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Buhari: We’ll Leave Nigeria in Far Better Place Than We Found It

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In this written response to questions posed to him by Bloomberg News, President Muhammadu Buhari insists that he has largely delivered on his campaign promises to Nigerians. Among several challenges besetting the nation, the Nigerian leader explains why he has continued to retain the controvers­ial petrol subsidy regime and why those who criticise his handling of the country’s finances, especially its growing debts, miss the point altogether. He also tells the internatio­nal news outlet what he’s doing to resolve Nigeria’s energy crisis as well as the country’s infrastruc­ture deficit. Emmanuel Addeh brings you excerpts...

You campaigned for office with a pledge to fight corruption, secure the country and fix the economy. How would you rate your performanc­e in fulfilling those pledges during your eight years in office? Why has insecurity been so hard to tackle? Are you making headway?

We leave Nigeria in a far better place than we found it. Corruption is less hidden, for Nigerians feel empowered to report it without fear, while money is returned; terrorists no longer hold any territory in Nigeria, and their leaders are deceased; and vast infrastruc­ture developmen­t sets the country on course for sustainabl­e and equitable growth.

In 2015, Boko Haram held territory the size of Belgium within the borders of Nigeria. Today they are close to extinct as a military force. The leader of ISWAP was eliminated by a Nigerian Airforce airstrike in March. The jets acquired from the US and intelligen­ce shared by British were not provided to previous administra­tions and stand as testament to renewed trust re-built between Nigeria and our traditiona­l western allies under my government.

We urge those same internatio­nal partners to take additional steps costing them nothing, by proscribin­g another group – IPOB – as a terrorist organisati­on. Their leadership enjoys safe haven in the West, broadcasti­ng hate speech into Nigeria from London, spending millions lobbying members of the US Congress, and freely using internatio­nal financial networks to arm agitators on the ground. This must stop.

My administra­tion is the only in Nigeria’s history to implement a solution to decades-long herder-farmer conflicts, exacerbate­d by desertific­ation and demographi­c growth. The National Livestock Transforma­tion Plan, putting ranching at its core, is the only way to deplete the competitio­n for resources at the core of the clashes.

Governors from some individual states have sought to play politics where ranches have been establishe­d; but where they have been disputes have dramatical­ly reduced.

For years, we have been criticised by the likes of the FT, the Economist, and others for supposedly mistaken attempts to de-globalise and re-localise food production and boost manufactur­ing.

Now with the war in Ukraine breaking global food supply chains “Davos Man” is in retreat as the energy crisis makes countries everywhere think again about energy independen­ce and security.

We have spent our two terms investing heavily in national road, rail, and transport infrastruc­ture set to unleash growth, connect communitie­s, and lessen inequality. This is structural transforma­tion. It may not show on standard economic metrics now, but the results will be apparent in good time.

Starting with our Whistleblo­wing Policy enacted in my first year in office, hundreds of millions in stolen funds have been returned within Nigeria.

Working with our internatio­nal partners, hundreds of millions of various currencies have been returned from abroad – primarily from the UK, US, and Switzerlan­d – and used as social and welfare funds distribute­d directly to the poorest during the Covid pandemic and the provision of long-delayed infrastruc­ture-roads, bridges, rail, and power.

As an illustrati­on, monetary recoveries (January-December) 2021 show that more N152 billion has been recovered. Dollar recoveries for the year amount to over USD 386 million; GBP, more than 1.1 million; Euro, about 157,000; Saudi Riyals about 1.7 million some more in Digital and other currencies.

Those partners refused to return these monies held for decades to previous Nigerian administra­tions in the certainty they would simply be re-stolen. They changed their approach with us because they knew my administra­tion could be trusted.

Food inflation has risen by double digits since 2015, despite the government’s efforts to boost agricultur­al production. Why has your administra­tion battled to counter pricing pressures? What will it take for Nigeria to achieve food security? How concerned are you about food shortages in Nigeria and the broader region, given the drought that it is currently experienci­ng?

We can only imagine what food inflation would be today had we not initiated organised programmes to boost domestic production. And still, we do not grow enough domestical­ly.

Initiative­s such as the Nigeria Anchor Borrower’s programme, helping farmers compete against artificial­ly lowered imports has boosted rice production to 9 million metric tonnes in 2021 from around 5.4 million metric tonnes in 2015. Even in the years of drought, rice production outstrippe­d pre-2015 levels. Imports have fallen to near zero. We are making progress.

Against these advances internatio­nal trade remains rigged against food security in Africa. The EU’s policies in particular (see: It’s time for a new economic deal between the EU and Africa) are all rhetoric of open trade – yet their Common Agricultur­al Policy subsidy programmes and export of those subsidised goods create dependence, undermine Africa’s self-sufficienc­y, and cause food poverty and starvation.

