Friday, October 1, 2021

What’s the Matter With Nigeria?

 

While the rising crude oil prices may bring short-term relief to Nigeria’s economy, it is not the ‘magic pill’ for the country’s ailments – which include a depressed economy, corrupt and fossilized politics, and general insecurity .

 


Nigerian Soldiers Matching During the Independence Day Celebration

Were Shakespeare living today, he might find a source of inspiration in the political and economic drama that is currently going on in Nigeria. Old political enemies shake hands, former political  friends stab each other in the back, kidnappings and crimes flourish,  and talks that everything is expensive fills the air in the country’s major cities such as  Lagos, Benin, Enugu, Onitsha, Owerri, Abujah, Kaduna, Maiduguri, and so on. In such a fevered atmosphere, the first day of the month of October  promises to be crucial because on that day Nigeria celebrates their  sixty-one years of Independence from their former colonial master, Great Britain. It ought to be a day of both celebration and quiet satisfaction. But, in my view as a Nigerian, there is really nothing to celebrate.  Seriously, what is there to celebrate when most Nigerians could barely afford the basics things of life including  food, shelter, housing, and transportation? For instance, since February, the bus and taxi fare Nigerians pay to go to work, school, or take care of  the other business have more than doubled. The price Nigerians pays for food items have also increased astronomically:    In general, Nigeria’s inflation is running at more than 18 percent. At 23 percent, the value of the inflation prices for food is the highest in two decades, according to the Economist. More than 50% of Nigerians are either unemployed or work in the informal sector of the economy. About 80 million of Nigeria’s 200 million people lived on less  than the equivalent of $1.90 per day before COVID-19. Available published evidence from the World Bank noted that the pandemic and population growth could see that figure rise to almost 100 million.

With fair justification, it makes a lot of sense to say that Nigeria’s economic woes is the reason for a vertiginous rise in crime. Without putting it in so many words, more people were kidnapped in Nigeria in the first four months of 2021 than all of 2020. Economic hardship and political radicalism has added to worsening violence around three flashpoints: a long-standing conflict between farmers and the Fulani tribe’s cattle-herders across central Nigeria (Middle belt); the jihadists of Boko-Haram in the north-east; and fighting between the government security agents and the IPOB – the Igbo separatists in the south-east.

There is no denying that COVID-19 has slammed economies everywhere. However, Nigeria’s economic woes started before the COVID-19 pandemic. There is plenty of academic evidence that shows that a country’s gross domestic product (GDP) is a good metric for measuring the value of all products and services a country produces in a year. Sadly, Nigeria’s GDP per person has fallen every year since 2015 – which is the year in which oil prices collapsed in the commodity market. A growing body of evidence suggests that by the end of year 2021, the real income per person in Nigeria (which is considered the ‘giant of Africa’ because it is the home for more than 16 percent of the sub-Saharan Africa’s people) will be at the same level it was in the 1980s. It will be logical, therefore, to suggest that Nigeria desperately need reforms. However, it will be very difficult to enact or implement the needed reforms in a country that exempts from the rule of law those who can buy or bargain their way around it, such as corrupt politicians, bureaucrats, and privileged business owners.

Wounded Tiger

It is no secret that while crude oil makes up about 9 percent of the Nigeria’s GDP (see figure 1), it accounts for more than half of the government’s revenues since it is the country’s main export product – as much as 80% of Nigeria’s exports is crude oil. The slump in the crude oil prices since 2014 hit Nigeria very hard, especially its domestic and foreign trade. Simply put, when crude oil prices fell from over $100 a barrel in 2014 to less than half of that by July of 2020 squeezed the supply of foreign exchange desperately needed by the country. Economic logic dictates that the best approach managing such exchange rate shortages is for the affected country to allow their exchange rates to fall – a strategy that might also make their imports more expensive. This approach can be painful in the short term because it can cause inflation in the affected country. But it is a price worth paying because it usually helps to boost the country’s exports by making them more competitive – an effect that, in the long run might help its currency to gradually recover its lost value. It is worth noting here that Nigeria would be less vulnerable to swings in the oil price if it could make, grow, or mine more for export.

Figure 1

 

Unfortunately for Nigerians, the government of President Muhammadu Buhari followed a totally different and ineffective approach: he restricted imports in his effort to prop up the naira, the country’s currency, which he sees as a measure of Nigeria’s strength. As a way of conserving the available dollars, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has banned those intending to import almost 50 items from buying foreign currency. During the moth of April, wheat and sugar were added to the list. It is worth remembering that President Buhari had earlier closed the Nigeria’s land borders to goods in 2019 to stop smugglers undermining local producers. The bad news is that all his moves have fueled food price inflation: the country’s inflation has remained at near four-year highs with food price growth at more than 20 percent year-on-year.

