The
timing of this lecture is auspicious—coming in the 6th month after the
inauguration of a new administration, and also with a new federal
cabinet now in place. Before the government rolls out its full agenda,
this is a good time to begin our citizen duty of joining the ever
continuous discourse on the economy. Our focus for now shall be
pre-emptive and provocative— to challenge the Buhari/APC regime not only
to demonstrate that it can manage the economy better than the PDP but
also that it can lay the foundation for sustainably shared prosperity in
a post-oil economy.
Let me make three quick points to provide
some context to our discourse. First, I supported President Muhammadu
Buhari (PMB) over Jonathan not because I was convinced about the
credibility of the APC manifesto (and I said so in my article in January
this year) but for three reasons. I was convinced that the last
economic team was bankrupting the economy and had no clue as to how to
fix it. Second, PMB is the first president of Nigeria under a democracy
to have seriously desired the job and struggled for it for over 12
years. To me therefore, he must have a few points to prove, and I was
willing to bet on a man who purposefully wanted the job than otherwise.
Third, I was convinced that it would be in the enlightened self-interest
of the APC, once in power to do their utmost to keep power by
delivering on the economy unlike the PDP which had taken power for
granted. I am still confident that PMB can deliver change (although as I
had indicated in my article in January, I didn’t believe that any of
the two parties could deliver on their manifesto) but he and his team
now need to run at the speed of a 1000 km per hour. We must support them
to succeed by contributing when we can, and criticising when we
must—tough love! I am enjoying my status as ‘an independent’ (I don’t
belong to APC or PDP) and I therefore have the liberty to say it as I
see it from the balcony!
Second, I am happy that the ministers are
now in place, and I believe the president has assembled a team of
eminently qualified and experienced Nigerians. A more important point is
that it is a team of ‘believers’—who share in the mission and vision of
APC. So now that a strong team of ‘believers’ is in place, there can be
no excuses!
Furthermore,
I read in the media that the Vice-President, Prof. Osinbajo indicated
that he is “responsible for the economy”, and I believe President Buhari
deserves great commendation for this fundamental delegation. No
question, the buck stops on Mr. President’s table. However, as I argued
in my article published January this year – “Buhari vs Jonathan: Beyond
the Election” (which Vanguard newspaper still posts on their website
under a section captioned ‘The Soludo Debate’), I believe the intention
of our constitution is that the VP should be the ‘coordinating minister
of the economy’. Besides being the chair of the national economic
council (NEC), our laws make the VP chair of major economic institutions
of the federal government. Thus, once a president selects his VP, we
should begin to have some ideas about the possible direction of economic
policy akin to a party in the UK naming its Chancellor of the
Exchequer. Ours is a peculiar institutional design but to the best of my
knowledge, these provisions have been undermined in the past (I have
thoughts on possible amendment to the constitution so that VPs are not
automatic successors to the President in case of ‘accident’ and to
shield the office from the distractions of day to day politics to focus
on the economy and no more). President Buhari has repeatedly stated his
focus on “re-building” our institutions, and where else to begin the
process of systematic dialogue on the economy than the strengthening of
institutions for doing so within government? There are other
institutional structures it must create/strengthen to consolidate and
sharpen what Nigeria desperately needs now: a War Room on the Economy!
The
rest of the paper is organized as follows: In section II, we summarize a
caricature of the baseline statistics on the economy that PDP
bequeathed but which APC/PMB must improve upon. Section III shows that
the ‘old’ Buharinomics of command and control is a tried and failed
policy and won’t work now. In Section IV, we hint at a few issues the
new Buharinomics must take cognizance of if it hopes to build a
sustainable, shared prosperity for Nigeria. We conclude in Section V.
II: Baseline Statistics: What is the APC/Buhari Government trying to ‘Change’?
Every
team serious about ‘change’ starts with a clear identification of the
baseline from which it measures deviations/progress. Nigeria has had 16
uninterrupted years of democracy with the PDP controlling the federal
government as well as majority of the states. APC is now in charge at
both the centre and majority of the states. A minimum standard for
measuring ‘change’ is the extent to which APC government beats the
record of the PDP in measurable terms. As the saying goes, if you can’t
measure it, you can’t improve/change it!
Government
must strengthen the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and preserve
its independence to produce and publish credible national statistics. It
needs serious funding. I really wish our policymakers can be a little
less careless or casual about the use of official statistics. I
criticised the last government for relying on ‘estimates’ by World Bank
staff instead of the NBS statistics. When I hear the narrative so far in
the media by the new government regarding the economy, I take it
largely as the kind of ‘usual propaganda’ new officials deploy to show
that their predecessors “did nothing” and therefore lay the ground for
claiming that they are “doing everything for the first time in our
history”. Fortunately also, there are many people as well taking a hard
look at the numbers and recording scores. At AfriHeritage, we are
developing a template for measuring government performance. As Nigeria
has largely evolved into a two party state in a democracy, I prefer to
frame the discourse on the baseline as ‘PDP’s legacy and the APC’s
challenge’!
Since it is the practice to blame the PDP for every
ill that befell our country in the last 16 years (and there are many of
them) it is also fair to credit them with the positive ones. According
to data from NBS, one outstanding legacy of the PDP is that in 16 years
it held sway, it more than doubled the GDP of Nigeria (indeed with
average year-on-year GDP growth rate in excess of 6% over the past 12
years, the GDP actually doubled within the last 12 years. It met average
annual growth rate of about 2% and raised it to 6-7%, led by the
non-oil sector. Yes, non-oil sector, and the “diversification” reported
in the recently re-based GDP happened within the last 16 years. Will the
economy more than double in the next 12 years under the APC? For me, if
only the APC can double the size of GDP from about $550 billion to $1.1
trillion in 12 -16 years, and further half the poverty index, Nigeria
will indeed be on course to be one of the largest 10 economies in the
world by the end of this century.
As at 1999 when PDP came to
power, Nigeria was largely a pariah state still lucky to have survived
as one indivisible sovereign, especially in the context of the struggle
by NADECO and restiveness in many parts of the country. On corruption,
Transparency International scored it 1.6 out of 10 and ranked 98 out of
99 countries in 1999. Nigeria was listed among four countries that were
non-compliant on the anti-money laundering rules by the Financial Action
Task Force (FATF). We could not service our external debt and relied on
stressful rescheduling, with all the intrusive donor conditionalities.
Poverty was estimated at 70%, and unemployment at nearly 20%. The 1990s
will go down in our economic history as the decade of stagnation: when
per capita income growth was zero. Average oil price in May 1999 when
President Obasanjo took over was $15.24 while stock of reserves was
about $5 billion.
