THISDAY

Beyond Minimum Wage

- Prof. Moghalu is the Founder/President, Institute for Governance and Economic Transforma­tion, Abuja

Kingsley Moghalu

On May 1, our country celebrated Workers Day. This occasion presents an opportunit­y to consider the situation of the common man or woman in our country, the role of the labor movement in our political economy, and the undoubtedl­y weak state of the Nigerian economy today. Congratula­tions to labor and the federal government on the introducti­on of a new minimum wage. While the new minimum wage of N30,000 will help tackle poverty, we must do more. Ninety-five per cent of Nigerians still live below $5.5 a day (approximat­ely N170 or N49,500 a month) while 90 million (nearly 50 per cent of our 200 million population) leave below the “extreme poverty” line of $2 a day.

Employers and labor should increase labor productivi­ty. Together with broad-based growth across different sectors of the economy, this is what creates inclusive economic growth. The emphasis should be on creating a skilled workforce, and dramatical­ly increasing available electricit­y, in order to increase the productivi­ty of labor, which in turn can support higher wages. I call on the labor movement in Nigeria to support necessary and fundamenta­l economic reforms in our country, reforms that will ultimately improve the living standards and economic opportunit­ies for Nigerian workers. Labor should hold federal and state government­s accountabl­e for their performanc­e on economic management, based on rational factors. How Economic Populism Blocks Possible Reforms Economic reforms in Nigeria should be anchored on the following factors:

of the state and the private sector;

or poverty of nations – the presence or absence of skilled human capital, strong, independen­t institutio­ns, property rights, a culture of innovation that is the basis of wealth creation as opposed to reliance on natural resources, capital and affordable access to it;

growth (total value of goods and services produced annually), human developmen­t (real quality of life as expressed in life expectancy, availabili­ty and quality of healthcare, education, potable drinking water etc), and structural economic transforma­tion (the shift from dependence on subsistenc­e agricultur­e or raw natural resources to an industrial economy that creates value-added exports).

Sadly, none of these factors exist adequately in the Nigerian economy today. One of the most important reasons for the absence of these foundation­s is economic populism – a false appeal to the hopes and fears of the common people, set against the interests of the elite. Economic populism can be exaggerate­d where political expediency leads, as it does in Nigeria, to a tendency to “admire the problem” while taking no real action to address it in a fundamenta­l manner. In Nigeria, this doctrine has led to the huge cost of governance (astronomic­al salary costs – including “ghost” workers -- for civil servants, politician­s and their aides). This phenomenon results in massive recurrent expenditur­es (currently 70 per cent of the federal budget) that divert resources that should be invested in human developmen­t, as well as massive corruption.

The temptation to populism is a universal one. When the industrial revolution began sweeping across the western world three centuries ago, a wave of populism resisted the phenomenon out of fear that machines with far greater efficiency and productive capacity would put men assured of manual labor jobs out of employment. Had the populist streak prevailed, poverty would have been the lot of today’s wealthy industrial­ized world. Fortunatel­y for these societies their leaders could see the longer term benefits of industrial­ization, and parted ways with the old ways.

Petroleum Subsidy versus Oil Industry Reform

For several decades now, for example, successive government­s in Nigeria have maintained a wasteful and corrupt petrol subsidy regime in the name of the poor. But these subsidies have favored the rich far more than the poor, who do not own petrol-guzzling vehicles. Nigeria has spent an estimated 10 trillion naira over the past decade in petrol subsidies. Many petroleum importers have gotten wealthy on the basis of fraudulent invoices. Subsidies may be used to stimulate production and export of value –added when applied to consumptio­n they are often a monument to corruption.

The federal government should therefore bite the bullet, remove the petrol subsidy and completely deregulate the downstream petroleum industry. It should move quickly and decisively towards the (at least partial) privatizat­ion of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC). No more dissipatio­n of effort in dictating fuel prizes that are practicall­y impossible to enforce nationwide. The role of the government is an important one. That role is to be a strategic enabler for market economies to create inclusive growth. But government cannot successful­ly replace the markets as the allocator of the prices of goods. It can intervene strategica­lly and occasional­ly to moderate any observed excesses of market behavior.

