to avoid repeating the mistakes made
by former President Goodluck Jonathan so his administration does not
end up in infamy like that of his predecessor.
The former governor of the Central
Bank of Nigeria also warned the government against continuing to
blame previous administrations for the nation’s woes, saying what
was important was for the
administration to concentrateon putting
the nation back on the path of progress.
He gave the warning while delivering a
paper entitled,“Nigeria In Search Of New Growth model” at the 15th meeting of
the Joint Planning Board and National Council on Development Planning.
The Emir also spoke extensively on the
nation’s economic recession. Here is his full speech at the
event:
First of all, I want to break from
tradition. Usually I speak in Hausa in Kano. But, I don’t know how I am going
to make an economic presentation in Hausa to 36 states’ commissioners and have
someone translate it into English. To avoid things being lost in translation, I
will speak in the language of economics.
Let me start by saying congratulations to
you minister. This is the first time I am meeting you in an official function
since your appointment, and to tell you in public what I have always said in
private; that you are one of the sisters I remain extremely proud of your work.
I wish you all the best in these challenging times.
I have always told people that Dr.
Shamsuddeen Usman, my teacher, (I don’t know if he is an ex or former minister,
multiple times) taught me microeconomics. So, he takes a lot of the credits,
and none of the blames, for what I have become.Ladies and gentlemen, I was not
given a specific topic to talk on. But, because the concern today is the
concern about the recession Nigeria is in technically, and also because it is a
meeting of Planning and Budget Ministers, I thought I will do a proper economic
presentation and put down my thoughts on where I think we are; why I think we
are where we are, and what I think we need to do to get out of this.
I am sure there will be many other
presentations specifically on what a state can do to raise revenues and so on.
But, having an overarching view of economic policy, and where we may or may not
have
done wrong, or what the key drivers of
growth should be for the Nigerian economy are things I thought we should talk
about at this session.
So, I call this presentation, Nigeria: The
Search For A New Growth Model. I will start by going back to the past, not just
Nigeria, but Africa. Let’s ask ourselves what were the key drivers of growth in
Africa, and what has changed since this
golden decade Africa had. Africa Golden Decade was basically the decade of the
2000s.
Africa moved from the previous decade,
where it was a hopeless continent, to a new decade that we have one type
lifting all story of Africa rising. This rise in Africa across the world was
one of stories of sadness, poverty, famine and hunger to a continent that was
full of potentials; where there were opportunities for investments; where
capital markets were booming.
All of a sudden people heard countries
like Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia, Ghana, etc. when previously these were supposed
to be a basket case in the world.
The first pillar of this growth was
clearly shifting terms of trade, which as we all know in developing economics,
can be a mirage. You can’t have improving terms of trade when you are exporting
commodities over short periods of a cycle. But, we know as far back as the 1950s,
from the Latin American structure economics, that over the long term, any
economy that specialises in exporting primary products and importing
manufactures would end up having terms of trade shifting against it.
You can have a temporary boost, but If you
don’t use that boost to have a structural adjustment that
would make for prudent management of the
economy, you would be courting trouble.
By 2008, one barrel of oil would buy you
one Sanyo flip telephone as against 19 barrels of oil to buy the same phone
earlier.
That gives an idea how well the terms of
trade have shifted.We had an oil price of $10 a barrel in the
time of Babangida. At one point under
Obasanjo, it rose to $140 a barrel. This was a time of rapidly improving
technology, cheaper manufactured products and therefore our oil could
technically import us much more.
This process was not common across all of
Africa, because we are aware of other African economies that grew, and
certainly it was not just one pillar. Let’s go to the second pillar of growth
in Africa in that decade, which was debt.
Between 2002 and 2008, the levels of debt
to GDP (gross domestic product) in African countries and what they became after
the Paris Club, HIPC debt reliefs and so on.
Nigeria was at 50 per cent debt to GDP and
came down to literally 5 per cent or so. This happened across all Africa in the
formof debt forgiveness, debt relief, debt restructuring and so on. What this
did was that it freed up government balance sheets and in that decade of Africa
rising, the countries went back on a borrowing binge.
Nigeria kept borrowing, not externally,
but internally. I think our external debt was just about $8 billion on the
balance sheet. But, the Naira indebtedness of the Nigerian government, we were
spending over 30 per cent (maybe 40 per cent now) of every Naira earned just
servicing debts.
That’s what you have. Nobody was noticing
it. We have written off the debts, and then we kept building it up bit by bit.
And when you look at where that debt was going into, you will see why, or part
of the answer to the problem we are having.
So, we have these two pillars – rising
commodities prices, and we monetise oil revenue, we will be able spend money.
We were able to borrow because the balance sheets could accommodate more debts.
Where did all these debts go? Did it go to
roads, power, refineries, or infrastructure? No. The new borrowings were simply
recycled into much higher recurrent expenditures. What that did was that it
helped sustain a consumption boom. And GDP
was growing, largely driven by consumption spending.
If you look at public sector wage bills in
real terms, Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia and Kenya, you will see it was rising
significantly from 2005 to 2014.
In Nigeria, for example, our public sector
wage bill went up from N443 billion in 2005 to N1.7 trillion in 2012. In 2010,
the government increased minimum wage to N18,000. I was at the Central Bank, I
protested and protested.
They had an election coming, they
increased the minimum wage N18,000 and basically borrowed money to pay. In
2012, as governor of Central Bank, I said this was an unsustainable wage bill.
We
needed to reduce the size of the public
service.
My own government minister came out to say
that was the (CBN) governor’s personal opinion. In fact, she said the
government wanted to employ more people. And this is the result. I am serious.
Sometimes I don’t bother. I’m never going to change. I’m never going to be
political. I’m never going to stand here and tell people what they want to
hear.
