ibrahim Magu’s leadership, a UK court has given us an extension of time to attack the award.

This puts the enforcement of the arbitration judgment on hold. Let’s pray we will not bungle the next phase: using the new evidence of fraud to get the tribunal to set aside the award, now estimated at $10 billion. It is not yet uhuru. Crucial.

NIGERIA-GHANA UNFRIENDLY
A little bit of rivalry is not too bad for neighbours with ambitions. It has to be healthy, though, for it to be meaningful. The cold war between Nigeria and Ghana is unhealthy.

The imposition of $1 million registration fee on “West African immigrants” who want to set up business in Ghana is clearly targeted at Nigerians, although the Ghanaians also argue that shutting the Nigerian border has hurt their economy too and violated the ECOWAS treaty.

The treaty, it must be said, does not allow illegal trade, so there must be joint efforts to crack down on smuggling. We also need to pay attention to Nigerians who are into criminal activities in Ghana. Let’s address all these issues jointly. Amity.

CURTAILING COVID-19
Plateau state has been recording an unusually high number of COVID-19 cases at a time some states seem to be doing better. The key question: what is going on in Plateau? It would appear that rather than anything else — including the suggestion that Plateau’s cold weather might be allowing the coronavirus to spread.

The increased testing by the government might be responsible for the high figures. Since most people who have COVID-19 are thought to be asymptomatic, mass testing is an effective way of curtailing the spread and curbing fatalities. It is even more dangerous as asymptomatic young people can easily pass it to adults, who may not survive it. Complicated.

LIONEL’S MESS
Lionel Messi, one of the greatest footballers to walk on Planet Earth, caused some earthquake recently when he told Barcelona the club he joined in 2000 at the age of 13 that he wanted to leave. For a player who is on a reported salary of $640,000 per week and is adored by Barcelona’s fans across the world, he just cannot walk away as he was wanted to.

Pp He finally changed his mind on Friday. From a business perspective, you can’t be valued at €700 million by any club and expect them to let you go for nothing. From a football perspective, you don’t expect Barcelona to let go of their all-time highest scorer and serial winner just like that. Not surprised the move failed. Misfired.

https://www.thecable.ng/buharis-shock-therapy-for-nigerians/amp

20 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Racoon(m): 12:39am On Sep 07, 2020
Whatever the situation is, there are some facts we cannot dispute: our finances are in a bad place.Oil revenues are badly hit.We keep borrowing. We are spending our little revenue on servicing debts.

And the reality too cannot be disputed: the load will disproportionately be on the heads of poor Nigerians. What will the government do about this? We need a clear statement and a re-assuring palliative plan.
Moral-"It is not always as you think." You cant win & rule by lies and propaganda.

76 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Onlinealaba(m): 6:05am On Sep 07, 2020
2015 was all about displacing the incumbent and 16 years of PDP misrule even at a point those that were supporting GEJ were having a rethink but 2019 can't be called a mistake it was intentional by the electorates and we are all facing the consequences now, 3 more years to go we hope and pray (Nigeria own solution of prayer) it will get better.

25 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by alwayslearning9: 6:06am On Sep 07, 2020
We need palliative Mr. President

Learn project/research analysis with SPSS & Eviews via zoom/whatsapp, for just N5k. Chat/call:> +234 814 565 8405

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Nobody: 6:06am On Sep 07, 2020
I guess the shock therapy is part of the change they voted for.
The shock no be here o. grin

22 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by PassingShot(m): 6:07am On Sep 07, 2020
Many Nigerians have long clamored for removal of subsidy from fuel and now we have it.

During PDP's subsidy regime of a trillion naira yearly, fuel was not available and we bought it at N600 or more per liter.

With subsidy removed, fuel price will fluctuate up and down, depending on the crude price in the world market; and that is what we are witnessing now. A drop in the crude price was the reason the fuel price was reduced a few months ago, not because of anything else.

Personally, I believe Nigerians deserve to enjoy some form of subsidy on fuel price. Unfortunately, it's impossible to argue for that when we do not refine the bulk of our crude and when we do not earn as much as we used to earn from crude sale.


The hypocrisy in all of this is that those who supported and voted for Atiku who said he would sell NNPC to enrich his friends are the same vocal opponents of this development. The question they should answer is if they thought fuel price would be cheaper if NNPC had been sold.

Fact is, we would have bought a liter of fuel at nothing less than N250 had Atiku won and succeeded in selling NNPC to his friends. It is similar to what we're seeing with the electricity tariff which PDP approved to be increased every five years. Think!

14 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Madibah(m): 6:07am On Sep 07, 2020
Al

1 Like

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by olaric(m): 6:08am On Sep 07, 2020
Apparently, the man Buhari and his co-travelers could care less what happens to us...