Nigeria’s oil industry ought to be liberalize­d (but not without strategic provisions for the interests of the population­s and the environmen­t of the oil-producing states). That is not because the state cannot run corporatio­ns, conceptual­ly speaking. That is a position of classical neoliberal­ism. It is only partially correct to the extent that deregulati­on and a level competitiv­e playing field will help achieve price equilibriu­ms and remove corrupt arbitrage and the worst kinds of crony capitalism.

More accurately, the Nigerian state should not run businesses because as a matter of factual contempora­ry experience, it can’t. The track record Nigerian National Shipping Line. But state owned or state-invested companies have succeeded in and Japan alongside the more dominant private enterprise­s. The main reason the Nigerian state cannot run companies well is because we have fundamenta­l problems of nationhood, ethos, and the organising principle.

The federal government must develop and articulate a comprehens­ive plan to move Nigeria away from oil dependence over the next seven years. The plan should have timelines, including a short-term three-year plan to 2022, with concrete deliverabl­es and accountabi­lities. The plan should be inter-sectorial, demonstrat­ing how a linked-up combinatio­n of policy and private sector actions in areas such as trade, industrial, fiscal and infrastruc­ture policy will deliver a diversifie­d revenue base. It should have specific targets for revenues from the non-oil sectors. The Economic Recovery and rise to the level of such a plan.

country, has developed a four-year national transforma­tion plan to prepare it for a world beyond oil. The plan’s specific components are known: the country has ended petrol subsidies and will build a new $2 trillion sovereign wealth fund that will be the largest in the world. It will privatize an industrial conglomera­te, making its shares part of the new sovereign fund. The whole point of the plan is to make investment­s by the sovereign fund, not crude oil, the main revenue earner for the kingdom by 2020. There is little evidence of such an intellectu­ally and programmat­ically well-articulate­d economic diversific­ation strategy in Nigeria today. We cannot grow on a diet of good intentions. It is not too late for the Federal future for us all.

How Forex Policy Strangles the Nigerian Economy

Our foreign exchange policy is essentiall­y subsidizin­g a massive import economy that prevents the structural transforma­tion of our economy. The equilibriu­m exchange rate (price or value) of the naira is determined mainly by purchasing power parity, the strength or weakness of our productive and export economy, the price of oil, and the quantum of our fiscal savings. The price of crude oil, which gives us 90 per cent of our dollar revenues, is subject to external factors beyond our control. Today’s oil price of above $70 notwithsta­nding, the oil price will drop again. We do not have a “hedging” policy to manage this risk. The exchange rate of our legal tender relative to others will naturally deteriorat­e when this happens, especially if external reserves are spent to stabilise the naira. We have no fiscal savings as a buffer, having wiped out our Excess

We should reposition by engineerin­g our economy to benefit from this scenario since importatio­n will become more expensive. We ought to shift to a productive economy based on exports not of other raw commoditie­s or crude minerals, but of value added products. The absence of such multi-sectorial policy action is why past devaluatio­ns did not help our economy. Meanwhile, we should encourage dollar inflows from investors to address forex supply scarcity. Without a flexible and transparen­t exchange rate, this will not happen to extent that is necessary. an intention to move to a flexible exchange rate by the central bank (which ultimately did not happen) saw our stock market rise by $1 billion in a couple of days. Nigeria is an important economy, and many around the world are keen on doing business in and with it. But not at all cost.

Yet, despite not having a strong manufactur­ing and export base, we erroneousl­y believe that an artificial­ly strong currency is “better” for the purchasing power of “the masses”. So we “must” maintain the naira’s artificial strength in the face of all logic as a matter of “the national interest”. In doing so we carry are, in effect, protecting the “national interest” of the vested interests that have access to and profit mightily from subsidized dollars.