After 16 years, several challenges remain and
some have even worsened (especially insecurity). Although President
Jonathan’s regime had the worst economic management relative to the
resources at its disposal, it must be stressed that tremendous progress
was made in the aggregate 16 years of PDP government. Yes, it should
have left more than $100 billion in reserves but left only $30 billion
(still about six times of what it met). We also wish that Jonathan’s
team did not leave Nigeria with unprecedented rate of debt accumulation.
But, according to statistics from NBS, the PDP handed over a $550
billion economy (largest in Africa and 26th in the world), with 7.5%
unemployment rate (better than European Union, France, Sweden, Belgium,
etc although the underemployment figure is much higher); 32%?? poverty
rate (as claimed by the former Finance Minister, or 61%??: NBS needs to
clarify this claim); a stock of reserves of $30 billion; GDP growth rate
averaging 6% over last 12 years; a relatively more diversified economy,
with ICT penetration from 0.2% to over 60%, and a new contributory
pension scheme now with trillions of Naira in pension fund. Our external
debt is down although total debt stock is escalating. Our Gini
coefficient (degree of inequality) is not different from China’s.
Nigeria has consolidated and stronger banking system that currently
finances both government debt and the private sector, with a relatively
vibrant capital market. The capitalization of the Nigerian Stock
Exchange grew from less than N1 trillion to N12 trillion as at handover.
For the first time, Nigerian economy is now rated by credit rating
agencies (Fitch, and Standard and Poor’s). Even on corruption
perception, Nigeria is far better today than in 1999, and PDP created
the two major anti-corruption agencies— ICPC and EFCC, and as at 2014 TI
scored Nigeria 2.7 and ranked 136 out of 175 countries. PDP secured
debt relief for Nigeria, thereby relieving Nigeria from the stranglehold
of the IMF/World Bank policy conditionalities. APC does not have to
negotiate with Washington on many economic policies. The list is long.
The point therefore is that despite the fall in oil price, APC is
starting from a much stronger base than PDP did in 1999 and the
challenge now is to do far better. In the coming years, Nigerians will
be asking APC to show us their figures!
III: Avoiding the Mistakes of the “Old” Buharinomics
Nigeria
desperately needs the moral force/Spartan discipline and leadership of
PMB at this time to fight corruption, terrorism, and hopefully begin to
reconstruct the values of a people gone astray. On the economy, it is
not going to be an easy transition for PMB. Igbos have a proverb that
one does not learn to use the left hand at old age, but my prayer is
that for the sake of Nigeria, he would have to do so and quickly too.
Many great world leaders have had to undergo this personal
transformation to adapt and exploit the levers provided by how the real
world economy actually works in order to prosper their people. The
former socialist/communist regimes of China and Russia are making
tremendous progress on the move to competitive market economies. Many of
us started off differently, and I actually made a career (with several
books and articles) as an unrepentant critic of the IMF/World Bank’s
structural adjustment programmes (SAP) in Africa even while doing my
hard core economics work. But we have remained pragmatic intellectuals!
When
PMB first came to power in 1984-85, the nation was as well in crisis.
He did so much within the short time especially on anti-corruption and
restoration of national discipline. He inherited a command and control
economic policy regime and deepened it (capital, exchange, and price
controls; import licensing; indiscriminate ban on imports, rationing of
essential commodities; government ownership and control of so-called
‘commanding heights of the economy’—banks and insurance,
telecommunications, airline, refineries, roads and transport, even
manufacturing companies, etc). I recall that it was something like a
criminal offence then to be in possession of foreign currency. Exchange
rate, interest rate, petrol price and several other prices were largely
fixed. In the face of continuing shocks especially the fall in oil
prices (in the face of huge debt service payments), relative prices were
not allowed to adjust to restore internal and external balances.
Rather, even more controls were imposed with all the gargantuan
distortions in the economy (and industrial capacity utilization was
largely below 20%) and as government could not pay salaries, massive
retrenchment of workers was undertaken, but the economic crisis worsened
and Nigeria was on the brink of bankruptcy. The economy imploded big
time. Unemployment and poverty worsened. It did not work. The successor
government faced little choice but to liberalize the economy under the
structural adjustment programme (SAP) and Nigeria began the journey to a
modern market economy. Of course, the journey has been chequered, and
naturally is still a work in progress.
Since 1986, Nigerian
economy has changed a lot and my reading is that there is a broad
consensus on continuing progress towards a competitive (probably also
compassionate) market economy framework. From the snippets of policy
since the new government came, there is a growing perception of
nostalgia, reminiscing of the ‘old good days’ pre-1986. There seems to
be a growing tension between a tendency to return to the past versus a
progressive match to the future. I am not sure how the new wine will fit
into the old bottle. T
Let me illustrate with a few examples.
First, there is this sense of ambivalence as to whether to remove petrol
subsidy or not; and whether government is going to run refineries in
competition with the private sector under a subsidy regime or
deregulated pricing. I am convinced that PMB has the moral authority and
legitimacy to quickly remove the subsidy and privatize the refineries.
The fundamental case against subsidy removal is not economic: it is the
fact that the citizens do not trust government to optimize the use of
the proceeds for their welfare. If PMB does not deal with these issues
NOW, I wonder when, if ever. Now that private refineries are coming up,
it is time to privatize public ones. It should have been done years ago.
The huge benefits are not only economic, but also an anti-corruption
move. Let government produce a credible agenda of reforms for the sector
and let us have another focused public debate on this subject. You may
be amazed that even the so-called ‘man in the street’ now understands
that it no longer makes sense. The fiscal cost of keeping it is
unjustifiable and unsustainable.
Second, one hopes that the report
in the media about plans to resuscitate the moribund Nigerian Airways
is not true. One thing the economy cannot afford at this time of crisis
is to invest scarce resources on prestige or white elephant projects
when most federal highways are not motorable (certainly none in the
South East is motorable) or when we need to be investing tens of
billions of dollars per annum on critical infrastructure. Third, the
treasury single account (TSA) is a great initiative, and I congratulate
PMB for that. However, we don’t have to return to the past of having
every penny of government largely redundant in the central bank. For an
economy desperately in need of stimulation, piling up idle cash at the
CBN is not sound economics. We should deploy technology and transparent
rules to implement a hub and spoke model of TSA whereby CBN is the hub
while the commercial banks remain the spoke. Of course there are some
benefits of keeping it at CBN, including possible anti-corruption
outcome but as a proverb says, you don’t set your house ablaze because
of the irritation of a rat in the house. We can rid the system of
corruption and realize all the benefits of TSA but still not starve the
economy of the necessary liquidity.
