As the economic recession bites harder,
spelling acute hardship for Nigerians, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
sunday sought to downplay rising worries over their wellbeing and asked
the people to be calm as the economy would soon rebound.
The bank spoke through its acting
Director, Corporate Communications, Mr. Isaac Okoroafor, but said,
however, that the quick rebound was only possible if Nigerians increased
their productivity, patronise made-in-Nigeria goods and support
measures being taken by it to manage foreign exchange.
He spoke in Owerri at a one-day
interactive enlightenment meeting with organised labour where the
workers told him that they want an enhanced wage and prompt payment of
their salaries, saying it was the only way they could be shielded from
the harsh effects of the recession, which the Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP) through a statement in Abuja yesterday, said was brought about by
the incompetent handling of the economy by President Muhammadu Buhari.
Addressing stakeholders at the Owerri interactive enlightenment meeting, Okoroafor urged Nigerians to have the strong belief that with hard work the economy would rebound soonest.
Addressing stakeholders at the Owerri interactive enlightenment meeting, Okoroafor urged Nigerians to have the strong belief that with hard work the economy would rebound soonest.
“What is required from everyone of us is
a strong belief that we can get out of it as hardworking people. There
are things we need to do to get out of the recession: we are calling on
all Nigerians to be calm, work hard enough and obey simple rules,” he
said.
He encouraged Nigerians to support the
federal government directives to ban the importation of 41 items that
could be produced in Nigeria to save the country’s foreign exchange
reserve.
“We should all support that policy, so
that we can allow our people to produce those goods and supply to the
people so that we can consume them and give employment to our people,
instead of importing the same goods from abroad and creating jobs abroad
for their people,” he said.
Okoroafor said Nigerians should support the central bank by exposing economic saboteurs who speculate against the naira.
Okoroafor said Nigerians should support the central bank by exposing economic saboteurs who speculate against the naira.
Responding, the Deputy President of the
Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Issa Aremu, admonished the political and
economic class to cultivate a bipartisan and pan-Nigerian approach to
overcome the current economic crisis instead of passing blame and giving
excuses.
He said all Nigerians regardless of
their callings are damned by the data on rising inflation, double digit
interest rates, factory closures and general underdevelopment, adding
that Nigerians must collectively confront underdevelopment instead of
giving excuses and blaming each other.
On the critical views of the past two
governors of the CBN, Mr. Charles Soludo and Emir of Kano Mohammed
Sanusi II, on the policy thrust of the Buhari administration, Aremu said
the two voices sounded too familiar, predictable but unhelpful for an
economy begging for solutions.
“It’s time to work the recovery of
Nigeria based on 1999 constitution’s provision that says the purpose of
governance is welfare and security of the citizens,” he said.
According to him, “After 30 years of
structural adjustment programme of privatisation, trade liberalisation
and currency/financial liberalisation, Nigeria urgently must replace the
current disjointed policies with sustainable national development
agenda consolidated in various national discourses articulated in
visions 2010, 2020 and 2014 National conference.”
He called for the realignment of
Nigeria’s monetary and fiscal policies to drive sustainable development
and hailed the current spirited efforts of the Governor of the CBN,
Godwin Emefiele, to defend the value of naira through stringent capital
control measures in the face of dwindling external reserves caused by
the collapse of oil price.
He said the ban on 41 imported goods and services from the list of items valid for forex in the forex markets was desirable for import substitution.
He said the ban on 41 imported goods and services from the list of items valid for forex in the forex markets was desirable for import substitution.
He suggested that as part of the
complementary efforts of the monetary authorities, Buhari and
Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo must quickly hit the ground running and
convoke a stakeholders’ forum with all the manufacturers and producers
of the 41 banned items with a view to removing the structuring problems
facing them to produce these items at home and that if necessary, there
should be sequencing and spacing of reforms to avoid the negative impact
on the citizens.
PDP Blames Buhari
In its update on the recession, the PDP
said there was no need for the federal government to beat about the bush
over the cause of the economic downturn, pinpointing Buhari’s lack of
vision as the culprit.
The party in a statement by the National
Publicity Secretary of its Caretaker Committee, Prince Dayo Adeyeye,
said rather than continue to pass the buck to the President Goodluck
Jonathan administration, the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led
government should blame its poor policies for the current economic
stagnation and recession in the country.
