"In the 2015 presidential election, the APC was more prepared for defeat
than for victory. The party did not expect to win and clearly had no
agenda for victory".
In a 1972 Hollywood film entitled The Candidate, Robert Redford acts as Bill Mckay, a political neophyte who is drafted out of the blue into a race for the U.S. Senate. With no chance whatsoever of winning, Mckay is given a free hand to say whatever he likes on the stump. Therefore, he tweaks the political establishment at every turn.
However, as a result of a series of unexpected developments, he keeps rising in the polls. By Election Day, he is neck and neck with his more seasoned opponent and the race goes to the wire. To everyone’s surprise, he pulls off an incredible victory and is elected senator of the United States.
The last reel of the film is on the night of his election. On hearing he has won, Mckay becomes flustered and
In a 1972 Hollywood film entitled The Candidate, Robert Redford acts as Bill Mckay, a political neophyte who is drafted out of the blue into a race for the U.S. Senate. With no chance whatsoever of winning, Mckay is given a free hand to say whatever he likes on the stump. Therefore, he tweaks the political establishment at every turn.
However, as a result of a series of unexpected developments, he keeps rising in the polls. By Election Day, he is neck and neck with his more seasoned opponent and the race goes to the wire. To everyone’s surprise, he pulls off an incredible victory and is elected senator of the United States.
The last reel of the film is on the night of his election. On hearing he has won, Mckay becomes flustered and
confused. Victory was certainly not part of the plan. As
media men gather, eager to get his reaction to his famous victory, he
pulls his campaign manager into a room and asks him in consternation:
“Marvin, what do we do now?” Before he can answer, the media close in on
them, drag them out of the room and the film ends.
The satire of
the film, which received an Oscar for Best Screenplay of 1972, is that
while Mckay might have succeeded in fooling the electorate to vote for
him, he did not have a clue what to do as a United States senator. It
was all a bit of a joke for him, but then the joke backfired. He never
expected to win and had no contingency plan for victory.
Groping in the dark
The
Candidate could easily have been a made-in-Nigeria movie in 2015. To
all intents and purposes, the opposition APC won an implausible victory
against all odds. But in the presidential election, APC was more
prepared for defeat than for victory. The party did not expect to win
and clearly had no agenda for victory. This is what accounts for the
cul-de-sac we now find ourselves in Nigeria. If anything defines our
current predicament, it is that we have a government that, in the middle
of an economic crisis, does not have a clue what to do.
The APC
did not plan to govern. The party-members told Nigerians what mayhem
they planned to unleash should they lose and what parallel government
they would establish. But concerning government, they proffered no
solution on how they would address Nigeria’s urgent economic problems.
On the contrary, they made wild unrealistic promises that were totally
out of kilter with the situation on the ground; promising to do
extravagant things that could not even be entertained by previous
governments in more buoyant climes.
How else can one explain the
fact that, in the context of a drastic economic downturn, the APC came
out with a “Father Christmas” manifesto, loaded with such pies in the
sky as paying unemployed graduates, or giving cash handouts to the
poorest 25 million Nigerians? Foolishly, Nigerian voters failed to
determine where APC hoped to get the money for such largess.
Because
the APC was not prepared to govern, no agreement was reached beforehand
by the legacy parties of the coalition about how to distribute the
spoils of office. This provided the basis for the free-for-all fights
that ensued once the election was over.
Because the APC did not
expect to govern and was not prepared to govern, it took President
Buhari five months to choose his cabinet. Five months of squabbling and
in-fighting, while pretending to Nigerians that the delay was needed to
find technocratic saints and angels. But the saints and angels turned
out to be the same old “devil you know.” While the president dawdled,
the economy went from bad to worse and investors voted with their feet;
leaving Nigeria in droves.
Nigeria in sick-bay
We are now
confronted with the fact that there is definitely a technocratic deficit
in the president’s new crew. Needing to make up for the time we lost
while the president kept everyone waiting, we have now discovered that
the people he labored to choose bring little or nothing to the table in
terms of their capacity to address expeditiously the grave issues
currently confronting the country.
So what do we have now?
Nigeria is a sick patient currently lying comatose in a hospital
emergency ward. Her condition is critical. A surgical operation is
urgently required. However, there is no doctor on duty. The night-nurse
only works at the hospital in her spare time. In the daytime, she is the
proprietress of a “mama put.” The other nurses are also part-time
workers. They are a collection of cooks, tailors and groundnut sellers.
This
raises grave concerns about the fate of the patient. What is going to
happen to Nigeria? If we are not careful, this patient might not make
it.