The problem is that there is nothing that
we are facing today that we did not know would happen. That is the truth. We
made mistakes. Many of them deliberate. We ignored every single word that
pointed otherwise. Economics is a science. It is not a perfect science. But,
over decades and decades and centuries, people have seen that there are certain
things that, when you do, will lead to certain consequences.
If you take a brand new car and give a
driver who doesn’t have a license to drive it and you have an accident, you
really can’t say you were surprised, unless you are some kind of idiot.
We knew that this was going to happen. You
can’t just keep borrowing money and paying salaries, not building roads, not
improving power and think this will not happen.
We will see the per capita investment
development in Nigeria and per capita results we are getting. These were all
from a resource in an enclave economy. And not so that we are not always
blaming
the previous administration, we have also
made mistakes in this administration. We have started retracing our steps. But,
we have to retrace those steps. And if we fall into the same hole that we fell
into the last time, where the government is always right.
When the minister is there, you tell them,
“You know, Hon. Minister, Nigeria is very lucky to have you in office.” No! You
tell the minister that you are doing well, but, you know there are these areas
that you must change. If a policy is wrong, it is wrong. Nothing will make it
right. And it has to be
changed.
So, this is what we did. Look at real
sector wages. It was not just Nigeria, it was all over Africa. Look at
sovereign debt fuelling growth. If you take the example of an individual. You
happen to know bank MDs and you can make a few phone calls and get loans. You
borrow N1 billion here today and build a very nice mansion in Abuja. You borrow
another N1 billion and let your family go out on first class ticket as you are
travelling all over the world. You borrow another N5 to N6 billion and buy a
private jet. We have very many people in Nigeria who you think are very rich.
But, who are really bankrupt, because everything about them are being financed
by bank debts. When one debt matures, they have enough connections to call
another bank, borrow and refinance that debt. They are not earning anything.
They have private jets.
They have yachts. Their families travel
first class. They go abroad and stay in the most expensive hotels. It happens.
And it is happening today. What do you think of those people? When you think
about such people, do you think they are foolish people? Or do you think they
are wise people? So, what would you say of a country that does this?
So, you feel growth by borrowing money,
pay salaries, people spend money on pure consumption spending, nothing is
produced. It’s fine. It’s short term. But, it is not sustainable. How much can
you
continue to borrow and consume without
producing? And the funny thing is, you did not have to stop borrowing. All you
had to do was borrow the right amount and apply them to the right purposes. It
doesn’t matter whether they were consumption spending or investment demand, GDP
will grow. So,
make a choice.
As a country, we made a choice. We wanted
votes, popularity or palliatives, so long as people are getting high minimum
wage, we keep quiet about all other things that were happening in the economy
that we should be talking about.
That was the relationship between public
debts and GDP growth. Today, we are in a new reality. This is what they call
the new normal in Africa. And we have a two speed Africa. If we look at the new
IMF World outlook, you will see something interesting. Non-commodity Africa
will be the fastest growing part of the world, even higher than emerging Asia,
whereas commodities Africa (countries like Nigeria and Angola) are among the
lowest growing parts of the world, at the rate of Europe and Latin America. And
we can’t explain why. But, think of a country like Ethiopia and then Meles
Zenawi, the late Prime Minister. Ethiopia keeps growing year after year at
11-12 per cent. And what did Meles do? The simple things we have been saying
for decades and decades and decades. This is a
country that came out of a war, remember?
It’s facing insecurities; got Eritrea and other countries that do not like it
around it. I’ll give two examples. Coffee. It originated from Ethiopia in the
world. But, Ethiopian farmers, before Meles, would get 10 per cent of the value
of coffee from their crops. They would just produce the coffee and sell to
companies, and the companies will take their coffee into Latin America and have
it improved and dried and and packaged. And Zenawi just asked: “Why can’t we
produce coffee in Ethiopia that would go straight from Ethiopia to the coffee
shops in Europe?”
And all sorts of responses came. “Well,
you know your weather is good for growing coffee. You coffee is very good, but
your farmers have bad farming practices.” So he said: “Why don’t you teach
them?” So, he got in touch with the IFC (International Finance Corporation),
got a loan, organised
Ethiopian coffee farmers into
cooperatives, taught them how to grow the coffee, how to dry, prepare and
package it.
Today, if you go to coffee shops in Europe
and take a cup of coffee that came straight from Ethiopian farm. And Ethiopian farmers
are now getting 70 per cent of the value of the coffee, from the former 10 per
cent.
So, he tells Aliko Dangote, come and build
a cement manufacturing plant here. I am going to give you electricity at three
cent per kilowatt hour. For a cement manufacturer, that is all the incentive
that
you need.
So, Dangote goes, builds the most
sophisticated cement plant in Ethiopia, gets electricity almost for nothing and
cost of cement drops by 60 per cent. The construction industries gets boosted.
Roads are being built with cement. Jobs are created. And new industry has taken
off. He said to the Chinese, “I don’t like this your idea of coming to buy
hides and skin and leather from Ethiopia and sell us shoes.
Set up the factory here.”Nigeria imports 3
million pairs of shoes per annum from China. Nobody knows how much duty they
pay. I am not talking about expensive shoes. I am not talking about what you
buy from Pierre Cardin, or Gucci. I am talking about shoes people wear on the
streets. Shoes that can be bought here in Kano.
We can produce all the shoes, and school
bags we want for primary and secondary schools children, millions and millions
of pairs. No, we don’t. You know what we do, we export the wet blue and we
import from shoes from China, and we have Chinese people coming here to take
wet blue to China and bring back shoes.
We are just a very interesting country.
Every single thing we are talking about today about what we need to do have
been said before. I have a document “Industrialization Potentials of Northern
Nigeria under Ahmadu Bello, 1962.” There is nothing we are saying today that
was not part of the industrial plan of Northern Nigeria in 1962.