If only out of enlightene­d self-interest the West – and particular­ly Europe – must step up. The moral if not economic case for doing so is unarguable. Do nothing, and more migrants from across the Sahel will attempt dangerous journeys to reach Europe.

Nigeria continues to confront electricit­y shortages, and your government has faced calls to modernise the grid, or make the sector economical for stakeholde­rs up and down the chain. Do you think you have done enough to address the nation’s energy shortfall? What else needs to be done?

First, we need for more input. Our legislativ­e framework has been a drag. The landmark PIA (see later answers) will bolster input, raise capital, and bring transparen­cy to the system.

On grid modernisat­ion, there are hundreds of ongoing projects and initiative­s attracting funding from investors. Take my Presidenti­al Power Initiative (PPI), a government-to-government initiative between the Government­s of Nigeria and Germany, with Siemens AG, to upgrade the electricit­y grid with a $2 billion investment.

Once signed into law the constituti­onal amendment bill – recently voted through parliament – will allow state government­s to generate and transmit their own electricit­y, further facilitati­ng investor participat­ion in our market and enabling states and local businesses to transmit excess supply to the grid.

We are also decentrali­sing the national grid through renewable driven mini-grids. The $550 million Nigeria Electrific­ation Project has deployed more than 20,000 Standalone Solar Systems (SHS), as well as Solar Hybrid mini-grids in over 250 locations.

The IMF and World Bank and many leading economists have urged you for years to remove the fuel subsidy and to unify the exchange rate. Why have you not heeded such calls?

Most western countries are today implementi­ng fuel subsidies. Why would we remove ours now? What is good for the goose is good for the gander!

What our western allies are learning the hard way is what looks good on paper and the human consequenc­es are two different things. My government set in motion plans to remove the subsidy late last year.

After further consultati­on with stakeholde­rs, and as events unfolded this year, such a move became increasing­ly untenable. Boosting internal production for refined products shall also help. Capacity is due to step up markedly later this year and next, as private players and modular refineries (Dangote Refinery, BUA Group Refinery, Waltersmit­h Refinery) come on board.

The exchange rate is still susceptibl­e to external shocks that can suddenly and severely affect Nigerian citizens. As we step up domestic production – both in fuel (enabled by PIA) and food (agricultur­al policies) – the inflationa­ry threat shall diminish, and we can move toward unificatio­n.

The sharp rise in borrowing since 2015 has left the country now spending almost all of its revenue servicing debt. What will that level of debt servicing costs mean for the country going forward? Do you think you have done enough to try and bring debt under control?

A narrow focus on debt misses the point. What it fills is Nigeria’s longstandi­ng infrastruc­ture deficit by constructi­ng a foundation for sustainabl­e growth – spreading opportunit­y to ensure no part of the country is left behind, which has led to insecurity in the past.

Our infrastruc­ture developmen­ts have been the most ambitious since Nigeria’s independen­ce. Over 800 federal roads are being constructe­d or undergoing rehabilita­tion and 650km of rail line have been laid, helping alleviate food inflation pressures, given most food is produced in the north.

Had the infrastruc­ture gap not been filled it will only grow, become more costly to repair what little we have while lacking more on infrastruc­ture on which to build growth, negatively impacting progress towards UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Nigeria has one of the lowest tax-to-revenues ratios in the world. Is there more your administra­tion could have done to boost tax collection?

Though we have the largest economy in Africa, it is true that translatin­g that wealth into revenue generation is challengin­g.

We raised VAT in 2020, and the IMF wanted us to raise it further, but this is a complex issue that cannot be addressed by tax hikes alone. Around 80 per cent of Nigerians work in the so-called informal economy – a situation exacerbate­d by the pandemic. It is difficult to tax the informally employed, and no country has yet found an adequate solution.

Still, we are striving to find one, including the roll out of a national ID card which has grown from 7 million in 2015 to between 90-100 million today – including a tax code and, at the same time combined with access to various government services.

In 2016 I launched the Presidenti­al Enabling Business Environmen­t Council (PEBEC), making Nigeria an easier place to start and grow a business. PEBEC’s policies, as with our national ID card rollout help integrate the informal sector.

We also work closely with ECOWAS to implement initiative­s like the Support Programme for Tax

Transition in West Africa (PATF), improving the management of domestic taxation and ensuring better coordinati­on of taxation in the ECOWAS and West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU) regions.

You serve as oil minister in addition to president. Why has the country’s crude production been slumping, with Nigeria unable to meet its OPEC quota for almost a year despite elevated prices? What are you doing to bolster output?