Another minor point relates to
communication and body language that jolts the market and undermines
confidence in the monetary and financial system. When it was widely
publicized on two different occasions within three months that
“presidency directs central bank to …..”, it got many players in the
economy seriously worried. For sure, Central Bank is not a government
unto itself, and despite the statutory ‘autonomy’ or ‘independence’ of
the Bank, it must work closely with the Presidency and economic agencies
to coordinate macroeconomic policy. Everyone knows that the central
bank or INEC cannot survive without the support and active collaboration
with the presidency but no one wants to hear that the president has
directed INEC on how to conduct an election. There is a reason the APC
promised in its manifesto to ensure CBN independence. A central reason
is to give the market confidence that the CBN will always act
professionally and independently to ensure price and financial
stability. It is to avoid the Africa’s Idi Amin phenomenon whereby the
government of the day may ‘direct’ the central bank to ‘print’ money or
to take other steps injurious to the economy because it wants to retain
power. When the market knows or believes that the central bank is merely
an extension of the presidency and takes daily ‘directives’ from there,
the Bank loses credibility and its monetary policy committee meetings
become meaningless. My fear is the precedence: we can never imagine how
far future presidents can go in ‘directing’ the central bank on what to
do with our commonwealth.
Responding to oil price shock: Exchange and capital controls as ‘directive’ of the Presidency?
For
the better part of this year, the external shocks to the economy have
been complicated or accentuated by a gamut of the “tried and failed”
command and control policy regime: de facto fixed exchange rate, largely
fixed CBN monetary policy rate, crude capital controls, veiled form of
import bans through a long list of ‘ineligible for foreign exchange’, de
facto scrapping of domiciliary account established by law, etc. At
first, I thought this was the usual kneejerk response of policymakers to
a ‘sudden’ shock. We tried a milder variant of this for a few months
during the 2008/2009 unexpected/unprecedented global crisis (with global
liquidity squeeze and massive capital flight) but even then, it was
communicated as a ‘short-term crisis response’ and it was quickly
dismantled. We now know what works and what doesn’t even at a time of
crisis. As one reads the confusing statements from government in the
media: ‘we won’t devalue’, ‘we won’t devalue for now’, and the emotional
debate about ‘nationalism’ around issues of import ‘bans’ and capital
controls, one wonders whether it is still a ‘short-term crisis response’
or a permanent shift back to the old policy regime of pre-1986. Even if
the government initially intended it as a short-term measure, interest
groups have emerged and are lobbying to make the policy shift permanent.
To add to the confusion, the policy is communicated as a “directive”
from PMB as widely publicised in the media. Really?
I can write a book on this subject, but for now let me make the following preliminary comments:
i):
How a small, open market economy responds to terms of trade shocks and
not trivial debate on ‘devalue’ or ‘not devalue’: Unfortunately, the
debate around the issue has been wrongly trivialized as whether to
‘devalue’ or ‘not to devalue’ the Naira. Much of what I have read have
little basis in theory or empirical evidence or even counterfactual
analysis but a rehash of the sterile but polemical diatribe between
‘neo-liberals’ and ‘neo-socialists’, or simply selective partial
analysis. This is not helpful and diverts attention from an otherwise
serious policy issue.
The issue basically is how a small, open
economy such as ours responds to (ever continuous) shocks in today’s
world. In the specific case of Nigeria currently buffeted by a terms of
trade shock, with macro imbalances (especially fiscal and current
account deficits) as well as supply side constraints, and with the
economy skidding to a halt with rising inflation and unemployment, how
should relative prices or asset prices (including exchange rate and
interest rate) adjust to reflect as well as shape the economic
fundamentals? External shocks do not kill an economy: the choice of
specific policy regime is what can lessen or worsen the effects of the
shock. How policymakers respond depends on the source of the shock
(nominal/monetary vs terms of trade/real sector shock). If you do not
allow relative prices to adjust when faced by a terms of trade/real
sector shocks, then you put the full burden of adjustment on real
variables or quantities (especially output and employment)— and they
will adjust with vengeance because you cannot fix price and quantity.
Both economic theory and evidence from around the world are relatively
unambiguous: faced with terms of trade shocks, countries with flexible
exchange rate adjust faster and better and with less negative impact on
growth and employment than those with fixed rate. Put differently,
countries that allowed relative prices (including exchange rate) to
become the key “adjusters” during terms of trade shocks have almost
always done better than those that resorted to price (exchange rate) and
other distorting controls.
ii) From Nigeria’s evidence, current
policy regime is inconsistent with objective of growth, job creation and
poverty reduction: Since 1973, Nigeria has had episodes of positive and
negative oil price shocks, and the impacts on the economy have depended
on the policy regime. We can broadly distinguish two policy regimes:
when relative prices/flexible exchange rate and quantities were allowed
to adjust simultaneously versus a regime of relatively inflexible
prices/fixed exchange rate and controls. A casual empiricism
nevertheless reveals a powerful result (there are not enough data points
to undertake rigorous econometric work, and so we do the usual ‘before
and after’ evaluation). Whether you compare episodes of positive oil
price shock or episodes of negative shocks, the regime of flexible
prices clearly outperform the regime of fixed rates/controls. Just take
an example of the 1981- 91 negative oil price shock with two different
regimes of fixed prices/controls of 1981- 85/mid 1986 vs the SAP era of
late 1986 to 1991. According to data from NBS, the economy did far
better under SAP especially in terms of employment, output growth,
poverty and in some years even inflation. Many people don’t like to hear
this but as one of my mentors, Prof. Emmanuel Edozien always says, you
can’t quarrel with statistics. Since 1999, relative prices have adjusted
and this was central to the minimal impact of the global crisis of
2008/2009. The world economy experienced the ‘great recession’, and
despite the collapse of oil price from $147 to $41 at some point,
Nigeria still grew by over 6%. Compare with the experience of many other
oil producing countries, and the difference in outcomes relates to the
different policy regimes. Of course, things are a little more
complicated but at least we need to insist that the debate be
evidence-based.
iii)The current economic hardship is largely our
choice and not just oil price shock: The current slump of the economy
was predictable and largely avoidable. Just as it happened in 1981-85,
the economy has been on a tailspin. There is now about 4% growth
shortfall relative to past trend, and this cannot be explained by fall
in oil prices alone. For the first time since 1990s, per capita growth
rate (on annualized basis) is now negative implying that poverty is also
escalating; capital market has lost trillions, inflation and
unemployment are on the rise. JP Morgan has delisted our local currency
bonds and Barclays is threatening same, while the cost of borrowing for
Nigeria rises. Foreign capital is on the run, while domestic savings is
miniscule. It was ‘headline news’ when FG paid October salaries, while
states are steeping in massive debt.