We are clapping ourselves that after 50
years, we have learnt nothing. The whole industrialisation of Kano, starting
from Bombay to Sharada to Challawa had space on that plan. These are very
simple economic logic. You cannot continue doing the wrong things and expect to
have the right result. Since 1950s and 1960s, they understood what was the
essence of colonialism. It was to come to these countries, take our raw
materials, process them and sell us manufactured goods, and keep shifting the
terms of trade against them, so you get
richer at their expense.
They understood that independence was not
about the flag, but about reversing that process. They understood it. We did
not. And therefore they said we needed to stop exporting our cotton. We need to
build textile industries. We need to stop exporting groundnuts. Kano used to
take pride in groundnut pyramids. I still have people who come to me and say:
“You know, Emir, you must bring back those groundnut pyramids.” But, I don’t
build groundnut pyramids. I want oil mills. What am I doing with groundnut
pyramids? They stopped exporting groundnut pyramids and build all these oil
mills. We should stop exporting hides and skin. Huge multinational corporations
that came to Nigeria, whosebusiness was to buy hides and skin. A company like
John Holt. In Hausa anyone who trades in skins is called ‘Dan Janho’. It became
a Hausa word, because this was a multinational whose duty was to just buy hides
and skins and take to Europe to produce shoes for us to buy.
So, they said let us build our own
factories and produce our own shoes and bags. It’s so bad in this country. Tomato
paste that our wives use in kitchens is imported from China. At best, it is
packaged in Nigeria. Now, we have a paste factory 40 kilometres from Kano.
That’s about the first. We cannot process tomato. We have to import tomato from
China. It’s a very sad case.
A country of 170 million people last week
Nigerians were celebrating, because we went to Rio and came back with one
bronze medal. I saw Nigerians jumping. Somebody said at least we were on the
medals table. We don’t have ambitions as a nation. Some of these things are not
just about numbers.
It is about a mindset and a people and
attitude.
Do we really love our country? Do we feel
any shame when we say that Malaysia that came and took palm seeds from us is
now exporting palm oil? Palm oil is what Eastern Nigeria people eat. Now, we
can’t produce it. Vegetable oil, groundnut oil. I went to my friend’s house the
other day in Lagos and they gave me Moringa tea in a nicely packaged tin. That
is the thing that grows wildly here in the Northern part of the country.
Somebody takes Moringa, puts it in a tin, packages it. I did not even know it
was called Moringa until I took the tea.
They packaged it and gave it an English
name. I did not even know it again. It was after I drank it that I knew it was
Zogale, as it is called in the local language. If they had packaged it and
called it Zogale, it would have been known as Zogale tea all over the world.
Just like people know coffee from Ethiopia. But, now that it is called Moringa,
a Hausa man does not know what Moringa is, and it is growing in his backyard.
Then, he takes pound sterling to import Moringa tea. So, this is what Ethiopia
did.
I will show you what countries like Kenya
did, which we didn’t do, and therefore Nigeria is right there in the low band and
non-commodities Africa is in the upper band. What is it that works? What is it
that these non-commodities African countries have done that we have not done?
First, take a model that is investment-
driven, rather than consumer or consumption-driven. At the very top, you have
Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Ghana, Kenya and Egypt. Those at the bottom are
Angola and Nigeria. And if you talk today in Africa, they will think Nigeria
and Angola are the richest countries, because they are oil producing. But, the truth
is that we are the worst performers, in terms of investments to GDP.
If you look at the other countries that do
not have oil, look at what they have done. If you have a high investment to
GDP, you will deliver high growth that is also inclusive. If you continue
working on consumption and rent-seeking model, your growth is not inclusive,
which is why in Nigeria, you have, over the past two decades, increasing income
distribution inequalities.
It is very easy to be very rich based on
rent. Again, we can always talk about the policies of previous administrations.
We talk about oil subsidies that brought oil billionaires. But, we have also
created our own billionaires since 2015 from foreign exchange subsidies. People
are shaking their heads. They don’t seem to understand what I mean. Let me give
an example.
I did not just become an Emir. Before then
I was Governor of Central Bank. Before then, I was a bank MD. So, I have
friends in the banking industry. When the CBN was selling dollars at N197 and
people were buying at N300, if I sit in my garden and make calls on the phone,
I will have enough people to call in the industry to get me $10 million at
official rate. Do you doubt it? As a former MD, former governor of the CBN and
what they now call a royal father? Think about. I sit in my garden and make a
few phone calls, and get $10 million at N197 per dollar and sell at N300 to the
dollar, I
will make a profit of N1.03 billion. If I
do that four times in a year, for doing nothing, I would have had N4 billion.
And people were telling us that this policy was to help the poor. We are not
devaluing the Naira, because if we do the poor people would suffer. The people
that were profiting from this were people that were telling the government that
if it devalued the Naira people would suffer.
Meanwhile, they all got the dollars at
N197 and priced their goods at N300 to the dollar. The poor paid the price of a
devalued currency and the rich schemed off the profits. It went on for one
year. We
talked and talked and talked. If this
government continues to behave the way the last government behaved, we will end
up where Jonathan ended. We may not like it. But, that is the truth. You have
to
listen. You don’t need to be an economist
to know that any system that allows you to sit in your garden and with a
telephone call make N1 billion without investing a kobo, that system is wrong.
It is unsustainable, no matter how positive you think about it.
So, the first thing I will like to say is
that there are many voodoo economists parading around. And many of them are not
economists. They are demagogues. They tell poor people, anyone that says
devalue the Naira wants you to pay a high price. It is arithmetics. It is not
economics. Many of the arguments I see in newspapers, sometimes I feel like
writing back, and I will remember I am an Emir and I am not supposed to. Even
this one I am giving this lecture, maybe someone would say: “Emir, stop giving
these kinds of lectures.”