President Buhari’s economic and exchange rate policies have also hobbled manufacturing firms by making it hard for them to obtain inputs. In most  cases, a manufacturer is considered lucky if they get, say, 20 percent of the forex they requested at a particular point in time. It is thus not surprising why many  Nigeria’s manufacturers, especially those of them that import machinery (including computers) and chemicals (as well as medical equipment), uses the volatile black market, where dollars cost almost 30 percent more than the official rate. It is indeed obvious that Nigeria’s economy is in shambles. And, despite all the unorthodox controls put in by President Buhari’s government, the CBN was forced to devalue the naira twice last year. Ask any Nigeria’s business owner about the forex situation and the reply is the same: they are getting neither a stable currency nor access to dollars.

President Buhari’s government appears to be slowly changing its tune, having learned the hard way that their economic model, which is hard to fathom, is wrong in principle and has failed in practice. According to Bismark Rewane, a member of President Buhari’s council of economic advisers, the government is starting to pay more attention to exporters. As a prove, he pointed to the country’s partial reopening of the land borders for goods in December, 2020, as well as to the country’s signing of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement in 2019. If the experience of the past few years teaches us anything, it is that sustained growth in exports required more than just opening the border. In plain terms, many Nigerian firms are uncompetitive because they are being crushed by red tape and government failures.

 

The Bad, and the Ugly

It is worth pointing out that Nigeria runs a government that is allergic to the economic doctrine of adherence to free markets, limited state and open meritocratic society. Electricity blackouts are maddeningly frequent in the country. The country’s roads are death traps and its ports are always clogged up. To move a container about 30 kilometers from Lagos’ Premiere port to the city can cost as much as the naira equivalent of $4500 – which is almost the cost of shipping the same container 12,000 kilometers from China. When it comes to the World Bank’s ease-of-doing-business index, Nigeria ranks 131st out of 190 countries. The country’s court system, which are supposed to prosecute crimes and enforce contracts are a sham, and jobs rely more on connections and kickbacks than merit. The country’s corrupt civil servants are also part of the problem: they often see jobs as hereditary sinecures, their ministries’ budget and the average Nigerian needing any form of government service as revenue streams to be milked, and any attempt to monitor the quality of the services they seldom provide as an intrusion on their work. There is no doubt that some of the country’s  industries, particularly the information technology (IT) sector, are growing. The truth is that the growth being experienced in these sectors are independent of the government’s actions.

So what lessons should be drawn from the Nigeria’s experience? The obvious one is that, to survive in Nigeria, one has to be an eternal optimist. Second, stalled reform is typical of Nigeria’s troubles. For more than three decades cash from the sale of crude oil has been used to subsidize things like fuel and electricity. The easy revenue from the sale of crude oil have also allowed the federal and state governments to get away with  both corruption and abysmal tax collection.

As we celebrate our sixty-one years of independence, I have no doubt in my mind that many Nigerians have had enough. Almost 70 percent of the Nigerians I spoke to want to emigrate to either Europe or America. The truth is that running away will never solved our problems. As we celebrate our Independence today, I believe that this is the time we begin demanding accountability from our local, state and federal governments. Given that no democracy thrives on apathy, the moment we start to do this as Nigerians, our lives and fortunes will begin to change in a positive way.

 

 

Notes

The Economist. (2021, May 15). Hard Times: Nigeria’s Economy is Stuck in a Rut. Retrieved from Middle East & Africa: https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2021/05/13/nigerias-economy-is-stuck-in-a-rut

Greg, I. P. (2013). The Litlle Book of Economics: How the Economy Works in the Real World. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Momodu, D. (2021, September 11). The Mistakes Nigerians Must Not Repeat in 2023. Retrieved from Thisday Live: https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2021/09/11/the-mistakes-nigerians-must-not-repeat-in-2023/

Soto, A. (2021, June 15). Surging inflation in Nigeria fuels crime wave, says World Bank. Aljazeera. Retrieved October 1, 2021, from https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2021/6/15/surging-inflation-in-nigeria-is-fueling-crime-wave-world-bank

Statista. (2021). Contribution of oil sector to GDP in Nigeria from the 4th quarter of 2018 to the 1st quarter of 2021. Retrieved from https://www.statista.com/statistics/1165865/contribution-of-oil-sector-to-gdp-in-nigeria/

Macrotrends. (2021). Crude Oil Prices - 70 Year Historical Chart. Retrieved from https://www.macrotrends.net/1369/crude-oil-price-history-chart

 

 

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