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Financial Times to Tinubu: Shock Therapy Alone Won鈥檛 Cure Nigeria鈥檚 Economic Ills
鈥ays current policies largely disjointed
Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja
A Financial Times (FT) article has described current policies by the President Bola Tinubu administration as disjointed, stressing that his 鈥榮hock therapy鈥 strategy alone will not cure Nigeria鈥檚 many economic challenges.
It stated that in the nearly 15 months since Tinubu became president, he has forced his 220 million fellow Nigerians to swallow some bitter medicine, removing a generous fuel subsidy, one of the few benefits citizens receive from their 鈥榠nefficient and corrupt鈥 state.
In addition, FT said that the Tinubu administration allowed the country鈥檚 currency, the naira, to enter freefall, fuelling imported inflation and triggering the worst cost of living crisis in a generation.
These measures, it said, have pushed tens of millions of already impoverished people deeper into misery.
However, the news medium admitted that they were necessary to begin correcting the country鈥檚 long-term economic demise.
The fuel subsidy, it said, was ruinously expensive, guzzling nearly a third of the federal budget and distortionary, channelling Nigerians鈥 energies into rent-seeking, smuggling and graft.
The exchange rate regime, which vastly overvalued the naira, wiped out exports of everything but oil, it added.
While genuine industries were starved of hard currency, cronies, it alleged ,accessed cheap dollars to sell on the black market.
It stressed that Nigeria鈥檚 elite learnt a lesson that was toxic to the nation鈥檚 prospects, meaning that it would rather not produce anything when it can make a killing through arbitrage.
鈥淚t is necessary, but insufficient. ‘Tinubunomics’ is so disjointed it barely deserves the name. Shock therapy will probably fail if important adjustments are not made.
鈥 First, the president must chart a course ahead and convince Nigerians they are in it together. For that to be remotely credible, the political class must make sacrifices. Out must go lavish pay rises for civil servants and flashy cars (not to mention jets) for government officials.
鈥淭inubu only has to look at Kenya, where violent street demonstrations have forced the government to withdraw tax rises, to see what happens when a sense of injustice festers. Likewise some savings from the fuel subsidy should be redeployed to support the most economically vulnerable as a priority.
鈥淗unger levels are soaring and millions of children are foregoing meals and school. Nigerian politicians love to be seen handing out bags of rice. But what is needed is direct cash payments to people鈥檚 phones, the technology for which exists, and in the longer-term a proper safety net.
鈥淎s things stand, the state lacks either the capacity or the probity to administer such a scheme. Tinubu needs to fix that urgently,鈥 it added.
With a few exceptions, FT stated that the president鈥檚 cabinet is full of lightweights who owe their jobs to political patronage, not to expertise.
鈥淭echnocratic talent exists in abundance. It must be marshalled. Corruption needs to be tackled. It does not help that Tinubu鈥檚 own vast wealth is not easy to decipher, nor that his poverty minister was suspended for alleged diversion of funds, something she denies.
鈥 It does not help either that the state is implicated in the wholesale theft of oil, depriving the nation鈥檚 coffers of billions of dollars. Tinubu should use all his political guile to staunch the flow,鈥 it added.
The FT piece stated that Nigeria collects tax worth about 10 per cent of gross domestic product, one of the lowest rates in the world, a sure sign of how little trust exists between the government and the governed.
鈥淏ut if the economy is to be revived, the state needs to be an enabler. It must provide power, roads, security and justice, not to mention schools, hospitals and support for the poorest in society.
鈥淲ithout a properly joined-up and articulated plan, Tinubu鈥檚 bitter medicine will not cure Nigeria鈥檚 ills. It will just leave a bad taste,鈥 it added.