Policy choices entail costs
and benefits, but the preference of one to another should be based on
the “net positive effects”, depending on the stated objectives. To
sustain the current arbitrarily pegged exchange rate will require a
steep rise in interest rate and squeezing of bank credit to the private
sector. Alternatively, intensifying the ever opaque and distorting
controls and ‘bans’ will also severely harm the private sector. I will
be surprised if the productive sector is not already feeling the heat.
The irony is that it is the small businesses (which have no voice or
power) that are suffering the most. Many are simply being choked to
death by the ‘controls’. To repeat, the current policy regime is
inconsistent with the objectives of creating jobs, growing income and
reducing poverty!
iv) There are better ways of implementing
capital controls if needed: Some commentators have sought to couch the
debate in terms of a struggle between ‘market fundamentalism’ and ‘state
capitalism’. Again, this is distracting. Every economy is ‘controlled’
in one way or the other. The question is what kind of controls or
regulations can be implemented to address observed market failures that
will be credible, transparent, and without distorting or perverting the
incentive structure so that we can have sustainably shared prosperity.
Uncertainties about what will be in the ‘black-list’ tomorrow or next
hurt capital flows, while the retroactive ‘bans’ on pre-existing
commitments by banks and producers damage the economy. I support
sensible regulations on cash transactions that prevent money laundering
but not ones that obstruct the payment system. Some countries suffering
from the disruptive effects of massive portfolio flows introduce some
taxes on capital flows. We had speed bumps on capital outflow through
mandatory holding period but this has been scrapped. We seem to be
approbating with one hand and reprobating with the other. The point is
to make the rules of capital flow transparent and credible and announce
the transition period. We can’t exacerbate the impact of external shocks
with dramatic policy shocks.
v)Avoiding the Great Mistake of the
1970s: competitive REER is the issue. Perhaps a worrying aspect of the
public discourse on exchange rate is the obsession with the level of
nominal exchange rate rather than the real effective exchange rate
(REER) or volatility of exchange rate. The question that matters most is
whether the currency is overvalued or undervalued in real terms.
Government has not shown that N196 per dollar as fixed for months now is
the rate that maintains a target competitive real exchange rate. Let me
make another strong statement: no developing country has diversified
its economy in the last 40 years or so, especially into competitive
manufacturing with an overvalued REER over an extended period of time.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Nigeria was in every aspect
comparable to Indonesia as agrarian societies before both experienced
oil boom in 1973. Books and articles have been published describing
Nigeria’s ‘great mistake of the 1970s’. Indonesia decided on a
deliberate strategy to avoid an overvalued real exchange rate, while
Nigeria fixed its nominal rate with overvalued REER. Our argument then
was that we had nothing but oil to export and therefore would not
benefit from a weak currency regime. Indonesia used weak currency to
protect its infant industries from imports, thereby encouraging domestic
production. After two decades, Indonesia’s export of manufactures
accounted for more than 25% of its exports while Nigeria’s was still
less than 1% as was the case at the beginning. More than 40 years since
1973, the debate in Nigeria has not changed, while our comparator
countries and rest of the world have moved on. When it suits us, we cite
examples of the East Asian countries and the newly industrializing
economies, but conveniently ignore their real exchange rate strategy.
Even the Communist Party in China knows better. Indeed, China and
several Asian countries deliberately keep a weak currency (in real
terms) as instrument to protect their economies from cheap imports,
thereby creating a productive base for the exports in the future. In
Nigeria, the logic is going in the reverse. Oil has indeed been a curse!
vi)Nigeria’s
experience of competitive REER and outcome: But Nigeria has also
deliberately experimented with an undervalued REER even during an export
boom (which is typically difficult because of so-called Dutch disease).
As Governor of CBN, we deliberately maintained an undervalued REER, and
even resisted IMF’s advice to shore up the Naira (which would have
brought the nominal rate to around N80 to a dollar instead of N117-
N120). Of course, that would have earned us street populism given
Nigerians emotional attachment to the level of the Naira. But I insisted
on not repeating the ‘great mistake of the 1970s’. This was the secret
why we had the highest rate of reserve accumulation in our history (over
$62 billion) even in comparison with other times of oil price boom (and
lower average monthly oil price for the 60 months). It was also central
to the massive capital inflows into Nigeria at the time such that the
CBN became a minor supplier of forex in Nigeria: private sources of
forex were dominant (many times we could not sell more than $20 million
at auctions even when we wanted to sell $200m). This undervalued REER
plus stronger banks following consolidation that could finance the
emerging private sector were central to the observed ‘diversification’
of the economy since 2005. Our calculation is that if we did not do
this, the exchange rate during the global crisis would have exceeded
N500 per dollar (this story is for another day). The point here is that
we have been through this road before, and also made conscious efforts
to remedy past errors.
vii)Delayed or dysfunctional adjustment is
costly: Crude controls to sustain an artificially fixed exchange rate
create permanent uncertainty and the currency remains under siege: it
becomes a dead weight loss to the economy! Fixing the rate and reliance
on controls to sustain the peg is a casual way to prove to everyone that
the currency is overvalued and discernible investors exercise their
option to ‘wait’ or expect policymakers to frontload incentives to more
than compensate for the future exchange rate risks they are taking
today. In either case, investment and the much needed capital inflows
into the economy wait or as is happening now, continue to flow out. It
is an irony that in the global economy of today with surfeit of
liquidity, Nigeria (with very low savings rate and desperately in need
of foreign savings) is suffering from massive capital flight. What a
paradox!
A fundamental issue many analysts miss in the case of
Nigeria is the link between exchange rate and government revenue.
Alternative paths to exchange rate adjustment could have pumped a few
trillions of Naira in extra fiscal revenue into the economy and
refuelled it. Even if it was just used to pay off the contractor debt,
the economy would have been back on its feet. Since N196 is an arbitrary
figure, why don’t we fix it at N100 and see if any government in
Nigeria will be able to pay salaries. This is a mute but powerful point
about deciding the choice of the rate.
viii)Lobbying for forex as
the new ‘oil rent’ in town?: We are literally back to a form of import
licensing regime, and portfolio carrying ‘agents’ are back in town to
‘lobby’ for forex. While the arbitrary list of ‘banned’ items has left
the economy haemorrhaging, those reaping the rents are lobbying to make
their gains permanent, while others are lobbying to join the new rent
industry. Oil rent is drying up and the new source of easy money is
forex. With a black market premium of about 20%, a successful roundtrip
creates instant jackpot. Furthermore, if a group can get items in their
sector ‘banned’, they will reap the monopoly rent instantly. If you
stretch the logic of the ‘ban’, it will be difficult to justify
allocation of forex for anything. After all, you can argue that denial
of forex should ‘force’ Nigerians to produce just any good for that
matter at home or patronize substitutes. After all, during the Nigerian
civil war, Biafran engineers were forced by the blockade to “invent”
their own refineries, bombs, etc. So, why don’t we close our borders and
seek to be ‘self-reliant’ in everything (whatever that means!). No, it
is the power and influence of the lobbying groups as well as subjective
preferences of policymakers that determine the content of the list.
