A wash in the great tide of politics, we must not forget why politics
can be a noble endeavour. It leads to governance. When done correctly,
governance can reform a nation and improve the lot of the people. In the
hands of the ignorant and the mean, governance cast abundant misfortune
upon a nation and upon the welfare of its citizens.
This
commentary concerns governance and policy more than it does politics. I
offer it to generate debate on an important economic issue. No matter
who is in power, we must do whatever is in our capacity to steer the
nation away from economic woe. The people have suffered too much
hardship already. Neither side of the political divide should seek to
purchase transient advantage at the high price of dousing the people in
greater economic calamity. Thus, I suggest this progressive’s position
on how best to shape economic policy during this period of falling oil
prices. I state this hoping those in charge will take pertinent advice
from any quarter. My prayer is that they are not so stubborn as to
adhere to a strategy that will deepen the economic misery of our people
even when better policy measures are proffered.
I confess to
writing this also for a reason essentially political but
non-confrontational. It accentuates the distinction between the
conservative Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the progressive All
Progressives Congress (APC). The nation faces momentous elections when
next year turns to its second month. The choice is a stark one; but many
people do not believe as such. The differences are vast especially
regarding economic policy. On the one side, the PDP champions a
conservative, elitist economic model based on the theory that wealth
money must first go to the already rich and well-heeled who shall
determine how small a fraction of it will trickle down to the rest of
society.
On the progressive side, we believe government can
fillip economic growth and development in such a way that brings the
fairness of prosperity to all of society. We don’t seek to penalise
those who already have but we will do our utmost to remove from the
clutch of poverty the bulk of our people. We seek to turn the hungry
suffering of our poor and working classes into a dignified livelihood
that provides a dignified existence for all.
Global oil
prices have fallen from over $100 a barrel to approximately $80 per
barrel. This slide has caused a corresponding drop in government’s
dollar revenues. With this, the federal government claims it has less
money at its disposal and the paucity of dollars necessitates austerity
measures. Most people accept this position as gospel; debate about its
correctness has been nil. Yet, the stakes are much too high to assume
this subjective position as an economic certitude or uncritically accept
its propriety. What they proclaim as policy is not based on any
unassailable economic principle. It is statement of economic bias that
beckons to the wealthy while auguring unnecessary hardship for most
Nigerians.
Look at jobless and poverty levels as well as the
diminished status of our middle class. After viewing these statistics,
most objective economists would conclude Nigeria is mired in a
long-term, secular depression. Forget the rosy GDP numbers. They signify
a great economic and financial segregation between those who have and
others who have not. If we continue with the policy preferences of the
current administration, the haves shall become the “have–mores” and the
“have-nots” shall become the “have even less.”
The vast
majority of the claimed GDP growth has fallen into the laps of those
already enjoying obvious luxury. The rest of the people are left to gaze
at the enormity of the income and wealth chasm separating them from the
cabal orchestrating the discordant political economy. While a small
group flourishes, the rest of the nation subsidises their economic
bounty. A tight confederacy rides an economic skyrocket while the bulk
of the people languish in the swamp. For one group, the economy is
effervescent. For the other, it is catatonic. Nigeria is one nation with
two economies.
For this government to speak of austerity is
to further enrich the affluent while casting the average Nigerian into
greater hardship and deeper socio-economic depression. As with the Euro
zone the past five years since the global financial crisis, austerity
has not solved the dire economic weakness of the nations that employed
this sickening remedy. All austerity has done is tighten the grip of the
wealthy on the economy while weakening the position of the middle class
and the poor.
Austerity weakens aggregate demand, deflating
an economy already fatigued and against the ropes. Those with hefty
portfolios, profit as the value of their holdings appreciates by the
very dynamics of deflation. Those who don’t have, find money even dearer
to come by. Jobs and commerce disappear. Debt climbs. Deflation turns a
noble but poor household into a committee of beggars and street
urchins. The austerity that the current administration offers is an
insensitive, myopic policy that lends primacy of favour to meaningless
accounting figures instead of the material wellbeing of the people.
Austerity undermines our economic pillars and breaks the spirit of the
people. Austerity is the merchant of pessimism and hopeless futility. If
you desire a nation of thralls, by all means continue this bleak path.
If we want a nation of prosperity and economic justice, a different
course is our due.
Listen carefully to the position of the
Goodluck Jonathan administration as articulated by the finance minister
and you shall collide into the barricades of illogic and its weighty
consequences. The claim is that government is low on funds because the
lower price of oil means fewer dollars are being collected from oil
sales. This sounds logical but for one fundamental point. The dollar
intake is basically irrelevant to determining the amount of naira the
government commands and places into the political economy. This
fundamental point reveals the government’s position to be the antiquated
relic of a past era. It is the way of the gold standard which ceased to
exist over 40 years ago. As such, government’s stance is based more on
superstition than on the actual functioning of modern economy with a
sovereign fiat currency of its own.
The last I looked,
Nigeria operates a naira-based economy not a dollar-based one. There is
no legal or moral restriction strictly limiting the amount of naira in
the system to match the amount of dollars collected via oil sales. More
importantly, there is no economic justification for the close linkage
implied by the government. If we take its position at face value, the
Jonathan administration is advocating that we effectively place the
naira and thus our fiscal policy on a “dollar standard”. The world
jettisoned the gold standard in 1971 because it proved unworkable,
reducing the policy space in which governments could pursue fiscal
programmes promoting full employment and social welfare. We should
likewise reject this government’s imposition of a dollar standard on our
nation’s fiscal operations.