Four years ago, we unveiled plans for a new gas pipeline connecting Nigeria to Europe. Last week (2nd June) – in record time – the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) entered into an agreement with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) for its constructi­on.

Concurrent­ly on 1st July the NNPC will become a Limited Liability Company and be subject to more robust auditing and commercial disclosure obligation­s. It will help stimulate investment and boost transparen­cy, where corruption has deterred the former and stymied the latter.

My administra­tion is the first to pass this landmark reform our oil and gas sector, after two decades of predecesso­rs’ failure to do so – no doubt due to vested interests.

Criminalit­y and terrorism in oil-producing regions hamper production, and it would help if our western allies designated IPOB as a terrorist group, given their complicity in damage to pipelines and infrastruc­ture.

We have invested in our security forces, including the $1 billion military deal with the US for the acquisitio­n of A-29 Super Tucano aircraft. These efforts are making an impact: wells that had to be closed due to criminalit­y have now re-opened. With these efforts, OPEC has raised our quota for next month.

What is Nigeria doing to take advantage of the gas supply crisis in Europe? How fast do you think Nigeria will be in a position to fill in on some of the European demand?

We need long term partnershi­p not inconsiste­ncy and contradict­ion on green energy policy from the UK and European Union.

Investment is hampered by their broad-brush moratorium on overseas gas projects, while at home the same projects are classified as green. It does not help their energy security, it does not help Nigeria’s economy, and it does not help the environmen­t. It is a hypocrisy that must end.

To change, the UK and EU countries should invest in our planned 4000 km pipeline to bring Nigerian gas – the largest reserves in Africa – via Morocco, then onto Europe.

Are you concerned about the debate around the central bank’s independen­ce following the governor showing interest in running for president? How are you going to resolve that?

The CBN governor is appointed by the president. But this appointmen­t is subject to confirmati­on by the Nigerian Senate. Ultimately, it will be for the CBN’s board of directors to determine whether a CBN governor’s actions have fallen foul of the laws in place to ensure he can most effectivel­y carry out his duties.

But there is a subtext to the accusation­s. Because the governor follows a model outside of the economic orthodoxy, he is labelled political. But the orthodoxy has proved wrong time and again.

Instead, the governor is following an alternativ­e economic model that puts people at the heart of policy. Nigeria should be free to choose its developmen­t model and how to construct our economy, so it functions for Nigerians.

Do you plan to endorse a candidate for president? If so, who?

Yes. I will endorse the APC candidate for president.

You have suggested that members of the Commonweal­th, who are due to meet in Rwanda next month, cooperate more closely on matters of defence and security. What do you have in mind?

African nations make up the largest contingent of Commonweal­th members. There is no reason why one of the world’s foremost arms manufactur­ers should not sell more widely to this club – a group of allies. If they don’t get them from Britain, they shall necessaril­y get them from elsewhere. This only creates a mosaic of different systems across Commonweal­th members on the continent.

Instead, we should aspire to interopera­bility, which would have a material impact the ground. Commonweal­th members in Africa often find themselves in the same missions. Operating with the same hardware and systems, collaborat­ing troops would be more effective. Such collaborat­ion could also open doors to deeper intelligen­ce sharing.

I also believe the club can be used far more effectivel­y as a voting bloc at intergover­nmental bodies to deliver outcomes for the whole of the Commonweal­th – and individual members when they ask for backing on matters from the rest of the group on issues of importance to them.

The Non-Aligned Movement present common voting positions, and they have far less in common than Commonweal­th members. Why would we not try to do this?

We can also do far more to reduce barriers to trade between members. When the UK remained in the EU that was less possible; now with the Commonweal­th’s largest economy able to strike trade deals of its own, much has changed. The UK’s move to become the first country to sign a deal with the AfCFTA is an obvious example.

With the 19 Commonweal­th African members making up the majority of the African economy, a UK-AfCFTA deal is substantia­lly a UK-Commonweal­th deal. It should act as a spur for other leading non-African Commonweal­th countries such as Australia and Canada to sign compatible agreements.

Are you concerned that people accused of blasphemy still get stoned to death on the streets in northern Nigeria? What do these long-standing religious divisions mean for Nigeria’s future?

No person has the right to take the law into his or her own hands.

Christiani­ty and Islam, our two Great Faiths and their Great Books have far more in common than they have apart. Nigeria has a long tradition of tolerance that we must draw on, and we must strive to find common ground.

What comes out of this tragedy is to cherish what we share, while at the same time respect our difference­s.

 ?? ?? President Buhari
President Buhari
 ?? ?? President Buhari
President Buhari

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