There is no objective basis, and I am sceptical of the ‘national
interest’ argument. Let me illustrate with an absurd example. Going by
the logic of the ‘bans’, why should Nigeria allocate forex for school
fees, medicals and mortgage abroad when we have thousands of schools and
hundreds of universities; hospitals etc? So, why not ‘ban’ school fees
and medical fees as a way of forcing the elite to patronize our local
schools and hospitals? What about mortgages abroad? These three items
also cost billions of dollars per annum. We won’t ‘ban’ them because
they are goods consumed by the powerful elite and policymakers. That is
the problem with this kind of opaque policy regime. So, where do we
stop, and who determines the list? As an anti-corruption government,
APC/PMB must not be unwittingly creating institutions/processes that by
definition are havens for corruption. This policy is creating instant
briefcase millionaires while businesses especially SMEs are dying!
ix)Five
Myths about the relationship between exchange rate/import ban and
Nigerian economy: When a lie is repeated very often, it starts sounding
like the truth. Let me add some footnotes to some of the clichés in the
public discourse. First, it is claimed that Nigeria is an
import-dependent (consumption-dominated) economy and therefore a
depreciation/devaluation will not be beneficial. It will take pages to
argue against this fallacy but suffice it to say that it is tautological
and superficial. I don’t know how many countries that do not ‘depend’
on imports, or where consumption does not dominate aggregate demand.
Nigeria’s imports as a share of its GDP do not bear out the claim. Check
out the size of imports of other countries. Furthermore, a corollary of
this argument is that if ‘devaluation’ is harmful, then a ‘revaluation’
should be beneficial. So why don’t we just fix the rate at N1 per
dollar? The issue is that real exchange rate is central to resource
allocation in an economy, as well as capital flows, savings and
investment. At the extreme, exchange rate and tariffs can combine to
provide powerful protection to domestic production against imports.
Exchange rate may not be the magic bullet that cures all ills but
getting it wrong can cause major havoc to the macro economy.
Second,
there are exaggerated claims about the inflationary impact.
Inflationary impact depends on other complementary measures but the
substantive issue is the sacrifice ratio— what degree of unemployment do
we want to tolerate to achieve a 1% reduction in inflation rate?
Evidence from episodes of ‘high’ currency depreciation does not bear out
the exaggerated inflation fear in Nigeria. The Naira has depreciated by
about 22% this year and the ‘increase’ in inflation has not exceeded
1%. Check out inflation figures during the SAP era when Naira floated
for the first time with hundreds of percent depreciation. In one year
inflation was 5.5%. Even with the massive liquidity injections during
the global crisis of 2008/2009 (as every central bank did then) plus
over 24% depreciation, the ‘increase’ in inflation rate was only 4%. The
issue is whether it was worth the price for preserving employment and
maintaining growth of 6%? Some analysts confuse the price level with its
rate of change (inflation).
The third myth is that crude capital
controls ‘save our reserves’ from being exhausted. I heard the same
argument when we were about to migrate from the retail to the wholesale
Dutch auction system (RDAS to WDAS). Many argued that our reserves would
run out in three months, and I insisted that the opposite would happen,
and we won. The market functions on reverse psychology and incentives.
When you have the incentives for economic agents to bring their forex
and they have confidence that your policy regime is transparent and
sustainable, capital would flow in. On the reverse, when they know that
policymakers are panicky, it is a confirmation to everyone that they
have lost control and private capital runs. If people are unsure how
they will take back their money as and when needed, they won’t come in
the first instance. Crude controls become a race to the bottom: as
private flows dry up, the pressure on official forex pool becomes
unsustainable thereby leading to more perverse controls with all the
distortions that kill the real economy. A vicious circle sets in. If the
current policy regime continues, I can bet that policymakers will soon
be under pressure to expand the list of items to ‘ban’. It is simple
logic. Alternative adjustment paths could have led to stability in
exchange rate and reserves without the distorting controls and bans.
The
fourth myth is that if we don’t fix the rate, the currency will
depreciate without bound. It is a funny arithmetic. Well, incomes and
money supply are not infinite and so the argument is untenable. As you
hit the liquidity ceiling, the currency will stabilize and might even
start appreciating (in nominal terms). I believe the TSA as implemented,
together with a few other measures would since have stabilized the
Naira without the capital controls.
The fifth myth relates to
import ‘bans’. It is claimed that a country like Nigeria should not
import things that it can produce, and that bans will help the economy.
Well, this is not just a theoretical debate. Nigeria and the world have
more than 50 years’ experience to draw from. It surely appeals to the
emotion but that is not how the world works. Otherwise there would be no
World Trade Organization (WTO) to which Nigeria is a member, and there
will be little trade among nations. Nigerians forget that the major
importers of our oil are themselves oil producers. The US has higher oil
reserves and produces more oil than Nigeria and yet for many decades it
was a major importer of our oil. China is also an oil producer. Imagine
if most countries to which we export decide to ‘ban’ Nigeria’s oil on
the ground that they ‘can produce’ it (in quest of their own
‘self-reliance’). The debate in the world is how countries like Nigeria
can build competitive advantages to produce quality, cheaper goods than
others. Besides, analysts need to study episodes of ‘bans’ in our
history and show the sectors/industries that emerged and survived under
the protection of ‘bans’. There are several concessions and non-tariff
barriers (NTBs) available to us under the WTO and other bilateral
agreements that we are not even exploiting. With poor electricity,
costly finance, little research and development (R & D), decadent
infrastructure, insecurity, policy inconsistencies and mostly
unemployable graduates of the educational system, does Nigeria now hope
to ‘ban’ its way to prosperity?
x)Clarity on government objectives
and CBN to return and focus on its mandate: Government needs to clarify
the confusion on its policy regime: is exchange rate an objective, or
an instrument or simply a price? Sometimes, you hear officials
explaining the ‘agenda to strengthen the Naira’— does this mean we are
going into exchange rate targeting? Are we going to target the level of
the nominal rate (and what is the target rate?; how do we pick the rate
to target)? More specifically, how did we determine that N196 is the
‘appropriate’ level? Why not: N1 or N50 or N140 or N200 or N230, etc? If
we are emotionally against ‘high’ figures as exchange rates, why not
redenominate the currency— take away two zeroes and at current rates,
exchange rate will instantly range from N1.96 to N2.33 to one dollar?
