NEWS AGENCY OF NIGERIA
Mr Peter Obi

Peter Obi’s analysis of Tinubu’s economic policies simplistic- IMPI

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The Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI) has described recent comments by the Presidential Candidate of the Labour Party in the 2023 election, Peter Obi, on using money to drive economic productivity as not only simplistic but hollow.

 

The policy group noted that Mr Obi’s position, which he canvassed in a recent TV interview, shows a pedestrian understanding of the national economy.

 

In a statement signed by IMPI Chairman, Dr Niyi Akinsiju, it argued that economic productivity was not a stand-alone item that could be automatically fixed with a single-dose action.

 

“We do not begrudge Mr Obi accusing the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of being ineffective in implementing economic policies but we consider his proposition of injecting money into productivity as the singular solution to Nigeria’s economic malaise in the first two years of this administration, if he were to be the President, as manipulative and borne of a deficient understanding of historical issues that underline Nigeria’s economic trajectory.

 

“He claims his silver bullet proposition would lead to a more productive and sustainable economy. Coming from a former governor and one who had chaired the board of a commercial bank, we found this submission puzzling and, at the same time, vexatiously narrow.

 

“The fact is that productivity is not a stand-alone item in the universe of economic productivity. It is, by fact and praxis, made up of different components and values aggregation.

 

“Economic productivity, which implies the efficiency of an economy in producing goods and services, is influenced by human capital (education, skills), technology, physical capital (equipment), natural resources, and entrepreneurship.

 

“Driving economic productivity supposes an overall strategy to streamline these factors and generate the appropriate quantum of revenue to invest in them while considering the period it would take to gestate and impact the economic space.”

 

The policy group pointed at Nigeria’s economic challenges and wondered what the former Anambra state governor would have done differently from steps taken by the Tinubu administration.

 

“Since 2014, Nigeria has had to contend with challenges of low revenue exacerbated by policies that continuously erode productivity, such as fuel subsidies and multiple exchange rates.

 

“Despite the storm associated with the removal of fuel subsidies and the harmonisation of multiple foreign exchange windows, the Tinubu administration expressed a profound understanding of the national economy by conducting the equivalence of a surgical incision on the economy.

 

It stated that tangential to this is the “injection of money into productivity” single-dose treatment of the nation’s economic malaise advocacy by  Obi.

 

“In an economy characterised by low revenue and huge accumulated debt as of the May 29, 2023 handover date, Mr Obi has left us wondering what exact policy options he would have deployed to achieve his “monetary injection into productivity” policy if he were President.

 

“To put it in context, we wonder how and what routes Mr Obi would wish to adopt in the first two years of his Presidency to accomplish his vaunted policy if he were in President Tinubu’s shoes.

 

“This is more in the face of a legacy of a fiscally constrained economy that manifests in a trifecta of headwinds witnessed from the second half of 2014 through to the disruptions occasioned by the 2020 Covid pandemic and the gross economic erosion recorded in the Covid era through to the post-Covid years to 2023 when the Tinubu administration, determinedly commenced the engineering of a paradigm change of the nation’s economic template.

 

“Against this background, we consider it somewhat perplexing that Mr Obi would criticise the Tinubu administration for ‘floating the Naira in the absence of productivity while also increasing the country’s debt profile and the cost of debt servicing’ which, according to him, was above the budgetary allocation for critical sectors like health and education.

 

“We consider this sweeping averment on the character of Nigeria’s emerging economy under the Tinubu administration to be either the outcome of unbridled ignorance about the workings of an economy or a deliberate manipulation of facts and reality to exploit Nigerians’ base political sentiments,” the policy group said.

 

IMPI added that contrary to Obi’s claims, its analysis which aligns with that of the World Bank shows that there are enough pointers to the success of the ongoing economic reforms.

 

“Against Mr Obi’s merchant-minded, import-focused understanding of the depreciation of the Naira as a consequence of floating the local currency and the diminished value of the Naira relative to other currencies, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) show that Nigeria recorded in 2024 a total trade volume of N138 trillion or $89.9 billion, the highest in the country’s history, representing a 106 per cent increase compared to the previous year.