“The major cause of recession is
inflation and poor handling of the economy given that the higher the
rate of inflation, the more impoverished people become, industrial
production and GDP decline resulting in massive job losses,” it said,
Giving instances of remarkable
turnarounds in the United States of America and Great Britain, the
opposition party noted that world history was full of many examples
where genuine leaders took over countries whose economies had stagnated
and moved them to positive growth.
The party described the analogy made
last Thursday by the Governor of Jigawa State, Abubakar Badaru, blaming
the recession on Jonathan as grossly ill-informed.
It said the PDP-led government under
Jonathan saw the looming danger since 2011 and wanted to deregulate the
sale of hydrocarbons in 2012, but that Governor Badaru and others in the
APC vehemently opposed it.
Again, it said that the Jonathan
administration also wanted to encourage more savings in the Excess Crude
Account (ECA) and set up the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) but some state
governors at the time took the federal government to court and did
everything to frustrate the effort.
The PDP said it was disappointing that a
notable personality as highly placed as a state governor could be drawn
into making idle and pedestrian claims without the benefit of facts.
According to the opposition party, it
was the ever challenging, unpredictable, unstable and energy sapping
business environment being witnessed under the APC-led administration
that had compounded the economic situation.
The party quoted the President of the
Nigerian Employers Consultative Association (NECA), Larry Ettah, as
having complained bitterly about the difficult operating business
environment, adding that Badaru should have known that one could not
plant grapes and harvest mangoes.
The PDP said: “It is no secret that the
policies and statements made by key government actors have not been
business-friendly and Nigerians and foreign business men took their hard
currencies out of the country.
“It is either he does not realise the obligation of speaking responsibly in that position or he is grossly ill-informed; in which case, we could only try to put the facts before him, and hoping he would recognise them.”
The PDP pointed out that Buhari and his party at the advent of their administration spent more time de-marketing Nigeria all over the world rather than making efforts to woo investors.
“It is either he does not realise the obligation of speaking responsibly in that position or he is grossly ill-informed; in which case, we could only try to put the facts before him, and hoping he would recognise them.”
The PDP pointed out that Buhari and his party at the advent of their administration spent more time de-marketing Nigeria all over the world rather than making efforts to woo investors.
Hunger Increases Suicide
A former Chaplain of Aso Villa Chapel
and General Overseer of All Christians Fellowship Mission, Maitama,
William Okoye, yesterday expressed concerns over the hunger and poverty
in the country, stating that it had increased cases of suicide.
He said this in Abuja during an
interview with journalists, after addressing his congregation on the
state of the nation message entitled: “The Need for a Social and
Cultural Security Safety Net.”
He warned that if urgent steps were not taken by the government, the number of people killing themselves because of poverty and hunger could increase, ushering in confusion and more devastation.
He warned that if urgent steps were not taken by the government, the number of people killing themselves because of poverty and hunger could increase, ushering in confusion and more devastation.
Okoye urged Buhari to listen to the
voice of reason and urgently embark on the processes of restructuring
the country in line with demands from the intelligentsia and leading
bureaucrats.
He said: “Yes, Nigeria is in a serious
problem now; people are dying and killing themselves because when they
come to the end of the road and they don’t have anybody to support or
encourage them, they think that the best option is just to give up by
just killing themselves.
“It shouldn’t be happening in our
society where we have responsible citizens, we should reduce that
(suicide). We can’t be talking about government, government and
government.
“The government has its roles to play
but we all as individuals should also have our roles to play and when
each of us take responsibility to play our roles in our own little ways
and corners, those things add up to bring the stability for we are
believing God.”
On the visit of the US Secretary of
State John Kerry, which Christians complained they were excluded, Okoye
warned that Nigeria should be careful because some US officials had been
looking for a way to cause division in the country.
He said: “Well, it depends on the reason
why he came. If the reason why he came was to meet with the Muslim
community because of some challenges there and so on, I think it was
okay.
“But I think like some people have
already said, generally the western world has been doing some funny
things to divide us, which is not healthy. I think we should also be
careful so that we don’t push some of these things to the extreme.”
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