Friday, January 29, 2016

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Fwd: [AfricanWorldForum] The Economist: President Muhammadu Buhari is repeating an economic error he made as dictator 30 years ago

The Economist is the Buffoon here.  It concludes:

"....that the economic crunch Nigeria is currently feeling "is one that Nigeria has been through before—under the then youthful Mr. Buhari. Then, as now, he refused to let the market set the value of the currency. Instead he shut out imports, causing the legal import trade to fall by almost 50% and killing much of Nigeria's nascent industry in the process."
"Today, as in the 1980s, the president is making a bad situation worse," according to the Economist."

What is the "legal import trade" if I may ask.  In 1983 Western Banks fronting for Western thieves take money from the Nigerian treasury based on fake invoices and import sand and useless items into Nigeria and share the money.  Buhari wanted to stop them and the overthrew him.  IBB and OBJ did their bidding and today we have a huge gulf of a few very rich thieves and an army of impoverished citizens.

Today we import useless goods that we can locally substitute like flour (with Cassava and yam flour) and rice which is 100% carbohydrate and our locally grown rice is sweeter and better or orange juice when we have the sweetest oranges in Nigeria.

Buhari wants Nigerians to look inwards and begin to produce to feed itself and manufacture to meet its consumption but Bloomberg and The Buffon Economist deride that.  They must think Nigerians are dumb and stupid.

We are not.  Let us see how far we all go with the current turmoil worldwide oil prices and who is more resilient than the other when the easy stolen money from Nigeria dries up!

When the mouthpieces of swindlers of African economies cry foul against Nigeria, then Nigeria must be doing something right.

Cheers.

IBK



_________________________
Ibukunolu Alao Babajide (IBK)
(+2348061276622)
ibk2005@gmail.com

On 29 January 2016 at 13:15, Oluwatoyin Adepoju <oluwasrividya@gmail.com> wrote:

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: therealsegun@yahoo.com [AfricanWorldForum] <AfricanWorldForum@yahoogroups.com>
Date: 28 January 2016 at 20:39
Subject: [AfricanWorldForum] The Economist: President Muhammadu Buhari is repeating an economic error he made as dictator 30 years ago



 

Nigeria's economy

Hope the naira falls

President Muhammadu Buhari is repeating an economic error he made as dictator 30 years ago

Jan 30th 2016

"GIVE me lucky generals," Napoleon is supposed to have said, preferring them to talented ones. Muhammadu Buhari, a former general, has not had much luck when it comes to the oil price. Between 1983 and 1985 he was Nigeria's military ruler. Just before he took over, oil prices began a lengthy collapse; the country's export earnings fell by more than half. The economy went into a deep recession and Mr Buhari, unable to cope, was overthrown in a coup.  

Now he is president again. (He won a fair election last year against a woeful opponent; The Economist endorsed him.) And once again, oil prices have slumped, from $64 a barrel on the day he was sworn in to $32 eight months later. Growth probably fell by half in 2015, from 6.3% to little more than 3% (see article). Oil accounts for 70% of the government's revenues and 95% of export earnings. The government deficit will widen this year to about 3.5% of GDP. The currency, the naira, is under pressure. The central bank insists on an exchange rate of 197-199 naira to the dollar. On the black market, dollars sell for 300 naira or more.

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Instead of letting the naira depreciate to reflect the country's loss of purchasing power, Mr Buhari's government is trying to keep it aloft. The central bank has restricted the supply of dollars and banned the import of a long list of goods, from shovels and rice to toothpicks. It hopes that this will maintain reserves and stimulate domestic production.

When the currency is devalued, all imports become more expensive. But under Mr Buhari's system the restrictions on imports are by government fiat. Factory bosses complain they cannot import raw materials such as chemicals and fret that, if this continues, they may have to shut down. Many have turned to the black market to obtain dollars, and are doubtless smuggling in some of the goods that have been banned.

Nigerians have heard this tune before. Indeed, Mr Buhari tried something similar the last time he was president. Then, as now, he resisted what he called the "bitter pill" of devaluation. When, as a result, foreign currency ran short, he rationed it and slashed imports by more than half. When Nigerians turned to the black market he sealed the country's borders. When unemployment surged he expelled 700,000 migrants.

Barking orders at markets did not work then, and it will not work now. Mr Buhari is right that devaluation will lead to inflation—as it has in other commodity exporters. But Nigeria's policy of limiting imports and creating scarcity will be even more inflationary. A weaker currency would spur domestic production more than import bans can and, in the long run, hurt consumers less. The country needs foreign capital to finance its deficits but, under today's policies, it will struggle to get any. Foreign investors assume that any Nigerian asset they buy in naira now will cost less later, after the currency has devalued. So they wait.

Those who fail to learn from history...

Mr Buhari's tenure has in some ways been impressive. He has restored a semblance of security to swathes of northern Nigeria that were overrun by schoolgirl-abducting jihadists. He has won some early battles against corruption. Some of his economic policies are sound, too. He has indicated that he will stop subsidising fuel and selling it at below-market prices. This is brave, since the subsidies are popular, even though they have been a disaster (the cheap fuel was often sold abroad and petrol stations frequently ran dry). If Mr Buhari can find the courage to let fuel cost what the market says it should, why not the currency, too? You can forgive the general for being unlucky; but not for failing to learn from past mistakes.

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