Alternatively, are we targeting the real exchange rate? Between exchange
rate, interest rate and inflation, we need clarity as to which one(s)
is/are objectives and which one(s) is/are instruments. I do not want to
join in criticising the Central Bank because it is not even clear
whether the policy regime is from CBN or ‘orders from above’. A proverb
says that you don’t tell the king that he is wrong. You rather tell him
‘Our father, please take a second look at the issue’. That’s all I can
say for now!
If it is true that CBN was simply “directed”, then it
has been put in a rather untenable situation. But if CBN indeed crafted
this policy, then reasonable people will have serious cause to worry—
even with our recent experiences? Currently the CBN suffers from the
classic Tinbergen’s problem: it has far fewer instruments than the
myriad of (sometimes confusing) objectives on its plate. Now that the
federal cabinet is in place, I earnestly pray that CBN will return and
focus on its mandate. The fifth function of the central bank is to
provide economic and financial advice to the federal government. The CBN
should lead the charge and advise government on a coherent and
internally consistent policy strategy. The current one is not the kind
of policy that ‘will work with time or in the long run’. This is one
example where, as Maynard Keynes reminded his critics in the 1930s, “in
the long run, we are all dead”! Sometimes on public policy issues, sheer
ego can stand in the way of self-correction. We quickly corrected
ourselves during the 2008/2009 crisis. I believe the APC/PMB team loves
Nigeria enough that faced with superior facts or logic, would make
necessary changes. Besides, it is still morning on creation day. Enough
said for now!
IV: Towards a “New” Buharinomics
At the end of
this century, Nigeria is projected to be the country with the highest
gain in its population (close to one billion and third most populous
country) and has the potentials to become one of the largest 10
economies in the world. But it could also unravel. The time is now, and
the choice is ours. Again, history beckons on PMB— as the president who
came “at the wrong time” according to him but one who seized the
opportunity to make history. This year, 2015, is the first year of our
second 100 years as a country, and fortuitously Nigerians chose a new
leadership this same year – APC/PMB– to lead the charge. The challenge
is whether the ‘change’ will be fundamental and as the title of a book
suggests, ‘built to last’ or will be merely tinkering at the margins.
Nigerians
and the world are waiting for the big ideas (Agenda) that will drive
this change. The APC/PMB leadership comes with two unique opportunities
or challenges depending on how one sees them: first, from all prognosis
of the future of oil, this government has the chance to lay the
foundation for a post-oil economy. This won’t be a coffee party, and
requires bold (out of the box) ideas with execution precision. Second,
it will be the first government challenged to embark upon disruptive
economic change but without the external agencies of coercion and
reward. Under SAP, the need for debt rescheduling forced Nigeria to
embark upon the IMF/World Bank sanctioned adjustment; while our quest
for debt relief led us to embark upon the first IMF’s Policy Support
Instrument—PSI). Debt relief has bought us increased policy space, and
Nigeria is largely free from the intrusive IMF/World Bank
conditionalities. The challenge is how we use such new found ‘freedom’
or ‘policy independence’. Can we truly discipline ourselves to take
tough choices or use it as license to be suicidal and take us back to
the pre-debt relief era?
There must be something in PMB’s natal
chart that keeps bringing him back to power as oil prices collapse and
the economy/country is in crisis. After his first stint 30 years ago, I
believe God has given him a second chance to correct the economic
‘mistakes’ of his first coming and perhaps finally lay the foundation
for a truly great country. For me, the ‘mistake’ to correct is to
abandon or reform the ‘old Buharinomics’ of command and control economic
system. Times have changed, and Nigerian economy is different. Every
leader in the world is also adapting to the changing world. Countries
such as India, China, Russia, etc are fast learners and trying to beat
everyone to the ‘game’. We must pragmatically play this ‘game’.
Our
goal in this lecture is not to outline the elements of the “new”
Buharinomics. We expect PMB and his new cabinet, especially the team on
the economy, to unveil it soon. Thereafter, we can join the debate. Our
central argument so far is that it has to be ‘new and bold’, and surely
dismantling several of the policy concoctions that are badly hurting the
economy now should be the starting point.
There are a few issues I
would however wish to draw the attention of the team as they craft the
‘new’ agenda. In thinking about the competitiveness of an economy, I use
an architectural framework that organizes the issues around the
meta-level; meso-macro level; and micro level. Let me highlight a few
salient issues on the meta level and meso-macro level.
a) Building to Last— meta-level socio-political governance infrastructure
The
castle of the new Buharinomics cannot be built in the air. There is a
proverb that one must first secure the ground before struggling for the
mat. Unfortunately, the ground on which we hope to construct our 100
storey building of hope is shaky and shifting. Nigeria is at war with
itself, and is currently on the ‘High Alert’ list of Failed/Fragile
States. When the Funds for Peace (US) first published its ‘Failed States
Index’ in 2005, Nigeria was ranked 54 out 76 countries— and Nigerians
screamed to high heavens to condemn the ranking. Every year since then,
our ranking has deteriorated and in 2015, Nigeria has been ranked 14 out
of 178 countries (the first 13 are: 1. South Sudan; 2. Somalia; 3.
Central African Rep.; 4. Sudan; 5. Congo DR; 6. Chad; 7. Yemen; 8.
Syria; 9. Afghanistan; 10. Guinea; 11. Haiti; 12. Iraq; 13. Pakistan).
As one studies the 12 clusters of variables used in constructing the
index, we are challenged to ponder the outlook for the sustainability of
change. Surprisingly, this ignoble status of Nigeria as a ‘High Alert’
failed state (bequeathed by PDP) does not even feature in our public
discourse.
But no sustainable economic progress can happen in this
context. The sustained June 12 protests largely contributed to the
economic stagnation decade of the 1990s. The North East economy was
grossly degraded in a matter of months. The South East has been desolate
with kidnappers holding sway and most of the elite largely in ‘exile’,
and now a resurgent movement for Biafra. Thus, whether it is Boko Haram
and its quest for a Caliphate (with over 1.5 million internally
displaced persons (IDPs); calls for Oduduwa country; increasing tension
between the Fulani herdsmen and their ‘hosts’; the resurgence of Biafra;
etc, there is something we can no longer ignore.
