We all want freedom, but sometimes
when the price is high, we justify servitude. A few western clerics in the
slave trade era found portions of the Holy Bible to anoint an economic system
that put whites and blacks apart, except when the blacks groaned under the
whites.
“When everyone is free, no one is
free,” wrote Nicolo Machiavelli, who had no patience for liberty. The notion of
freedom has come to play in our economy today.
It was easier to define in the Goodluck
Jonathan administration because our foreign reserve was robust with the price
of oil cresting at $114 for a barrel. Nigerians were free to import as much as
we wanted, from Ferrari to toothpicks.
We could afford them. Oil dividends
glittered in our pockets and lifestyle, although it was mainly the lifestyles
of the rich, the footloose political class and their conniving business elite.
Day after day, they are making headlines for the billions of Naira they stole
in the Babylon the Great of the Jonathan era that has now fallen.
Now the story is different.
Nigerians cannot shop on the streets of London or Manhattan with the swagger of
a few years back. Their ATM cards may not be honoured. Even their children
schooling in the tony colleges and universities abroad are not attending
classes because their parents cannot transfer funds. But that is not the only
story. Investors are fuming. They cannot buy or sell, and they cannot import
even materials they usually ferried into the country like clockwork.
Now here is the grim story. Between
June and December 2015, we spent over $180 million on BTA and PTA. The airlines
gulped $584 million and school fees lapped up over $284 million. In 2014, the
foreign reserves stood at $38.3 billion, while today it is about $28 billion.
What this means is that our unending
quest for toothpicks, flowers, shoes, textiles and even imported cowhide known
as pomo, has placed extraordinary pressure on our currency and reserves. It is
such that we demand about $4.6 billion monthly for foreign exchange, while we
only cart in about $1 billion. If we continue this trend, we shall see our
reserves dwindle until they crumble. When the price of oil soared, we had no
such quandary about whether to import certain items or open our liberal doors.
Now, the Central Bank of Nigeria and
the Buhari administration decided to take a few measures. It was to place
restrictions on foreign exchange. Many groaned and caviled, and proponents
countered with the logic that it was time to rein in our appetite. The
alternative: Look inwards.
It has challenged our economists,
especially as we see the value of the naira cascade so steeply that at the last
check, the naira exchanged at the parallel market for over N300 to a dollar.
Only a year ago, we wept when it exchanged for about NI65 to a dollar. In spite
of this, the call for devaluation has hit the rafters. But the Buhari
administration says no.
Devaluation has its costs.
Devaluation will make foreign
purchases less attractive because they will be expensive. But it will fire up
local inflation and create a social crisis of its own. Many will lose jobs, and
those who cannot pay house rents might look glumly into the streets. The
scenario appalls the conscience. Devaluation does not also guarantee that we
shall rake in enough foreign exchange to shore the present deficit. Countries
that work its monetary policies with such confidence do so with the backing of
a buoyant economy. But here we rely predominantly on oil for foreign reserves
and the price of oil hovers around $30 a barrel.
What this means is that the market
is not free even for the rich anymore. If it has not been for the poor, it is
even worse now. If we have to buoy our foreign reserves, we have to run a
productive economy. We have not been doing. We had oil to thank for that.
The CBN reversed its measures under
pressures and allowed the old regime of allowing our companies and individuals
buy forex and send them abroad. But it still has its problems. We cannot sell
when there is no dollar backing, and we cannot buy for the same reason. As
Isaiah says in the Bible, “as it is with the seller, so it is with the buyer,
as with the lender, so with the borrower.”
The danger is that we shall have to
look inwards. For starters, the refineries ought to be revived locally. In the
aftermath of the fuel subsidy riots in 2012, the Jonathan government promised
what it called ‘greenfield refineries.” A nifty phrase.
But we had neither green fields nor
refineries. Now, importation of refined fuel consumes 40 per cent of our
foreign exchange earnings. If we want to free our economy, it is not from
foreigners or the west; it is from our greed and lack of planning.
The only way to boost the economy is
to focus on what is termed comparative advantage. Already reports have it that
the locals have stepped up the output of eggs, rice and other poultry products basically
because imports of some items have been discontinued because they endanger our
health. Before they arrive here, some of the imported rice is stored in Asian
warehouse for years and the poultry products are preserved with the same
chemicals used to keep corpses from disintegrating.
The CBN has to keep our foreign
reserves from falling, and its quandary between allowing the foreign market to
reign or rein in our excesses can only grow.
The world economy is not showing any
promise. The U.S. economy stopped bleeding, but its recovery has not led to
individual prosperity, and it is the same in Europe. China’s inability to match
internal consumption with a sunny endogenous profile has led to negative growth
with its reverberations around the world, including Nigeria. We need a Nigerian
economy, and that comes when we rely more inwards for what we need than
outside.
The irony of globalisation,
according to political scientists, is that it has made nationalism more potent.
A globalised economy works when a nation prospers within the rubric of laissez-
faire. We have to make internal productivity work for us by stressing our areas
of strength.
The Buhari government’s talks up
agriculture but we are still waiting for its blueprint or vision. America and Europe
developed theirs. They even over-produce. The U.S. pays farmers not to produce.
In our agriculture belt around Benue State, we record phenomenal losses in
yams, plantains, tomatoes, onions, etc, because what the farmers produce, they
never sell. Yet we import them. Recently, newspapers reported that we import
tomato paste worth billions of Naira yearly. Shall we say we have free
enterprise? No, we have chaos.
By our conduct, we are saying, “flee
enterprise.”
It is not free enterprise for the
local egg farmer when “killer” eggs are imported to overwhelm nutritious local
alternative. When between 2005 and 2015, the nation’s import rose from N148
billion to N917 billion, it is not free enterprise for the locals. It is greed.
That is why our forex policy is problematic.
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