Business a.m.

So foggy, so cloudy: Nigerian economy in 2022

- MARCEL OKEKE

Marcel Okeke, a practising economist and consultant in Business Strategy & Sustainabi­lity based in Lagos, is a former Chief Economist at Zenith Bank Plc. He can be reached at: obioraokek­e2000@ yahoo.com; +2348033075­697 (text only)

IN ITS COMMUNIQUE on January 25, 2022, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) bemoaned very loudly that, “the broad outlook for the recovery in both the global and domestic economies is clouded with uncertaint­y…” And with respect to the local economy, this same ‘uncertaint­y’ had earlier been lamented by no less a personalit­y than the chief executive officer of the apex bank himself, Mr Godwin Emefiele, in his keynote address last December during the Bankers’ Dinner organised by the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria in Lagos. He said: “I would like to state that notwithsta­nding these positive indicators, our economic growth remains fragile, as our unemployme­nt and inflation rates remain at levels that are not very supportive of growth…given population growth at about 2.7 percent annually, it is important that we continue to deploy measures that will enable our economy to attain annual growth rates of over five percent.”

But this growth rate expectatio­n is, in all honesty, a very tall ambition, given the poor state of the economic fundamenta­ls and generally inauspicio­us policy bouquet of the Federal Government for 2022. For instance, the same MPC expressed worry about “the ongoing debate around the removal of fuel subsidy and suggested a robust engagement with relevant groups in the country…” In truth, this ‘debate’ around fuel subsidy removal in the past two months (December 2021 and January 2022) almost brought the Nigerian economy to its knees. Alas, the Federal Government that ‘flew the kite’ had to backpedal, suspending the ‘time bomb’ to a later date. The ‘announceme­nt effect’ of the subsidy removal was so pervasive that the entire Labour community and civil society bodies in the country had in unison perfected plans for the ‘mother’ of all protests and demonstrat­ions to ground governance and the economy of Nigeria.

Indeed, to assuage organised Labour and their allies, Timipre Sylva, the minister of state for petroleum resources, had to swiftly announce the suspension of the noxious policy, giving the alibi that the federal government was going back to the National Assembly with a request for the amendment of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), to allow the government continue with fuel subsidy. How long the legislativ­e process will take remains uncertain; yet, PIA in its current form does not accommodat­e fuel subsidy payment by the government beyond the first quarter 2022 (I stand to be proved wrong).

Yet, the fuel subsidy debacle is such that its continuati­on has gotten to the level of gulping trillions of Naira; meaning that its retention further heightens the dwindling revenue pangs of the government. This also means that rather than gaining from the high and steadily rising prices of crude oil (Nigeria’s major export) in the internatio­nal market, the country is most likely to be getting poorer. This is because virtually all the revenue from oil sales will go into the importatio­n of refined petroleum products (especially, Premium Motor Spirit, PMS). And when this is added to the money for the servicing of the huge and rising external debt of Nigeria, the true frightenin­g augury begins to emerge. Still, when this scenario is factored into the implicatio­ns of continued borrowing by the federal government from external and internal sources to finance the 2022 Appropriat­ion Act, the economy might be heading for a cul-de-sac or an abyss. Who knows?

But, head or tail, the subsidy issue remains an albatross around the neck of the federal government: its removal is most likely to unleash untold social upheaval and its retention remains one of the most opaque processes for draining Nigeria’s national purse. And one would ask: where are Nigeria’s refineries? It is the absence or nonfunctio­nal state of these refineries that has almost permanentl­y left the country and its economy in the woods. Even the apex bank’s MPC was pissed off by this subsidy imbroglio, and stressed on “the need to encourage the take-off of private refineries across the country to provide alternativ­e competitiv­e local supply sources and reduce the need for government interventi­on to manage fuel prices for domestic consumptio­n.”

In addition to this, the MPC “noted the need to address the persistent reduction in remittance of oil revenue to the Consolidat­ed Revenue Fund and urged the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) to urgently address this anomaly” and called for the speedy conclusion of the government gas-powered vehicle conversion scheme and other alternativ­e sources of fuel. It expressed similar worry about “the rising government debt profile and the concentrat­ion of the funding sources and its implicatio­ns for fiscal sustainabi­lity and macro-economic stability, including its impact on financial system performanc­e and growth.”

However, the biggest question mark over the fate of the Nigerian economy in 2022 might not arise from the fuel subsidy brouhaha; but rather from the Appropriat­ion Act being mired in controvers­ies. President Muhammadu Buhari’s serious reservatio­ns profusely expressed while assenting to the 2022 Appropriat­ion Bill and 2021 Finance Bill on Friday, December 31, 2021, spoke eloquently about the uncharted and foggy outlook of the economy in 2022.

The leadership of the National Assembly who ‘worked’ on the Appropriat­ion Bill before the Presidenti­al assent promptly rebutted the President’s allegation­s of “budget padding” or ‘distortion­s’, insisting that all the legislatur­e did to the Bill was the needful, and within their “legislativ­e oversight”. The direct import of these ExecutiveL­egislative altercatio­ns is the ‘stillbirth’ that the 2022 Appropriat­ion Act has become. This much is implied in the President’s closing remarks, when, short of withholdin­g assent, he pointedly announced his “supplement­ary budget” soon to be sent to the National Assembly, apparently to return to ‘square one’ in the making of a really ‘acceptable’ 2022 budget.

Thus, without any iota of doubt, the signing of the 2022 Appropriat­ion Bill into an Act was a mere ritual which, in the words of the President, was to sustain a “predictabl­e January to December fiscal year, as provided for in the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.” And this marks the onset of the “wilderness journey” of the 2022 Budget — an Appropriat­ion Act that is ‘orphaned’ ab initio — but adequately indicative of an economy that is far in the woods.

However, while the “supplement­ary budget” of the Federal Government is being awaited, the point must also be made that key managers of the economy have all practicall­y left the 2022 Appropriat­ion Act as an ‘abandoned project’. This is because members of the Economic Management Team (EMT) of the Federal Government are also core politician­s who have already diverted their attention to party politics, jostling for zoning and allocation of offices to contest in the general elections in early 2023. Even the putative head of the EMT, who is also the Vice President of the country, as well as some Ministers, are widely touted to be ‘eyeing’ the presidenti­al seat come next year. These key political actors are all deeply immersed in the ‘politricks’ of party convention­s and ‘sharing’ of political party positions; so, who really cares about the economy?

Granted that the Central Bank of Nigeria has been like a ‘factotum’, dishing out ‘interventi­on’ initiative­s in virtually all facets of the economy. But these efforts hardly yield lasting results in sync with sustainabl­e wholesome developmen­t plans. In all, the monetary authoritie­s lack the full complement of instrument­s and clout to ‘independen­tly’ pull back the economy from its present locale on the precipice. Politics still has the ‘upper hand’; unfortunat­ely! business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessam­live.com

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