That you have someone who writes what you
call a brilliant economic paper, and he is telling you that if you devalue the
currency prices would go up. Is that economics or arithmetics? It is
arithmetics! If you ask your boy in Primary 3, if the dollar costs N150 today,
and tomorrow it costs N300, what would happen to prices? He will tell you
prices will double. He can calculate. One times 300 is two times one times 150.
That is not economics. That is arithmetics.
The economics of it is, these billions
that are being schemed off by people who get official exchange rate, should you
give the states their revenue. For example, should you take dollars, for every
$1 billion taken from the Federation Account and sold by the CBN at N200 to the
dollar, the states were losing N100 billion that could have gone into salaries,
agriculture, healthcare. Yet, the states were going to borrow from the same
government on a bailout when the government was selling dollars cheaply to a
small group of people. What kind of economy are we running? Who is advising the
government? I have asked that question before. I want to know so I can talk to
the adviser. We did not have money. Oil prices had collapsed. Niger Delta
Avengers were blowing up oil wells. The scarce dollars we had, we were selling
cheaply, subsidizing people. What was the argument? We need to promote
manufacturing. Right? Thank you. But, what percentage of your GDP is
manufacturing? Eight percent.
Let me ask you Commissioner, you are a
manufacturer, you are able to secure $10 million from the Central Bank to
import raw materials and produce goods, you spend N2 billion to get $10
million, and somebody says to you: “Listen, I will pay you N3 billion for this
$10 million, so that you make a profit of 50 per cent for just doing nothing.
Just buy the dollars and sell.”
Your option is to buy raw materials,
establish a letter of credit, import raw materials, maintain generators, buy
diesel, pay labour, produce your goods, take the risk you may not sell at a
profit, transport it, or to make a profit margin of 10 per cent over a 120 term
period, what would be your choice? Would you import and manufacture? You have
an automatic guaranteed 50 per cent return immediately for no labour. With this
every manufacturer abandoned production and started looking for FOREX. I had
people who would come to me or telephone me and book an appointment only to ask
me: “Your Highness, I want you to help me get dollars.” They wanted to turn me
into a dollar middleman. So, every manufacturer decided that he would get the
dollar and sell, instead of buying raw materials and producing. So, what
happens to production and employment? What do you end up
with? A recession. And why are we
surprised we are having a recession? We created it. But, we did not call it
recession. We called it demand management. People were using words they did not
understand. You want to manage demand? Fine. You will manage demand for
industrial raw materials, you are also managing industrial output. You manage
demand into inputs to services and
manage down service outputs. The result we
have was the result that we were always going to get with sets of policies we
put in place. And we don’t realise that we made those mistakes. I am glad it
seems we have.
But, we need to just come out and come
clean. That is the best way. We have taken a few wrong steps. It was all done
in good faith. We genuinely wanted help the poor people, that’s why we made
those mistakes. Now, we are retracing our steps. Now we begin to talk.
Let’s look at the GDP against government
spending. For Nigeria, from a base in 2005 to 2015, GDP has been rising
nominally, driven largely by recurrent expenditure. If you looks closely,
recurrent expenditure seems to spike on the eve of elections.
The economy has quadrupled in nominal
terms since 2005. Our population has grown by 40 million since 2005, but
capital expenditure has not changed. $0 million more people, but we don’t have
more
power, roads, schools, hospitals houses,
etc. Where are these 40 million people going to be? The Niger Delta creeks and
Sambisa Forests?
Our economy, at least in part, created
terrorism by simply not creating the opportunities for these young people. If
you think the Niger Delta or Boko Haram or other insurgents or something are
the issue,
let me give you another number. We have
over 160 million Nigerians today. The median age is 19. In the next 20 years,
we are going to have at least 80 million Nigerian men and women between the
ages
of 20 and 40. Maybe in the next generation
you can start doing something about it. You can start family planning or
something. But, these ones have been born, and we have to prepare for them.
Those of us who are alive now, we have to prepare for what we are going to do
with these 80 million young people. We can’t kill them. And if we do not expand
the earnings and production base of
the economy through wise investment and
very difficult, but appropriate decisions, we will end up in a classical
Malthusian situation, where the resources cannot support the population and we
start having wars and pestilence.
This is Rev. Thomas Max, one of the very
first lessons you learn in EC101. Look at the road ahead. You know this is all
a combination of old sets of policies. There are times in the history of this
country when we had it right. But, we didn’t continue. A lot of the reforms
done in the second term of Obasanjo laid the foundation for sustainable growth.
But, then we kept going back and forth. And I am hoping that in here we are not
like the ordinary innate Nigerian. We do feel a level of shame at what we see.
You have got your per capita nominal income – Angola, Botswana, Cote d’Ivoire,
Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana and Zambia. Per
capita income in Kenya is $1,388. In Nigeria, it is $2,943. So, on paper, Kenya
is half as rich as Nigeria. So, how much is Kenya able to raise as tax revenue
per
capita? $232. How much was Nigeria raising
in 2014-2015? $117. Now, how much was Kenya spending as development spend per
citizen? $129. How much was Nigeria spending? $17.
The research you see don’t just come out
of nowhere. They are the direct consequence of deliberate policy decisions. If
you choose to make it very profitable for people to produce fake bills of
lading and claim fuel subsidy and build estates and private jets, we are never
going to have refineries. If you make it profitable for a Chinese man to come
to Kano…. Now in Kano, the Chinese are doing tie and dye. Even the tie and dye
pit that has been in Kano for about 600 years are at risk.
We have been talking about the protection
of this industries. Minister of Planning, nobody has done anything you know. In
the next 10 or 20 years, if people of Kano starts picking Chinese and throwing
them into the dye pits, because they are importing simple dye, they took the
technology from Kano,
went to China and they will now be coming
to ask the people the pattern that they want.