 

“We also observe how the national economy is shifting from a low revenue-earning to an increasing capacity for high revenue generation, as shown in the quantum of revenue available to be shared among the three tiers of government by the Federation Accounts and Allocation Committee (FAAC).

 

“In 2024, Nigeria’s Federation Account received ₦15 trillion in revenue, with a 43% jump in disbursements to the Federal Government, States, and Local Government Councils. In contrast, N10.143 trillion was received and shared among the tiers of government as statutory revenue allocations in 2023.

“In this light, Mr Obi’s conjecture on economic issues shows a truly deficient comprehension of the dynamics of economics and their real-life application,” it noted.

 

The policy group also questioned Obi’s understanding of the constitutional mandates of the tiers of government on the basis of his position on the President taking responsibility for primary healthcare and basic education in Nigeria

 

End

 

 

POLICY STATEMENT 023 BY

THE INDEPENDENT MEDIA AND POLICY INITIATIVE (IMPI)

 

*Dissecting Obi’s Economic Sophistry*

 

We have reviewed the submissions and responses made by the Labour Party candidate in the 2023 presidential election, Mr Peter Obi, on a television station’s news interview programme. Considering his public standing and antecedents, we found his specious generalisation of the nation’s economic environment and his proffered solutions utterly simplistic, commonplace, and confounding.

 

We do not begrudge Mr Obi accusing the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of being ineffective in implementing economic policies. However, we consider his proposition of injecting money into productivity as the singular solution to Nigeria’s economic malaise in the first two years of this administration if he were to be the President as manipulative and borne of a deficient understanding of historical issues that underline Nigeria’s economic trajectory.

 

He claims his silver bullet proposition would lead to a more productive and sustainable economy.

 

Coming from a former governor and one who had chaired the board of a commercial bank, we found this submission puzzling and, at the same time, vexatiously narrow. The fact is that productivity is not a stand-alone item in the universe of economic productivity. It is, by fact and praxis, made up of different components and values aggregation.

 

Economic productivity, which implies the efficiency of an economy in producing goods and services, is influenced by human capital (education, skills), technology, physical capital (equipment), natural resources, and entrepreneurship. Driving economic productivity supposes an overall strategy to streamline these factors and generate the appropriate quantum of revenue to invest in them while considering the period it would take to gestate and impact the economic space.

 

Since 2014, Nigeria has had to contend with challenges of low revenue exacerbated by policies that continuously erode productivity, such as fuel subsidies and multiple exchange rates. Despite the storm associated with the removal of fuel subsidies and the harmonisation of multiple foreign exchange windows, the Tinubu administration expressed a profound understanding of the national economy by conducting the equivalence of a surgical incision on the economy.

 

Tangential to this is the “injection of money into productivity” single-dose treatment of the nation’s economic malaise advocacy by Mr Obi. In an economy characterised by low revenue and huge accumulated debt as of the May 29, 2023 handover date, Mr Obi has left us wondering what exact policy options he would have deployed to achieve his “monetary injection into productivity” policy if he were President.

 

To put it in context, we wonder how and what routes Mr Obi would wish to adopt in the first two years of his Presidency to accomplish his vaunted policy if he were in President Tinubu’s shoes. This is, more, in the face of a legacy of a fiscally constrained economy that manifests in a trifecta of headwinds witnessed from the second half of 2014 through to the disruptions occasioned by the 2020 Covid pandemic and the gross economic erosion recorded in the Covid era through to the post-Covid years to 2023 when the Tinubu administration, determinedly commenced the engineering of a paradigm change of the nation’s economic template.

 

 

We consider this sweeping averment of the character of Nigeria’s emerging economy under the Tinubu administration to be either the outcome of unbridled ignorance about the workings of an economy or a deliberate manipulation of facts and reality to exploit Nigerians’ base political sentiments. Indeed, nothing reeks of sophistry more than this ill-anchored generalisation of the state of the Nigerian economy.

 

Contrary to Mr Obi’s doomsday characterisation of the Nigerian economy, our reading of the national economy indicates an emerging economy forged in the best tradition of inclusive growth, market-determined conditions, and the facilitation of participatory international trade.