The previous
governments lived in denial but there has been a simmering undercurrent
and threat to long term sustainability. We have arrested, detained,
imprisoned, even gunned and bombed the ‘agitators’ but the agitations
rather rise in direct proportion to the use of force applied.
Conventional approach of deploying force and fear have not worked, and
probably won’t. We have sought to drive the conversation underground.
Oil boom has bought us some apparent peace of the graveyard and yet our
yearly ranking deteriorates. As we transit to a post-oil economy with
all the hardship that comes with the drastic adjustment for a
people/elite already glued to certain entitlements, I don’t know how the
dynamics will play out. It is now time to do what people do in a
democracy: dialogue and negotiate openly! Yes, it is time for a
Commission to coordinate the open national conversation. I believe that
the late Ahmadu Bello was right when he disagreed with Nnamdi Azikiwe,
suggesting that we should rather seek to ‘understand’ rather than
pretend to ‘forget’ our differences. I will add that we should work hard
to urgently design institutions to address those differences/grievances
in a transparent manner. It will be the first sign that we want to
‘build to last’.
A2) Institutions for a competitive, productive economy?
It
is evident that PMB cares deeply for systemic change, especially
national discipline and anti-corruption. These are critical. But some
might argue that to an extent these are symptoms of a dysfunctional
system design. Let us get to the roots! Nigeria’s unitary federalism
with its perverse fiscal federalism is designed to share and consume
primary resource rents. Easy money from oil kept the parasitic elite
together – united by the sharing business. As we seek to transit to a
post-oil economy, to what extent can a system designed for consumption
become efficient for production? The perverse incentives embedded in our
constitution penalize hard work and enterprise. A national economy
cannot be competitive if its constituent parts are not competitive. The
last national conference report does not go far, but it provides a
starting point. To jettison it without a better alternative will be a
historic mistake.
B: Macro-meso level issues:
Let me raise a few issues to consider in the design of the ‘new’ Buharinomics.
i)Efficient
and competitive market economy with a human soul (or what Komolafe
calls ‘social conscience’). Nigeria has come a long way in developing a
market economy and still has a long way to go. If it is not broken,
don’t mend it! President Obasanjo once narrated his conversation with
the late Prime Minister of Singapore. He asked the late Li Kuan Yew to
explain the Singapore’s miracle to him. According to Obasanjo, Li Kuan
Yew told him there was no miracle: all they did was that they got a few
things right and kept doing them for an extended period of time. There
is a lesson to learn here. The ‘new’ Buharinomics must resist the
temptation of most new governments to think that their mandate is to
discredit and replace everything they met. Reducing uncertainties and
cost of doing business as well as maintaining macroeconomic stability
remain critical first steps. We must avoid ‘state overload’. In a regime
of weak institutions, entrusting the bureaucracy with excessive
discretion to pick winners is a breeding ground for corruption and crony
capitalism. From Nigeria’s political economy and experience so far, it
needs to become a slogan that “government in business is bad business”!
ii)Fix
the broken public finance: This is the elephant in the room. I don’t
envy our new Minister of Finance who must fix the public treasury. As I
listen around, I can hear a sonorous song by all the governments in
response to the current crisis and its popular refrain is: ‘give us more
money to spend’! Given the short-term electoral cycle, it is evident
that most governments want to avoid the painful adjustments required to
put back their public finance on a path of sustainability because that
could offend voters and make them unpopular. Everyone is relying on
increased taxation and borrowing. But the previous government loaded the
public finance with an overload of debt at a time of unprecedented oil
boom. The leg-room for more debt is there but definitely not much. The
PMB team must not treat this oil price shock as temporary and believe it
can borrow its way out of it. We must plan for the long haul and also
keep an eye on the balance sheet of the central bank and commercial
banks vis-à-vis public debt. I worry more about the crowding out of the
private sector as governments compete with it for debt.
The
APC/PMB government must establish its reputation on public finance. Is
it going to be the tax, borrow and spend party or a wealth creator? How
does it intend to reorganize government to free up resources? How does
it intend to negotiate or deal with the vested interests in preserving
the status quo, especially the national assembly? State government debt
is a time bomb for the nation. The new team must take a serious look at
the Fiscal Responsibility Act— it needs serious review and tightening
otherwise ‘state bailout’ will become a permanent feature of our public
finance.
I have read a lot of wonderful proposals about a welfare
system— conditional cash transfers, unemployment benefits, social
investment, etc. Great ideas! Do we need it? Yes we do. Can we afford it
at this point in time? I am not sure. I have just a few words of
caution. First, we must avoid the pitfalls of the Western welfare system
that has become a trap for many (created generations of indolent,
entitlement-dependent, non-working households). Government must avoid
institutionalizing the “dash” culture (a culture where people expect
something for nothing). Once you start, a welfare system is not easily
reversible. While we struggle to wean Nigeria off the oil rent, we
should not replace it with another entitlement culture. Second, we must
do the math properly and avoid the Jonathan’s open air announcement of
wage increases before anyone tried to crunch the numbers. The result was
that for five years, the total recurrent expenditure exceeded total
government revenue. Every penny of capital spending was borrowed. Can
APC/PMB reverse the trend and ensure a recurrent expenditure of no more
than 80% of total REVENUE, or alternatively a recurrent of no more than
50-60% of total budget? Where is the statistics to use for this welfare
payment? We know how states manipulate the school enrolment figures to
get more money from Abuja. There is work to do before you roll out,
please.
We recognise the dilemma. There is pressure to fulfil
campaign promises (which are largely untenable and could bankrupt the
country) versus trying to pick the pieces and put them back on a
sustainable path. In my article in January, I stated that none of the
two parties would deliver on their promises given the state of our
public finance— except of course it wants to be suicidal in tipping us
off the fiscal cliff. The APC/PMB team needs to weigh this carefully.
But let us be honest: how many Nigerians voted for PMB because of the
APC manifesto? My reading is that the last presidential election was
more a referendum on President Jonathan’s tenure and a little bit about
Buhari’s moral force as well as the powerful coalition (under a two
party system) that propelled APC to power. It is time to go on a
retreat: roll your sleeves and with your laptops, and start crunching
the numbers. So far, they don’t add up, but your mandate is to make them
add up. Already, you have done a good job of convincing the public that
you met a ‘total rot’, and so we can understand if you tell us you
can’t deliver on those promises (although many of us knew from the
beginning). Just come clean and move the country forward. After all,
even during the oil boom, the PDP never delivered on its election
manifesto as well (compare the various glossy election-time manifestoes
with the actual programmes implemented). Someday, we shall get there but
for now, you need to get us out of the crisis. The critical first step
now is to regain the lost momentum on growth, and then crunch the
numbers on the ‘social spending’ before taking a plunge. It is better to
err on the path of a delay than to rush in and rush out.
iii) Declare National Emergency on Industrialization
The
new Buharinomics must articulate the five big ideas/programmes to drive
the vehicle of change. Where are the iroko trees of the change mantra?