They come in, they bribe Customs, and
because there is no way you can produce that thing in China and bring it and
they sell and our industries are destroyed. The textile Industries in Kano are
gone. The tanneries and leather industries are gone. A combination of a lack of
electricity and infrastructure, lack of investments and very bad trade
policies.
We have to go back to the drawing board.
This is why this conference and the Ministry of Planning are the most important
economic Ministry. I have always said that the Planning Minister is the most
important Economic Minister. Assuming that, one, he is able to produce a very
good plan, and two, that the government listens to him. And this is why I
thought instead of coming here to talk about
just monetary and fiscal policy, I will
talk about them.
But, let’s try to get into a mindset,
where at the federal, states and local levels, we can
actually look and see what we can do to
change this things. So, are we going to adopt an investment driven model? Now,
we talked about the public sector, and public sector fundings, and when I come
forward I will show you that for Planning Ministers, you need to think beyond
what the government budget is. If you need to build a road, your job is not
about whether you can raise enough taxes to build the road, it is whether you
can fund that road. With the combination of taxes, and debts
and investment and whatever, that road
needs to be built. It doesn’t have to come from the government’s balance sheet.
Nobody says the government must fund every single thing that is development.
This is where investment becomes important. We are not getting money from oil.
Our non-oil revenue is not rising fast
enough. We talk about taxation, but there is a limit to how much you can tax a
man who is not able to eat. And also, there is a limit to how much you can
continue borrowing in Naira. You know, we play with these numbers.
When I was in the Central Bank, we say:
“Oh! You know, our debt to GDP ratio was 25%, therefore it is nothing to worry
about. It is not up to 70%. Your debt to GDP ratio is 20%, and you spend 30% of
your revenue servicing debt. What does that tell you? 70% of your GDP does not
generate government revenue. Agriculture is about 35%. How much tax does it
pay? Wholesale and retail trade, how much tax does it pay?
You have a GDP where the tax is coming
from the oil sector and telecom’s. That’s your government revenue base. And
those sectors constitute maybe 30% of GDP. So, for all intents and purposes,
gentlemen, if your debt to GDP ratio is 30%, and only 30% of your GDP is
generating revenue, you are at 100%, until you broaden your tax base.
If you just look at debt to GDP ratio,
there is no reason why the Nigerian government cannot borrow more than N2-3
trillion. But, let them borrow now. When are they going to pay? You don’t pay
debt from GDP. You service debt from revenue. Nobody talks about debt to
revenue. What’s the good news? It’s that Nigeria is not all about oil. I know
we all think it is oil. But it is not! Oil does not form even a critical part
of our GDP, or our growth. Look at these numbers.
That’s your GDP per capita. The present
value of your oil reserve in 2016, which was calculated based on 37.2 million
barrels, $60 a barrel, production horizon of 40 years and discount rate of 12
per cent. If you sold the entire oil reserves of Nigeria today, the proceeds
will add only $1164 per head, compared to GDP per capita of 3000 in 2016.
So, those making noise about oil should
stop making noise about ii. People should stop being afraid, because oil is not
critical. It is just a working capital. We sell it. We get the dollars that we
use to import. If you can find another source of working capital, we can do
without it. It is 15% of GDP.
When I was governor of Central Bank, the
economy was growing at 37%. The oil sector was not adding anything to GDP
growth. The growth was coming from agriculture, services and trade, which is
also very revealing. If we are now saying we are in a recession, because of the
collapse in oil price, we are not being sincere. You can’t be in recession,
because a sector that is 15% of your GDP has declined. What happened to
agriculture, trade, services and health?
Something else to look at. This is the
slide that got me sacked from my job. You know the truth will always be there
and I like this power point presentations because the figures tell you more
than a thousand words. These are our external accounts, now look at Nigeria and
look at Kenya up there in the blue line. These are current accounts surpluses
we have had from 2005 to 2014. Not even one oil price rise in 2014 did we have
in our current account deposit. I think today, up to 2014 we have current
accounts surpluses. Now, below there you have other investment assets, which
will be your capital inflows. I mean your reserve, and you have something
called net errors and omissions.
Look at 2014, the errors and omissions
were about $20 billion, from about minus 5 to minus 35, about $30 billion
actually. So, when you are an accountant and you produce accounts and errors
and omissions that are 70% of the numbers, or 60%, what does that tell you?
These are national accounts published by
the Central Bank of Nigeria and the Central Bank is telling Nigeria: “Look, all
we know is that this is money that we think should be in the economy, but we
cannot find it.” And people didn’t want me to talk. Now, we are hearing where
the money went. All sorts of revelations that nobody thought where possible.
Everyday they were captured in errors and omissions. Now, look at Kenya.
They do have errors and omissions, but
compare the errors and omissions bar to what they were able to account for. 5%,
even 10%, is acceptable. But when you cannot explain where 50% of your earnings
went and the country continues and nobody is asking any questions, and even
when you tell Nigerians that this is the thing, they will say: “Don’t mind the man.”
Look at that, so where do we have a
problem? First of all, as you can see we have not been able to attract
investments. All the other investment assets headed as errors and omissions had
been headed out. Which means, the money went out and did not come back.
Anything below the zero line represents money that went out of Nigeria and did
not come back. Anything above represents what came in on the net basis. Now, a
country like Kenya was having huge trade deficit, and that’s why the blue lines
are below zero, but is able to attract investment. And that’s all above the
line and that’s why Kenya is growing. We earn the money, we don’t attract any
kind of investments, apart from portfolio flows.
How much investment do we have in the oil
sector, roads, economy, agriculture, refineries. etc.? When you talk to people,
they will tell you this sectors are not profitable. But why are people
investing in Kenya agriculture? Why are they investing in roads in South
Africa? Why are they building bridges? Why are they investing in power plants
in Ethiopia?
