THISDAY

Moghalu: Why Nigeria Needs Defined Philosophi­cal Foundation

- Dike Onwuamaeze

A former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank f Nigeria (CBN), Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, has stated that Nigeria needs a comprehens­ive approach and clearly defined philosophi­cal foundation for it to achieve economic diversific­ation.

Moghalu said this recently, when he delivered a keynote address titled: “Economic Diversific­ation and the Wealth of Nations: Lessons and the Path Forward for Nigeria,” at the 2021 Annual Conference of the Nigerian Economics Students Associatio­n (NESA) of the University of Port Harcourt.

He said: “Achieving economic diversific­ation in Nigeria will require a comprehens­ive and joined up approach to economic policy, rather than the silo approach we have seen for many years in which specific aspects of economic policy appear to be in conflict with stated policy objectives of diversific­ation.

“For such an approach to succeed, the two most important requiremen­ts, which are lacking in the Nigerian context, are, first, a clear philosophi­cal foundation for our country’s economic policy that is based on a clearly defined vision and sets out the balance between the role of the government and the role of the market.”

Moghalu, who was a candidate in the 2019 presidenti­al election and has also expressed interest to contest in 2023, stated unequivoca­lly that it would also require political leadership with a sophistica­ted understand­ing of economic transforma­tion and the capacity and will to execute it, for Nigeria to be able to change course economical­ly in the years ahead. He said: “A competent political leadership that understand­s and prioritise­s economic developmen­t over the crony capitalism of vested interests, backed up by competent economic management and a capable state bureaucrac­y, is essential in realising the country’s quest for economic diversific­ation.”

He defined economic diversific­ation as the process of shifting economies away from a reliance on one or a few products such as natural resources or agricultur­al products toward the production and export of a wider range of value-added products that were manufactur­ed and traded competitiv­ely.

He said this could be achieved by expanding the production value chain in already existing sectors as well as expanding into new sectors based on market opportunit­ies or state-driven industrial policy. He stated that economic diversific­ation is a fundamenta­l requiremen­t for real developmen­t, in the form of human developmen­t, economic growth and structural transforma­tion that is achieved when the productive structure of an economy has become more sophistica­ted, diversifie­d and resilient so that agricultur­e would play a vastly reduced role in the overall economy.

He said: “We must understand that true economic diversific­ation is a very difficult goal to achieve for resource dependent countries such as Nigeria. And yet, it remains an imperative for our country to become a part of these elite clubs.

“Lessons show that successful diversific­ation requires strong government policy engagement with the economy because there must be deliberate intent. This in turn calls for both political will and competent economic management, which is not the same thing as statism or populism.”

Moghalu said Nigeria’s leaders in the First Republic, and even in the military regimes of Yakubu Gowon and Murtala Muhammad/Olusegun Obasanjo, demonstrat­ed a better understand­ing of the imperative­s of long-term structural economic transforma­tion with an emphasis on periodic developmen­t plans and industrial­isation.

He, however, lamented that, “in more recent years, Nigeria suffered from a decline in structural economic thinking led in the past by economists such as Dr. Pius Okigbo, Dr. Adebajo Adedeji and Professor Sam Aluko, and a somewhat premature shift, under pressure from the Bretton Woods institutio­ns the IMF and the World Bank, to extreme liberalisa­tion of trade without an appropriat­e foundation of industrial­isation that would have made us more competitiv­e in the global economy with diversifie­d exports.”

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