Daily Trust Sunday

A Jumbo loan is a bad option

- Ochima44@yahoo.co.uk with Dan Agbese

Nigeria is inching towards the path it abandoned only a few years ago when the Obasanjo administra­tion successful­ly negotiated the forgivenes­s of part of its debts from the Paris Club. We thought we would never trudge that road again. Wrong. President Buhari is taking us back. His letter is before the Senate, asking it to permit him to borrow $30 billion to fund infrastruc­tural developmen­t projects. That is a fanciful name for roads, water, railways, energy, once christened dividends of democracy. We must have overdrawn our account in the bank of democracy for its dividends to have become so scarce as to need a jumbo loan to make us enjoy them again.

This is the real jumbo loan. When a country is in dire straights, as Nigeria is, borrowing offers itself deceptivel­y as the only option available to it to survive. Ask Brazil. In a way, it is difficult to fault the president’s decision to borrow against the advice of Shakespear­e: neither a lender nor a borrower be.

Yes, poor or stagnant infrastruc­tural projects helped to deny our country the crown of economic leadership on the African continent. A few years ago, we watched with shock as one major manufactur­ing company after another followed Michelin to close shop here. They moved to Ghana and other African countries. They could take it no more. It was a national shame to see the giant of Africa left at the starting block of infrastruc­tural developmen­t by smaller and relatively poorer African countries. They had got their acts together; we are still struggling. We would like to see Buhari commit his administra­tion to building a solid infrastruc­ture without which all our economic developmen­t plans would merely blow in the wind. But with a $30 loan? It makes you shudder.

We do not have details of the said loan yet. We do not quite know who is or are loaning us the money. However, last week the minister of national planning, Senator Udo Udoma, hinted that we would borrow from the IMF and the World Bank because they give out loans on “concession­ary terms.” Oh yeah? By the way, I would not know if Udoma was speaking about the same jumbo package.

Surely, our leaders do not have a short memory. Surely they cannot have forgotten that in 1983, or so, the Shagari administra­tion initiated negotiatio­ns with the IMF/World Bank for a bridging loan of $2.5 billion. Jumbo loan, we called it then; chicken feed, we call it now compared to the $30 billion. When the Shagari not seem to have excited Nigerians. I believe it merits a huge national debate. We are not just talking of Nigeria of today. We re talking of Nigeria and its future generation­s. A loan such as this, no matter under whatever favourable conditions it is given, is a crushing future burden on a nation and its people. Ask Brazil.

I think the government should administra­tion fell, its seeking the subject it to informed public debate. loan was held out as evidence, that it We should know and be satisfied was as a consequenc­e of its poor and that it has explored all the options mismanagem­ent of the economy that available to it before dragging us Nigeria, an oil rich nation, suddenly back to the road we had abandoned. became a borrower. The IMF/World No lender loans money without Bank lends to countries under imposing conditions favourable to certain stringent conditions known him. Ask Shylock. Future generation­s as conditiona­lities. Experts among would be forced to repay the loan us warned us that taking the loan with interest. In a year or two, the under those conditions would be loan would balloon to one and half tantamount to mortgaging the future times the original principle. And of our country. We were frightened. every year, its burden gets heavier.

President Babangida, who Again, ask Brazil. succeeded Buhari in 1985, always The Buhari administra­tion ahead of everyone around him, saw means well. All borrowers do. I do not the mileage in ostensibly asking think the path to our infrastruc­tural Nigerians to decide the fate of the developmen­t necessaril­y lies through loan through a national debate. The this loan. Given our recent history, rest is history. it is clearly a no no. I waited to hear

So, what concession­ary term is the economists wade in. So, far the minister talking about? Has the silence. Only the irrepressi­ble Emir IMF softened its conditiona­lities so Muhammadu Sanusi of Kano, the as to make its loans more attractive? man who loves to speak truth to I doubt it. I find it surprising that this power, has broken his silence over jumbo loan has received a jumbo it. His criticism, as usual, was blunt silence so far from the public. It does and trenchant. I could also detect his No lender loans money without imposing conditions favourable to him. Ask Shylock. Future generation­s would be forced to repay the loan with interest. In a year or two, the loan would balloon to one and half times the original principle. And every year, its burden gets heavier veiled contempt for the economic management competence of the Buhari administra­tion. He said he was waiting to see who would loan us the money given the poor performanc­e of the economy. The administra­tion might surprise him. China, the new economic imperialis­t on the continent, has deep pockets and a willing heart.

The emir knew he was putting his head in a hornet’s nest. The reactions from the defenders of the administra­tion came fast and furious. An obscure group calling itself The Buhari Support Group, led by Muhammed Labbo, made a fool of itself by advising the emir to be seen, not heard. Nonsense, we are all involved in this and must be allowed to air opinions. We did not elect Buhari because we thought he was omniscient. We elected him because we believe he had the courage to do right by us by a) recovering what the late President Kennedy called the years the locusts ate and b) make this country live the true meaning of democracy.

The government should explore a home-grown alternativ­e to this future burden it wants to impose on our children and grandchild­ren. The restivenes­s in the Niger Delta is the immediate cause of the massive short fall in the country’s revenue. Buhari should instead seek ways and means of ending the crisis there so that our crude oil can flow unhindered once again and the petrol-dollar would fill federal and state treasuries. As I see it, this does not mortgage our future. I believe Buhari has the courage to take on this sad task and rescue our country from recession and enveloping poverty.

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