I am Chairman of a company called Black
Rhino. By the way, I don’t have a kobo in that company, but I am a Chairman.
This short man who owns black stone said to us: “Gentlemen, here is $5 billion
to invest in power projects in Africa, a joint venture with Dangote on a
condition that for every $1billion you put in, Dangote puts in $1 billion, so
we have $10 billion to invest.
We have projects in Ethiopia, Eritrea, and
Kenya. I accepted to be Chairman on one condition only, that he will allow me
to fix a power project in Kano. And he said: “If you can find a good power
project in Kano, I am okay.” Now, power companies are here trying to invest,
negotiating. And what did we hear?
One day some judge in a court sits down
and says reverse the tariffs. I am here talking to someone in New York who
cannot understand that a government can issue a power privatization plan; that
investors can come in; that there is a regulator for power; that they looked at
the numbers, looked at the cost of power, looked at what is cost recovery,
agree on a tariff, announce that tariff, they bring in their money to invest on
the basis of that and a court in the same country says this is illegal.
You know, for you sitting here and for
Nigerians, this may not sound well, in fact people were saying yes! They are
cheating us. But, what that one judgement does in terms of the signals to
foreign investors is very disastrous.
There is no country in the world where a
court had agreed to interfere with commercial transactions between the
government and private investors that are in to attract investments. There is a
contract!
The judge did not even say do not give
this going forward. He said the ones that have been done is illegal, and you
expect somebody now to bring in $3 billion to invest in power in Nigeria?
Knowing that you can tell him this is the tariff, and tomorrow your court can
wake up and say the tariff is illegal? So, as planning ministers and
commissioners, if you decide upfront that investment is important to you, the
entire system has to be searched, to make sure that these signals are not set.
Your Customs officers should know that okay, this is the duty; pay correct
duty. Don’t add anything on top. It is the economy’s investment. If a man is
entitled to 5 year visa for bringing some kind of
investment, he will get it. He doesn’t
need to know anybody in immigration. The court should respect legal agreements.
And the right incentives should be provided, and when you provide incentives,
do not review. Every government comes in and the next thing you know, some
businessmen comes to them and say:
“Your previous government gave this one
tax incentive and you start reviewing and reviewing. The next time you offer
somebody your own incentive to invest, he will not come, because he believes
that the next government will reverse it.” If the government that has made the
mistake is gone, you then offer your own set of incentives and make sure that
they are transparent. If you offer somebody an incentive in cement, make sure
that every cement manufacturer gets that incentive. Fine, its sectoral.
Assuming cement is important to you, if
you offer an incentive for agriculture, make sure that everybody who meets
those conditions should get those incentives, not just somebody who knows his
way around Abuja. The farms are not in Abuja anyway. You can see this.
Basically, no investment has come in, and as you can see, I am building a
consistent story that you have had growth model driven by commodities and
consumption, which is your problem, and you now need to shift and you have a
growth model that is driven by investment. And for this forum, it means you got
to stop
thinking so much about how much the
government can spend, as in how much can we get into this economy.
Lagos has done very well. If I have money
to invest, I will invest it in Lagos, because it is attracting investment.
Lagos has realized a long time ago that the government cannot fund all it
needs. And I just love what Lagos has done. The Lagos story is a story of what
Nigeria can do with itself – transparency, consistency, regulations – and
people can be rich. There is no problem if people can be
rich while growing an economy. Nobody
minds. But, in Nigeria people become rich when people are dying. Let’s take the
Lagos story, and that’s why today Lagos state is 30% Nigerian non-oil GDP, and
Lagos can do without oil. Lagos can do without the rest of this country. So, we
must not let Lagos go.
This country is better off with Lagos than
with the Niger Delta. Let’s not make that mistake. We should be together as a
country. Every part of the country is important. But, let us not be so obsessed
by a resource, because we have had the commodity driven model, and we are blind
to the potentials of an alternative model. Lagos doesn’t need oil. What is oil
anyway? It is a raw material. You don’t drink it. You need it to move your
vehicles. Now, you have electricity. You need it to fill your generator. Now
you have solar power, and biomass. The future of oil is not there. So, those
few people who are trying to break up this country over oil, after sometime
that oil will be worthless. You are better off being in a country that is based
on this model.
This is a country of the future, that is
the past. Exchange rate Let me start by congratulating the government for
making changes. Unfortunately, those changes were a bit late. But, the
adjustment has been very severe.
My sense is that where we are today, the
Naira is already undervalued. If you look at the real effective exchange rate,
we are below the zero line. Basically, what this means is, if the Naira were to
strengthen to about 9%, you will get exchange rate palliatives. So, you are not
really under any more pressures for a devaluation. This is the nominal exchange
rate adjusted for relative prices, and also adjusted for rates of our trading
partners. So, on a trade basis, the Naira has gone from one of the most
overvalued currencies when we were at N197 to the dollar, to the one that is
undervalued. So, that adjustment has been made by the Central Bank. And what
the Central Bank needs to do is just to allow this system to operate properly
and stop panicking. You know, from what you can see here, even if the markets
starts at N320, N340 or N350 to the dollar, if you allow it to operate, it will
revalue itself and adjust.
What is causing the problem is all the
sense that we are not entirely flexible, and sometimes wrong signals. After you
have allowed the flexible markets, you act as if you really don’t believe in
it. These things don’t just work on fundamentals. I was in the Central Bank,
the markets works on the basis of
confidence and perception. There was a
time speculators started hitting the market when I was with the Central Bank.