14 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Madibah(m): 6:09am On Sep 07, 2020
People still dey sleep grin

1 Like

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Taiwojon(m): 6:09am On Sep 07, 2020
buhari shocked??

baba is in shocked again anyway take your shocked to Jesus before it is too late.

1 Like

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by 2020Experience(m): 6:09am On Sep 07, 2020
We are watching
Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by kuntash: 6:10am On Sep 07, 2020
But where are those that's been supporting this govt?

Especially those that campaigned and voted in the second time?

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by litathom(m): 6:10am On Sep 07, 2020
Na si
Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Blogger1007: 6:10am On Sep 07, 2020
e never see anything
Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Openbusiness: 6:10am On Sep 07, 2020
grin
Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by arantess: 6:11am On Sep 07, 2020
Good morning Nigeria
Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by jabberjawz: 6:11am On Sep 07, 2020
Na today day break....No be the Buhari wey we know?

Other countries think creatively to manage their situation, Greece was in a tougher mess a few years back and they are gradually getting back on their feet, but look what we have in Nigeria, a nepotistic old man with empty brain & hatred flowing in his veins & blood vessels......loaded with a cabinet full of people with empty brain cells......all they know is how to tell lies, lies & more lies.....no thinking out of the box to tackle challenges & proffer meaningful solutions ......rather some are already thinking about 2023, wey them no even dey sure if them go live long enough to see........

30 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by general111(m): 6:11am On Sep 07, 2020
Lol....
Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by jacoik(m): 6:12am On Sep 07, 2020
can someone summarize it for me? because am just coming from Ghana yesterday and am having headache

4 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Jazzafizzy(f): 6:13am On Sep 07, 2020
Wicked man

2 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by VirginSearcher(m): 6:14am On Sep 07, 2020
PassingShot:
grin
Are u not his zombie why are u laughing undecided

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Nobody: 6:15am On Sep 07, 2020
Our darling daddy crew never wake up, abi fuel no dey to power generator/phone...

Patiently waiting for dead meat griller to come defend his paymaster angry angry

8 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Pious101: 6:15am On Sep 07, 2020
He would never change. What should we expect from a man who does not know d happenings around him? He would be more shock once his tenure is over and the next administration would unravel d level of looting in his administration. APC is just a group of disgruntled individual who needed power by all means without preparing for it. Are u even aware that Buhari is shocked that he won d election? May we never continue to be shock in life... Let's fold our hands akimbo while d series of change this administration have in stock for us unfold itself.

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by whytediamond(m): 6:19am On Sep 07, 2020
As
Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Chindaibezim: 6:19am On Sep 07, 2020
This is not a time to chicken out. This is the time to bring the best brain on board and leave ethnic and religious sentiments. This Nigeria belongs to all of us.

I-develop-beautiful-websites-without-advance-payments. You-pay-after-design. WhatsApp-or-call 09 0 60 400096 for-business

2 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Exponental(m): 6:23am On Sep 07, 2020
A good government would have injected the changes when electricity supply is increased to justify price increase and then, effect the fuel price. I know electricity is expensive but economic policies need systematic approach. Fuel/ generator is the alternative to electricity for majority that cannot afford solar. Why double the suffering? This administration has just proved that electoral promises are mere mirages.

4 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Craaaa: 6:25am On Sep 07, 2020
Na electricity go shock you this time. Worst president even in the Africa history.

3 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by ayenale1(m): 6:26am On Sep 07, 2020
President BLAME MOHAMMODU SHOCK BUHARI

2 Likes

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by easyfem(m): 6:27am On Sep 07, 2020
e shock everybody even we that we are in abroad ..... we are shocked

oduduwa pls come to reality before nigerian will start given their wife to visitor so that the family can eat ....... i know its sound crazy but its the reality ...... pple are hungry and they need to survive .....i dont knw aw that country remain silent with all that experience ... we are using coin to buy petrol in d country i am now but as for nigerian , ask ur neighbor when last u spend coin and this coin is still active officially in naija

1 Like

Re: Buhari’s Shock Therapy For Nigerians by Donspicey: 6:29am On Sep 07, 2020
Nigerians voted for change instead of transformation...... now see the mess we are into.... am sorry for Nigeria....... 3 more years to go.....

4 Likes

(1) (2) (3) (Reply)

Owerri Jail Break: FG To Pardon Escaped Inmates, If They Voluntarily Return / What Third-Party Candidate Peter Obi Would Mean For Nigeria - Yahoonews / Peter Obi Received By Supporters In Kafanchan, Kaduna State (Video, Pictures)

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 75
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.