Under the gold standard, a
national government took pains not to incur budgetary deficits that
exceeded the dimensions of its gold reserves. This was because the
currency had no value by itself. Its value was based on the convention
that the currency was backed by the nation’s gold holdings. Those
governments that ran deficits had to pay those debts in gold. Given that
gold supplies were always and everywhere finite and exhaustible; a
nation had to keep its deficits within the confines of its ability to
pay debts in gold. Because of this straitjacketing effect, nations would
abandon the gold standard during harsh economic times in order to give
them the fiscal freedom to rejuvenate their economies. This was the case
during the Great Depression with the major economic powers. This should
be the case with Nigeria today since the bulk of our people live in
conditions redolent of the Great Depression or any other depression for
that matter.
Our government persists that it must limit fiscal
outlays to the amount of dollars the nation holds. Similar to the
operation of the discarded gold standard, following this path is to
strap ourselves to austerity and the chronic deflation of austerity
produces.
Worse, it serves to enthral the fiscal policy of our
sovereign nation to the monetary policy of another country. That nation
plies monetary policy to serve its interests and not the economic
interests of Nigeria. I am baffled why this government would give such
power over the fate of our economic wellbeing to another nation that
does not incorporate our interests into its decisional processes. This
government makes our nation the economic servant of another so that
government may turn about to make the Nigerian people its economic
servant. While there is a certain logic to this dynamic, it is a
perverse and debilitating one.
Because we operate a sovereign
fiat currency the federal government issues at its sole discretion, the
federal government can never be rendered insolvent in naira. This means
it can run naira fiscal deficits indefinitely. The only outer bound is
to ensure the fiscal expansion does not incur damaging inflation rates.
There is no logical reason to peg the flow of naira into the economy to
the flow of dollars received. The correct perspective is not to
mechanistically restrict naira expenditure to dollar intake. This would
be tantamount to those crippled with economic blinders forcefully
leading those who can see we are heading for disaster. It points to
deflation, recession and worse. The better methodology is to ascertain,
then achieve, the level of naira expenditure needed to expand the
economy and create jobs without causing inflation to rise to dangerous
levels. This is how broadly-shared prosperity is generated in a
sustainable manner.
In this way, the nation’s economic
engineers should focus primarily on allocating value and opportunity to
our underutilised labour force and our idle, yet potentially productive
capital in a way that promotes wealth creation and expansion of
aggregate demand. It is this sustainment of aggregate demand that
empowers the nation to rescue itself from the whirlpool of economic
contraction. This avenue is more benign than the one the federal
administration now advocates. Their way calls for us to forget growth
and for government to preoccupy itself with allocating economic misery
among those segments of the population too poor and weak to contest the
immiserating actions of government against them.
In the face
of recessionary headwinds, government should run countercyclical fiscal
policy by using its naira sovereignty to fund fiscal deficits. The
deficit is not simply for the sake of running a deficit; the funds
cannot be spent on non-productive matters. It must be used to fuel
infrastructural and other projects that not only employ great numbers of
people but enhance the overall productivity of the economy. The funds
must be used to backstop state governments in a nonpartisan manner so
that each state government may continue to pay salaries and pursue
projects essential to that state’s economic critical path.
To
accomplish this, the federal government needs to reverse the inimical
“dollarization” of the national economy in two ways. First and most
importantly, it must abandon the out-dated peg of fiscal policy and
expenditures to the dollar intake. The one actually has no correspondent
nexus to the other. Any commanding connection we give it is an artifice
not an economic necessity. Related to this, we must reverse a trend
that has gained momentum under this government. Among government-aligned
elite, the fad has been to conduct domestic business transactions in
dollars. Policy must “nairasize” the economy by requiring all domestic
transactions occur in our legal tender. As this is done, the
government’s infinite ability to issue naira will come to outweigh the
limitations inherent in the overuse of the finite supply of another
nation’s currency for transactions wholly internal to our domestic
economy.
Inflation is the major risk of running budget
deficits to spur growth. We can contain inflation to acceptable levels
by ensuring additional government expenditures are for items that can be
supplied domestically, particularly labour. Naira paid to poor and
working class people mostly circulates in the domestic economy, spurring
additional local commerce and production. This is because their
consumption patterns do not approach the level of import expenditures
associated with their wealthier compatriots. Related to this, we must
decrease our level of superfluous imports.
These measures will place
downward pressure on the naira. Devaluation will not be destructive but
it will be noticeable. For most nations, such devaluation would be
welcomed as it would make export industries more competitive, thus
creating jobs and export earnings in the process. However, this will not
be the case initially for us because of the moribund state of our
industrial sector. Here, government would need to initiate crash
programmes aimed at enhancing those domestic industries perched on the
borderline of international competitiveness.
In the end, the
policy I propose is not without risks, inflation being the chief
concern. Yet, if wisely prosecuted, the rewards of job creation and
economic growth allocated among the bulk of the populace outweigh the
inflationary risk. More to the point, the policy now pursued bears no
risks at all. It is certain to toss the average man’s economy into a
stagnation that will resemble the onset of a major recession. Saving the
people from this unnecessary plight is sufficient imperative to eschew
the policies of old and embrace the progressive course.
I offer this
advice, this warning, because the people have suffered enough hardship. I
offer this advice in the slim hope those in power will ignore the
messenger and objectively weigh the quality and humane nature of the
message. If so, they will spare the people the grief visited upon a
vulnerable people when their government blindly imposes last century’s
policies in a modern setting inappropriate to the old strictures.
Regardless
of our partisan affiliations, let us consecrate this land by dedicating
ourselves to the betterment of the poor, weak, and needy members of our
national family. Let this moment not pass like so many others where we
have demanded that the most vulnerable among us bear the greatest weight
of the national burden. Let us give them the hope, change and dignity
they deserve and human decency demands. This is how we make the nation
great. When I speak of a common sense revolution, this is what I mean.
• Tinubu is a National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC)
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