The Kenyan Shilling got hit and got divided by 25%. Ghana got hit by 30%. South
Africa got hit and they started heading towards Nigeria. And I called an
emergency monetary policy committee meeting jerked up the monetary policy rate
(MPR) by 200 basis points, jacked up CRR (cash reserve ratio) by 400 basis
points and declared that I will defend the currency. I didn’t have the
money to defend the currency, but
everybody believed me and they left me alone. The market works based on
confidence. By the time you have taken over one bank, fire one bank MD, they
will believe you when you make a threat. I made many threats as governor of the
Central Bank that I never carried out. If banks messed up, I will say, I will
remove you, and because I have removed bank MDs, they will say sorry sir. They
fell in line. So, if you are going on a flexible exchange rate, have the
nerves. You have produced a fantastic document, stick to it. You can’t be any
worse than you were. You are in a recession anyway, so you are trying something
different. So, try it and try it properly. Real interest rates: Again, Central
Bank has raised it and people have been attacking the Central Bank for raising
the rates. Why? It’s not just about inflation. It is about stabilizing the
currency, because the truth is that where we are today, the only way we are
going to reverse this recession is to increase liquidity in the foreign
exchange markets and reduce the gap between the official rate and the
parallel market rate.And this is what I think the Central Bank needs to keep
doing. A flexible exchange rate regime and a positive real interest rate will
combine to bridge that gap. Bring in the dollars that we need to finance
imports, and those imports of raw materials are the things that will increase
production, and that production is what will lead to growth.
I have been very critical of what the
Central Bank has been doing since the beginning of this administration. I am
very supportive of the decisions it has taken in the last few Monetary Policy
Committee (MPC) meetings, all that we ask is that they have produced a
fantastic document on foreign exchange rate they should do it.
On the treasury single account (TSA), they
should just realize the difference between the dollars balance sheets and the
Naira balance sheets, because I have seen this whole thing about banks being
banned from foreign exchange markets for dollar TSA. The Naira balance sheets
of banks is highly
diversified. The government deposits may
be 20% of deposits. Banks are financial intermediaries. They engage in what is
called maturity transformation. They borrow money short term and loan for long
term on their Naira balance sheets. They have this money coming every day – current
accounts, savings and deposits. If you tell them to pay off government
deposits, they pay off and send marketers out and raise money.
On the dollar balance sheets, Nigeria only
raise dollar on oil sales. The IOCs (international oil companies) have their
money in international banks. NNPC is the only provider of dollar money, and
they have lent out that money. If you apply the same rules on the Naira balance
sheet and dollar balance sheets, without looking at concentration risk, you
bring the banks down. They have lent out these dollars.
Look at the maturity of their assets. Give
them time to pay back these dollars. For them to pay back these dollars, they
have to find dollars elsewhere. Where are they going to find? Who is the other
exporter, apart from oil. What do we export in Nigeria? And that is the point.
So, they need to be very careful. So long as you know where the money is, give
them the time to sort out their assets and pay back. Don’t precipitate a
banking crisis and this idea of banning banks from foreign exchange market.
In the history of this country, and Dr.
Shamsudeen Usman knows that, very few banks have ever survived after being
banned from foreign exchange markets, because banks has lent money to customers
who depend on import to produce. If banks can’t buy dollars for those
customers, they can’t produce. They can’t pay back their debts. You build up
non-performing loans.
So, let us think through the consequences
of some of these decisions that we take. But, apart from that, I am extremely
supportive. I think the Central Bank is doing the right thing, and I think we
should encourage them. I think the government should be given credit to say we
are going to retrace
our steps.
The government has said we are going to
eliminate wasteful subsidies. I don’t want to go deep into this. I have been
saying a lot about fuel subsidy since 2011-12. We have seen everything. Just an
interesting thing. If you look at 2011-2012, in theory o, because I don’t
believe it, we were importing about 60 million liters of premium motor spirit
(PMS) every day. Now, we are down to a little above
30million liters every day, has our
population gone down? Do we have fewer cars? Are we consuming less? All those
numbers were fake. Again, you can go back to the record 2011- 2012, I sat in
front of the House of Representatives and made a presentation. I produced
documents. I had documents that showed people claiming they had 15 vessels of
30,000 metric tons offloading in Lagos on the same day, and they were being
paid subsidy based on those documents. People sat in their offices produced
bills of lading, bribed everybody from Customs to PPPRA (Petroleum Products
Pricing Regulatory Agency) to whatever and got money out. All they needed
was a paper that says you have allocation, and based on that allocation they
will go.
I am glad again that we are moving towards
removing these subsidies. They are painful. Let me make that clear. If you have
to pay more for fuel, it hurts, it bites. The truth is that no system is
perfect. And the subsidy system benefited a very small groups of criminals much
more than it benefited the poor people. And if you are going to subsidies,
please provide this subsidy in production. Provide cheap gas to power plants
and set power prices to a level where they can make a profit without passing on
high gas prices to customers. Reduce the cost of setting up a business. Reduce
the tax burden on pioneer industries. Subsidize production. Do not subsidize
consumption. Rather than give poor people subsidy on fuel that never gets to
them, take that money and put it in their hands. We were spending $6 billion,
$7billion per annum on fake subsidies. And where is that money today? It is all
in private jets, private yacht, expensive jewelries, property abroad, that’s where
it is. It is not in this economy. Its gone out.
One number I will give you is that Nigeria
earned $16 billion from the oil sector in 2011. I was the governor of Central
Bank. We established LCs worth $8billion for importing petroleum products and
spent another $8 billion in petroleum subsidy.
Every dollar we earned from the oil sector
went back to petroleum sector in 2011. Not one dollar went into education,
roads, power. It went into importing fuel and paying subsidy on imported fuel.
The numbers are there. And if you look at that town hall meeting that has been
going on, on Channels TV I gave this number then. Not that this one I am saying
will change anything o! I am just saying it. But, tomorrow if you invite me,
you will hear. Look at power generation. That is where we need to focus on.
Let’s get the power reports back on track. Fantastic policy.
Power was privatized. What happened?
People bought DISCOs (distribution companies), because they had connections.
