In an article by bloomberg titled "Nigeria's Economy needs Visionary Leadership", International business website, Bloomberg, said President Buhari’s rigid leadership style is making Nigeria's econocmic problems harder to solve. Read the article which was published today below.
Africa and the world cannot afford a failing economy in the continent’s
most populous nation. Yet that is exactly what Nigeria might be getting:
Its economy is on track to shrink by1.7 percent this year, the official
unemployment rate has more than doubled over the last two years, and
inflation is at an 11-year high.
One concrete step President Muhammadu Buhari could take to address the
crisis would be to eliminate the country’s disastrous foreign exchange
controls. Instead, Buhari has made no secret of his desire to defend
Nigeria's currency.
And the central bank has mostly gone along. Despite allowing the
devaluation of the naira in June, it is continuing to manipulate the
exchange rate -- discouraging foreign investors, creating a crippling
shortage of dollars for businesses that need to import, and feeding a
currency black market. To keep down the street price of vanishing
dollars, Buhari’s government has arrested informal money-changers. More
capital controls are in the works.
Dismantling Nigeria’s foreign exchange controls will doubtless cause at
least a short-term rise in inflation. Yet doing so will not only draw
foreign investment and make the economy more productive and competitive,
but also cut off a conduit for corruption. Buhari can cushion the blow
for Nigeria’s poor through targeted cash payments -- an approach Nigeria
has used in electronically delivering subsidies to poor farmers. That
same mechanism could also shield the poor from the regressive impact of
an increase in Nigeria’s value-added tax -- which is relatively low but a
potentially valuable source of additional government revenue.
There are other ways to stimulate the economy, of course. But Nigeria’s
Senate rejected Buhari’s three-year spending blueprint and an ambitious
campaign to borrow $30 billion abroad because they lacked details.
Meanwhile, his reluctance to sell off state-owned assets has undermined
other efforts to raise revenue.
To be sure, Buhari faced ugly circumstances when he took office in May
2015. The plunge in oil prices had left the economy reeling and
government coffers bare, and attacks by Boko Haram were ravaging the
country. Yet while some progress has been made fighting both terrorism
and corruption, Buhari’s rigid leadership style has made the country's
economic problems harder to solve.
Buhari’s election and pledges of good governance rightfully raised
expectations across Africa. To fulfill those hopes, however, he will
have to demonstrate more flexibility.
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