When President Buhari finally chose his ministers, he chose
by his own account “noise-makers.” These turned out to be economic
illiterates. Instead of putting together a coherent economic policy that
will stop the free-fall of the naira and encourage monetary inflows to
supplement the drastic cuts in our foreign exchange income, the
government’s answer has been to do nothing but blame the past
administration for everything. Its blueprint, if it has any at all, has
been to ignore the economy and concentrate instead on anti-corruption
propaganda while the president junkets around the world.
No economic blueprint
Before
Lai Mohammed was appointed, Adams Oshiomhole was the self-appointed
minister of Information. His job, was to attack Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the
former minister of Finance, at every turn. This assignment involved
re-writing the history of the Jonathan years.
Okonjo-Iweala is a
seasoned economist with vast technocratic experience. At one time, she
was in the running for President of the World Bank. As minister of
Finance, she had an economic blueprint for addressing Nigeria’s economic
morass; something sorely lacking in Oshiomhole and his colleagues
today. Since leaving office, she has been snatched up as Senior Advisor
at Lazard.
Okonjo-Iweala stressed the need to reduce Nigeria’s
recurrent expenditure. She insisted Nigeria could not afford the
petroleum subsidy. She wanted its trillion naira leakages plugged. But
Oshiomhole and his former labour union colleagues would have none of
that. They mobilised Nigerians against her; so the hemorrhage continued.
Okonjo-Iweala wanted Nigeria to save for the rainy day by establishing
an excess crude account and a sovereign wealth fund where incomes above
budget estimates could be saved.
However, Oshiomhole and his
governor colleagues would also have none of that. They insisted all
extra money earned must be shared and spent and not saved. They even
went to court to force the minister’s hand. Now that the national oil
cookie has crumbled, the same Oshiomhole and his misguided colleagues
are holding Okonjo-Iweala responsible for not building sizeable foreign
reserves in times of plenty.
However, nothing justifies
Okonjo-Iweala’s earlier postures more than Nigeria’s present
predicament. Indeed, what Nigeria desperately needs today is
Okonjo-Iweala or an Okonjo-Iweala. We need a seasoned and experienced
economist to head a team of hard-nosed economists to work out an
economic policy to get Nigeria out of the woods. No such team exists
today in the Buhari government. Instead of constituting an economic
team, the president is appointing social media aides to help launder his
image.
As a result, the naira is in free-fall and nobody in
government seems to know what to do. It is now 400 to the dollar and the
president keeps saying he is against devaluation because it will affect
the masses. Somebody needs to tell Mr. President that the masses are
already adversely affected. Everybody is raising prices, using the
free-falling naira as excuse. It is not inconceivable that by this
week-end, the naira might be trading on the parallel market at 500 to
the dollar.
Big government
In many respects, Nigeria’s
economic situation today is god sent. It enables us to do what we failed
to do when the oil market was booming – downsize the government and
transform the economy away from oil dependency. However, the tragedy of
today is that we are saddled with a government that refuses to face
reality. It refuses to entertain the harsh adjustments that need to be
made.
The first economic blunder of this government was to
bailout the states with salary arrears. The bailout did not address the
fundamental issue of the insolvency of those states. It just postponed
dealing with them. Since the bailouts are not grants but loans, with
repayments to be deducted from the monthly allocations of the states, it
means even less money will be coming to them now that there is far less
money to share.
The truth is that most of Nigeria’s states
cannot survive without government handouts. Better now than later, we
need to re-visit the issue of Nigeria’s unrealistic states structure and
face up to the fact that we cannot afford 36 states. Neither can we
afford a federal legislature that gobbles up over N100 billion per
annum. In addition, we can no longer afford a situation where billions
of naira is spent every year just catering to the president.
Padded budget
One
of the strange things about this government is that it refuses to
entertain the need for austerity in the context of our drastically
reduced income. Instead, it comes up with a bigger budget than when our
economy was far more buoyant. Nigerians refuse to see the 419 in this.
If you were earning six naira and your income drops to four naira, you
don’t then decide to spend eight naira. This is what the economic
illiterates currently running our economy are proposing to do in 2016.
The
APC refuses to accept that after 16 years in the political wilderness,
it has to make do with lean resources now that it is its turn to be at
the helm of affairs. Therefore, it decided to pad the 2016 budget by
basing it on oil selling at $38 dollars per barrel; when the commodity
has already dropped far below $30. It has also decided to pad Nigeria’s
reduced income with borrowed money.
Sums are allocated for fake
items, others are inflated beyond measure. Although civil servants have
been made the sacrificial lambs for the budget mess, one wonders if a
number of the inflated items were not camouflaged backdoor paybacks for
APC’s dubious election campaign expenditures.
The hard choices we continue to refuse to make today will still come back to haunt us tomorrow.
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