Let me suggest that one of them should be a national emergency action on
industrialization. Nigeria’s urbanization rate at 5.2% per annum is one
of the highest in the world, and with a rapidly growing population and
millions entering the labour market every year, creating value-adding
jobs for these clustering urbanites will be a fundamental challenge. We
must maximize the potentials of every sector in job creation including
the hitherto dormant solid minerals sector and then accelerate the
transformation of agriculture. But the overarching emphasis of the APC
manifesto on solid minerals and agriculture as its own ‘new economy’ is
misplaced. An Igbo proverb says that a person who sells a dog and buys a
cat still has a squatting animal in his house. Oil, agriculture, and
solid minerals are all primary commodities subject to extreme
volatility. If job creation is the central objective, both sectors won’t
deliver much over the medium term. Indeed, as we modernize agriculture
and its productivity rises, total employment in the sector declines.
Manufacturing and services remain the key for the future.
It will
task our policy and execution entrepreneurship to the limit to break
into the club of the newly industrializing countries. China is now
running out its rural cheap labour and manufacturing wages are beginning
to rise. To continue to compete, Chinese firms will have to relocate to
cheaper cost locations (just like the Japanese firms relocated to many
East Asian countries in a phenomenon called the ‘flying geese model’).
Nigeria must position itself to be the preferred location for these
flying geese. We need bold targets, a plan, and actions. For 53 years
since the first national development plan, we have tried all kinds of
strategies to industrialize (including nationalization, indigenization,
self-reliance, import-substitution, free market strategy, etc). There
are ample lessons from the rest of the world and from our own history.
We should build on those lessons to now set and implement an ambitious
national plan to industrialize. Indeed, emphasis on solid minerals and
agriculture could become integral part of the industrialization
strategy— as we should aim to export only processed minerals and
agricultural produce. For example, can APC set a 20 year audacious
agenda (2035) for Nigeria to achieve manufacturing as share of GDP in
the region of 30%, and for manufactured exports to account for at least
20-25% of exports?
It is a doable target, requiring activist
governments at all levels as promoters. To work, Nigeria would have to
unleash state and regional competition. Attempt to drive it from Abuja
will fail as usual. The starting point is to constitute urgently a team
of out-of-the box thinkers to come up with a seemingly ‘crazy plan’. For
example, the Federal government might have to rethink its monopoly
rights over solid minerals. If I have my way, I would immediately remove
all fees/commissions on capitalization of manufacturing firms;
instantly reduce corporate tax on manufacturing to 10%— to signal the
national focus to the world; and states to retain 50% of all corporate
taxes from their states as own revenue. I honestly believe that we
should seriously debate the tax code and tax rate. I have a view that we
should actually drastically reduce corporate tax rate at this time: it
is too high (let’s debate!). I am just thinking on my feet, but a little
further reflection will suggest several ‘simple’ but powerful policy
changes that can ignite action beyond the ‘usual’ catalogue of
constraints to be removed. Manufacturing as a share of GDP is miniscule
and hence the initial fall in tax revenue will be insignificant but the
revenue will be huge in the future as the sector explodes. We can limit
the national honours in the next five years to appreciate people who
have excelled in creating wealth and jobs. Nigeria needs a war room and
trading floor in the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment (akin to
what Ron Brown had in the US under President Clinton) and we need to
dismantle the huge public bureaucracies and give private enterprise a
breeding space to prosper and create jobs. The above is just
illustrative, but many of the ideas that will unleash a boom will
require changes to the constitution.
The new Buharinomics must
take a position on the EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). How
will the ECOWAS common market prosper in the face of EPA? We had a
vision for our Naira to become the de facto ECOWAS currency and I am
convinced that Nigeria will ultimately return to a variant of our
four-point strategic agenda for the Naira, including redenomination of
the currency. As we envisioned under the Financial System Strategy,
2020, Nigeria can and must become Africa’s financial hub. Government
must expedite action in setting up the international financial centre.
iv) Developmental Exchange rate strategy:
At
the heart of the new Buharinomics should be an exchange rate strategy
that avoids the great mistake of the past. The market for nominal
exchange rate in Nigeria is an imperfect market given the position of
government as dominant supplier of forex in most cases. Thus, a ‘market
determined exchange rate’ in the circumstance is both an art and a
science. It requires a great deal of skill to get it right. The
objective however is to have a stable (not fixed) nominal exchange rate
that avoids an overvalued real exchange rate. We must have a path of
REER to target, and skilfully manage the evolution of the nominal
exchange rate to maintain a competitive real exchange rate. In other
words, nominal exchange rate adjusts to maintain a competitive REER. We
can learn a lesson here from the Communist Party in China. This strategy
is critical for the success of the industrialization objective, reserve
accumulation, capital inflows, internal and external balance, and
several other macro objectives.
It is in the light of the above
that I believe that the current debate on exchange rate is the wrong
debate. Debating whether to ‘devalue’ or ‘not to devalue’ means we have
already accepted a ‘fixed’ exchange rate system (since devaluation means
moving from one fixed point to another). Are you devaluing from N196 to
what, and for how many hours/days/weeks will it remain fixed? It is the
wrong debate. Our position is that Nigeria should maintain a flexible
nominal exchange rate system that avoids an overvaluation of the real
exchange rate. We have done it before, with great benefit to the
economy. The de facto fixture of the exchange rate at N196 is a great
mistake.
Conclusion
Let us conclude. A fundamental challenge
to the APC/PMB team is that their’s is an agenda with a deadline. It
has basically three annual budgets and no more than 7,000 hours (if it
works 8 hours a day) for Nigerians to SEE the change. As the saying
goes, you don’t have a second chance to create a first impression. It is
going to be a thankless job as no one gets applause for managing an
economy in a crisis. But that is what Nigerians employed them to do.
Some elected officials make the mistake of postponing fundamental
changes until their second term. It backfires often. My advice is to
install all the pillars of the disruptive change in the first year and
do all the battles and bargaining with relevant interest groups. If the
change is a credible one, by the third year, the pain might have turned
into gain. With the full team in place now, we must now turn the page
from the Book of Lamentations, and give the people hope that soon, they
will start singing from the Psalms of David. For the rest of us, we can
only work, watch, and pray that the new Buharinomics can indeed usher
the change that Nigeria needs.
Soludo delivered this lecture in Enugu on Thursday, November 19
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