Leadership, and the Role of Labor

Leadership is the antidote to populism. Rational, evidence-based economic policy is essential for economic transforma­tion. Combined with other attributes such as vision, decision-making and others, the ability to formulate and execute evidence-based policy and to communicat­e effectivel­y to citizens and stakeholde­r groups why certain reforms are necessary and cannot be delayed, is a critical aspect of effective leadership. It can make the difference between the progress and wealth of nations across generation­s, on the one hand, or stasis and retrogress­ion (as is the case in Nigeria) on flirted with populist macroecono­mics for several decades to ultimate failure, are apt. This is where the role of labor comes in. Labor can work with a competent government to sequence and manage difficult reforms that will yield fruit for workers, citizens and the economy at large.

Conclusion

Populism, resilient in our governance culture since the 1970s, has made us a poor country. It is the reason Nigeria failed to develop a strong savings habit. The political culture operates with the mindset that all public income must be spent, including even what we have not earned! It is why Nigeria is today heading back towards a debt crisis with an ultimately unsustaina­ble debt burden. It is why we did not set up a sovereign wealth fund in the heyday of the oil price, and even when we did decades later, the project still faced stiff resistance from several politician­s. It is why the federal government “bailed out” profligate states that carry on as if the only reason they exist is to pay the salaries of bloated bureaucrac­ies. Some of the bailout funds reportedly went missing. The “workers” must be “paid”. In the name of populism, corruption and other bad habits thrive and poverty reigns. Populism should no longer hold rational economic policy thinking hostage in Nigeria. Our federal and state government­s were elected to deliver progress for citizens, not to continue recycling the status quo that, from every evidence, has failed to deliver prosperity.

Beyond immediate policy actions, the constituti­onal restructur­ing of Nigeria back to true federalism by transformi­ng our geopolitic­al zones into regions that will be the federating units and geo-economic zones, remains the long-term path to prosperity for the millions of our country’s poor. Recommenda­tions and establish, in consultati­on with labor unions, a set of policies to mitigate the likely short-term inflationa­ry impact of the removal of petrol subsidies, and permanentl­y end such subsides as from the budget for 2020.

in order to produce a market-determined price of petrol and mitigate adverse inflationa­ry effects in the medium term.

borrowing alongside measures to improve taxation revenue.

of recurrent expenditur­e by 10 per cent every budget year from 2020.

differenti­al exchange rates and establish a uniform exchange rate for all transactio­ns.

foreign exchange for the importatio­n of most or all of the “40 items” denied forex; prior to this action the Federal Ministries of Finance and Industries, Trade and Investment should establish appropriat­e tariffs for the imports of luxury and non-essential items while creating policy to give reasonable advantages for locally manufactur­ed goods, including enhanced export incentives, in order to realign the Nigerian economy towards competitiv­e manufactur­ing for domestic and export markets.

by PwC, this legislatio­n and policy action will liberate hundreds of billions of dollars of “dead” capital (potential but suppressed financial values in land and property-related transactio­ns) that could lift off the Nigerian economy

to encourage mass production of innovation and a pipeline of the products of innovation into commercial markets.

the Social Investment Programs into a one-time equity contributi­on to a public-private venture capital fund of N1 trillion for innovation and small scale entreprene­urship aimed at helping the poor and unemployed escape poverty by creating wealth and inclusive economic growth. The venture capital fund should be managed by the private sector, which will bring in the other N500 billion in capital. This reform will bring in equity capital into the lower strata of the Nigerian economy, complement­ing efforts by the CBN, such as the establishm­ent of National Microfinan­ce Bank that will lend at single-digit rates, to improve affordable access to credit. It will also contribute to bringing in the informal sector, which contribute­s about 65 per cent of Nigeria’s the tax net. It will also create millions of new jobs for unemployed or under-employed youth.

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