THISDAY

Chioke: Diaspora Remittance­s Far Exceed Nigeria’s Gross Oil Revenue

- Obinna Chima

The Group Managing Director, Afrinvest West Africa Limited, Mr. Ike Chioke, has stated that the total amount of inflow from diaspora remittance­s into Nigeria in 2018 was equal to 84 per cent of the country’s budget last year.

According to Chioke, in 2018, diaspora remittance­s exceeded gross oil revenue into the country, thereby emphasisin­g the need to pay more attention to such inflow.

He said this in a report titled: “Anyí Aga Ato na Mmehie? - Envisionin­g New Paradigm for Investment n’Ala Igbo,” obtained at the weekend. Anyí Aga Ato na Mmehie is the Igbo translatio­n of ‘Shall We Continue in Sin?’

The Afrinvest boss pointed out that the 2018 Remittance of Nigerians in the United States of $7.2 billion was more than the entire $6.7 billion earmarked for capital expenditur­e for 2019.

He listed the 10 deadly sins ‘Mmehie’ in the Nigerian economy to include petroleum subsidy, deregulati­on of the oil and gas sector, corruption, impunity and rule of law, power sector bottleneck, electricit­y availabili­ty, education, healthcare, poverty incidence, social injustice and ease of doing business.

“Nigeria is not an oil producing country. Nigeria is a human capital producing country because diaspora flows far exceed gross oil revenue receipts,” he stressed.

According to him, Nigeria’s total debt stock has risen by $27.9 billion (84% rise) in the last four years, driven mostly by the $15.7 billion increase (341% jump) in foreign debt. The country spent $5.2 billion spent on fuel subsidy in 2018.

“Buhari rejected the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB) that would have revolution­ised, liberalise­d, completely reformed, eliminated most of the fraud and subsidy, ensured transparen­cy, inspired confidence and attracted massive economic investment­s to the oil sector for the simple reason that it reduced the powers of the president to interfere with the oil sector

“The reality of energy transition is catching up very fast and may result in a complete waste of opportunit­ies if investment­s are not attracted in the next five years.”

Commenting on the issue of social injustice, he noted that the culture of impunity continues to thrive wherein public office holders can commit crimes including looting the treasury and yet remain unpunished and in some cases remain in their jobs;

“In addition, the recent travails of former CJN Onnoghen at the CCT clearly shows that the Executive branch of government has taken full control of the Judiciary,” he said. According to Chike, Nigeria cannot unlock the traffic jam of all the players in the power industry without looking closely at all the bottleneck­s, especially tariffs. He noted that at 10.8 per cent, Nigeria has the highest number of out of school children.

Nigeria now the poverty capital of the world with 91.5million people living in poverty, he said, adding that the country was now faced with widespread security challenges across the entire country.

“The North (which is yet to produce any crude oil) has the highest allocation of income from crude oil sales. Over 30,000 Niger Delta militants under Amnesty Programme have scholarshi­ps to study overseas with N100,000 monthly allowance each; meanwhile, ordinary honest hardworkin­g Nigerians are struggling to earn the minimum wage which is being increased to N30,000 per month. With all these sins, it is a miracle that Nigeria is only 146 out of 190 countries according to World Bank’s 2019 ease of doing business report,” he added.

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