Mrs. Kemi Adeosun |
Where
Nigeria possibly stood out was in the fact that during the preceding three
years when oil prices were in excess of 100 dollars per barrel, the Government
did little in terms of saving and investing for the future.
Our Sovereign Wealth Fund, which was
established in October 2012 with just US$1
billion, did not receive any further inflow during the oil price boom.
Instead, billions of dollars were squandered through corrupt oil and defence
contracts. It is a terrible thing for a country to fall on hard times without a
savings buffer. There was nothing unexpected about our downturn. It was the
inevitable result of the choices we made or didn’t make during the years of
boom.
What
is remarkable, yet not as talked about, is the way we have worked so hard to
exit the recession, reset the economy and reposition it for a brighter future
for the present and future generations of Nigerians. The administration of President Muhammadu Buhari is laying
the foundation for the kind of economic growth that makes a real impact in the
lives of citizens.
The
downturn has inspired unprecedented levels of fiscal responsibility, in line
with President Buhari’s determination to fight Nigeria’s endemic corruption. Shortly
after taking office, he issued a Presidential order mandating the immediate
implementation of the Treasury Single
Account (TSA) system, consolidating thousands of government accounts
scattered across deposit money banks into a unified system that is transparent
and easy to centrally monitor and track.
Under
the old system, it was common for government accounts to be converted into
personal use, but under the TSA this is impossible. Also, the proliferation of
accounts encouraged rent seeking rather than questionable practices. Budgetary
reform has also taken a lot of our time and attention. We are pioneering the
use of software to prepare our annual budgets, which allows greater
transparency and the ability to track changes.
We
have insisted on using biometric verification in the deployment of our Social
Investment Programme, which includes a Job Scheme for unemployed graduates, a
School Feeding Scheme for Primary School Pupils, a Conditional Cash Transfer
scheme targeting a million of our poorest citizens, and a Micro-Credit scheme
for artisans, farmers, and traders. In the past the Social Investment payments
would have been done as cash handouts. A similar insistence on biometric
verification for the federal payroll has resulted in the detection of tens of
thousands of bogus beneficiaries – or ‘ghost workers’, as we often refer to
them, in Nigeria – and savings running into billions of naira every month.
We are
pursuing unprecedented cooperation with foreign governments and powers, as part
of our transparency and anti-corruption drive. For the simple reason that a
disproportionate amount of public funds looted in Nigeria end up in the United
Arab Emirates’, Nigeria has signed bilateral agreements with the UAE Government
on extradition, exchange of information, and repatriation of stolen public
funds.
One
strong demonstration of our political will has been a Whistleblowing Scheme we
launched months ago that empowers citizens to report public corruption. The
impact in terms of recoveries has exceeded our expectations. The tighter rein
on public finances allowed us invest US$500m in our Sovereign Wealth Fund,
during a recession.
A lot
of the work we have done over the last two and half years has been focused on
dismantling the old ways of doing things, rebuilding them, and empowering and
fortifying our institutions with technology to block loopholes, discourage
abuse, and prevent a relapse into the destructive ways of the past.
The
new Nigeria we seek will not happen without this kind of foundational reform
that imposes on us new ways of thinking and of doing things. The early results
are already being seen. A concerted focus on agriculture has seen our rice
imports from Thailand dropping by 90 per cent between 2015 and 2016, and
replaced by locally grown variants.
As oil
has let us down, we have started to do what we should have done decades ago,
invest in agriculture and mining. Throughout the recession, agriculture
recorded healthy growth. As we emerge from the recession, its impact is certain
to multiply and position Nigeria for a prosperous future.
Let me
point out that the most important elements of any reform effort tend to be the
least flamboyant. We are confident that in the months and years ahead,
Nigerians and the world will see the full impact of the foundational resetting
that the Buhari administration has been focused on since 2015.
There
is of course a lot of resistance to reform, by vested interests within and
outside the system. But we are not fazed. The work of reform goes on. It is, to
borrow from the Nigerian novelist, Professor
Chinua Achebe, morning yet on
Creation Day. Not very long from now, Nigerians and the world will look back on
this recession we have just emerged from, and realize that it was the turning
point in Nigeria’s journey to true growth and greatness. (Guardian)
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