 

Against Mr Obi’s merchant-minded, import-focused understanding of the depreciation of the naira as a consequence of floating the local currency and the diminished value of the naira relative to other currencies, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) show that Nigeria recorded in 2024 a total trade volume of N138 trillion or $89.9 billion, the highest in the country’s history, representing a 106% increase compared to the previous year.

 

We also observe how the national economy is shifting from a low revenue-earning to an increasing capacity for high revenue generation, as shown in the quantum of revenue available to be shared among the three tiers of government by the Federation Accounts and Allocation Committee (FAAC).

 

In 2024, Nigeria’s Federation Account received ₦15 trillion in revenue, with a 43% jump in disbursements to the Federal Government, States, and Local Government Councils. In contrast, N10.143 trillion was received and shared among the tiers of government as statutory revenue allocations in 2023.(NAN)

Edited by Ismail Abdulaziz

Obi seeks establishment of online universities

267 total views today

 

 

By Oluwafunke Ishola

 

Mr Peter Obi, Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate in the 2023 polls, has called for the establishment of more online universities to enhance the development of Nigeria’s education system.

 

Obi made the call at the Nexford University 2024 Graduation on Saturday in Lagos, noting that online education was the only way the country could provide high-quality education at the scale required.

 

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Nigeria’s universities have a capacity issue, as the number of students they can accommodate is much lower than the number of applicants.

 

According to the National Universities Commission (NUC), the country’s universities can only accommodate 700,000 students out of the two million applicants seeking admission annually.

 

Obi emphasised that online education was the sustainable and scalable strategy of offering students continuous learning that empowers society.

 

“Countries like Pakistan, India, Turkey, and Bangladesh have online universities that have more students than all our universities.

 

“We need to do it. We need to massively educate people because education is one of the most important tools of development,” Obi said.

 

Obi also advised leaders to be compassionate, have good character and be competent, to deepen good governance.

 

Similarly, Mr Okechukwu Enelamah, former Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, said online education bridges learning barriers and positions students strategically for global opportunities.

 

Enelamah noted that tech-enabled, online education is transformational and crucial to socio-economic growth.

 

Also, Dr Oby Ezekwesili, Chief Executive Officer, Human Capital Africa, said education offered by Nexford was to strategically equip and position Nigerians, and Africans to compete with their counterparts globally.

 

Ezekwesili, a former Minister of Education, noted that today’s world has an aging population with an average age of 33, while Africa’s average age is 18.9 years.

 

“So, that means that it is Africa that will empower the workforce of the world in a matter of decades from now.

 

“As a matter of fact, by 2050, almost 85 per cent of the increasing global workforce will be through the African young people.

 

“That, therefore, means that the education of the kind that Nexford offers to our people, cutting-edge global standard education, that’s at the frontier of the kind of technological revolution that we’re seeing, is the way to go.

 

“And the way to go cannot be in a way that is outside of the capabilities of the people, because the population data also shows that it’s a significantly poor population.

 

“Therefore, what we do at Nexford is well worthy to be acknowledged,” Ezekwesili said.

 

She noted that the university offers courses like artificial intelligence, cyber security, basic knowledge of blockchains, leadership and communication skills, among others.

 

Similarly, Mr Olatubosun Alake, Lagos State Commissioner for Innovation, Science and Technology, said online classes have democratised learning and improved education outcomes.

 

Alake emphasised that technology can change economies, necessitating the state to establish various programmes and also support organisations championing infusion of technology across sectors.

 

Commenting, Mr Fadl Al Tarzi, CEO, Nexford University, said the school had integrated artificial intelligence into all its courses, disclosing that almost 40 per cent of its graduates already studied the course.

 

Tarzi said artificial intelligence would improve Nigeria and the global economy, boost productivity, accelerate research and development and connect Nigerian talents with global talent.

 

Speaking on the graduation, Tarzi said no fewer than 1,200 students graduated, saying efforts were ongoing to double the number annually. (NAN) (www.nannews.ng)

Edited by Vivian Ihechu

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