Dr. Usman was head of what was called the technical committee on privatization
and commercialization in the 1980s. I know because as a Merchant Banker, I
privatized
Okomu. Okomu oil mill is still there. As a
solid company, because when they were in TCPC, they have a process where you
don’t just buy a company. If you say you are going to invest, they had a
process of making sure that after you bought that company, you make those
investments. They don’t just sell assets to you. Privatization is not just
about selling assets to people, it is about making sure that they make the
investment they are committed to making when they bought it. So, we have people
who bought DISCOs who said they will
invest, but they have not invested. Land Registries. Lagos has done well, but
you need to do more. In Lagos alone, you have 13 procedures to register land,
according to World Land in Business Report. It takes 77 days, 10% of your
property value and the quality of land is 7 out of 30, compared to 22 in the
OECD countries.
Lagos has now moved up, they are merging
all relevant laws into a single piece of legislation. The only reason why I am
not praising Lagos is, because I want to see the result first. But, they have
at least realized that this is a problem. And I hope all states would look at
this. Power and Land reforms are very important and having that data base is
critical, especially for agriculture. Mark your land, give a C of O; let the
farmer be able to use that land as collateral to borrow, or as security. Many
of you had read Henandez De Sotos’ The Mystery of Capitals. Land is capital. I
have that big problem here in Kano, especially in the Muslim villages. A
woman’s husband dies and leaves her a farm. She doesn’t farm. So, her husband
takes over the farm, he farms it, but that is her capital, and she gets no
return on it. He uses her farm. He earns a
living and he gives her chop money from her own money.
I am Chairman of a group call
“Babbangona”. We are working on farmers trying to improve their yields, and I
am having that problem, and I get to the district heads and say: “Look, get all
Muslim women that own farms to sit with their husbands. This money that is
being given for seeds, for fertilizer, for inputs is being given to the woman
who owns the land. If your husband wants to be the labourer, let him be. If he
doesn’t, let her get someone else. You are the boss, because she owns the
land.
If your husband is ready to farm for you
for a fee, let him do it. Otherwise, we will find a farmer for you.” So, this
issue of land is crucial to addressing poverty, especially poverty among rural
women. Many of them own lands being hijacked by their husbands and they remain
poor. And it is all cultural, but what I learn from “Tudun wada” is that the
Christian woman has learned to farm and they come out to farm, because they
love it. But, the Muslim woman has been stopped from farming, but in the name
of culture. What the men had done is that they have taken over their capital,
and it’s not religion. And therefore, as leaders, we have to address this
social issues as part of economic rejuvenation.
Trade Policy: You know, I keep sounding
like a broken record 2012 – 2012.
I wrote an article in the Financial Times
in London in which I criticized China’s relationship with Africa. It was very
controversial. I don’t know if you read it. But, if you google it, you will see
it. Now, look at this. These are our trade with China. We are all importing
from China. Those that export to China are exporting oil or solid minerals.
China’s interest in Africa is not our development. America’s interest in Africa
is not our development. Europe interest in Africa is not our developments.
China’s interest is China’s developments.
Likewise America and Europe. Please our government! Our interest should be
Nigeria’s development. If the Chinese are going to come back and set up textile
factories in Nigeria and buy cotton from our farmers and employ Nigerian
workers and produce these textiles and sell to us, they are welcome. If
they are going to produce textiles in Shanghai. Subsidize them. Bring them
here. Bribe our Customs Officers. Come to our markets and destroy our industries,
we have to say no sir! If China is lending us money, and we are going to pay
back that money to import equipment from China, we should please check that
those equipment are properly and transparently priced; that we cannot get them
cheaper from another part of the world; and that they are of high quality.
This idea that am lending you $1billion to
buy rice mills from me, which you can get at half the price elsewhere, you have
already paid interest of 100%. If you don’t know it, the price is not a cheap
loan. Now, we go to these countries and we think there are no strings attached,
especially at this time that the World Bank and the IMF and the Europeans are
saying we want you to pursuit policies, China does not interfere. So, we are
running to China, it is a good partner.
We must trade with China, India, Europe
with America. I have nothing against any of them. What I want us to do is to
sit on the table with them and negotiate trade agreements that protect our
interest, because that is what they are doing and that is what every reasonable
country in the world does. So, I think we have talked about Fiscal Policy,
Monetary policy, Trade and Industrial policy and if there is any message I have
tried to send is that we have a model.
Historically, that was driven by commodity
growth, by consumer spending. We have a future that is based on investment that
should come in. We need to move to an investment-driven model. We need to have
some elements of state planning. We cannot just allow the market. The market
will not put money in agriculture, refineries. So, you have to provide the
incentive and lead capital so that’s where you are important and that what for
me is the way forward.
So what’s the summary? The years of Africa
rising where one child could lift us up are behind us. Sustainable inclusive
growth now depends on investment. Please every planning commissioner should
remember that its investment. The role government can play is now by getting
appropriate market growth, and we said that you don’t have enough money. You
have seen how much money you are raising per head. It is not much. Even if you
move money from recurrent to capital expenditure, if the pull does not
increase, it is not much. So, the government doesn’t have the pocket to do. If
you got to look for private investments, local and foreign, to to do that, and
you do that by having a corporate micro-policy and the government is getting it
right, finally, and also creating a supportive business environment. So, set
excess rate to intensify it flows, eliminate subsidies, that has been done.
Now, address failures in the power sector
value chain, starting with the DISCOs, digitize state, land registries,
prioritize public spending towards investment and protect infant industries.
Anybody who tells you not to protect your industries is deceiving you. Create a
level playing field between the infant industries and the big ones. I am not
saying go and protect everything, but they must be a way
of ensuring through power, infrastructure,
industrial plasters, research and technology, technical and vocational
education and through appropriate trade and tariff policies that critical
policies are incubated before they are allowed to go out on the streets.
Thank you.
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