President Muhammadu Buhari’s current economic policies are similar to
those he promulgated during the military regime he led in the 1980s, a
former Minister of Education and social critic, Oby Ezekwesili, has
said.
Mrs. Ezekwesili said Mr. Buhari’s “archaic” and “opaque” economic
principles are not only encouraging massive corruption and abuse of
power, but also hurting the poor they were intended to help.
Mrs. Ezekwesili said this at The Platform, a public policy forum that is currently underway in Abuja.
“During the first coming of this our new president, a command and control economic system was adopted.
“During that era, inflation spiralled. During that era, jobs were
lost. During that era, the economic growth level dipped,” Mrs.
Ezekwesili said. “That era wasn’t the best of eras in economic
progress.”
“What did not work in 1984 cannot possibly be a solution in a global economy that’s much more integrated.”
Mrs. Ezekwesili said Mr. Buhari was rehashing the same “command and
control” approach towards economic issues which has left the country’s
economic indices worse off since he assumed office almost year ago.
“In over one year, the president is still holding to the premise that
command and control is the only way out,” Mrs. Ezekwesili said. “In a
year we have lost the single digits inflation status we maintained in
past administrations.”
Mrs. Ezekwesili said Mr. Buhari’s distortion of foreign exchange
system has left the poor it was intended to support even worse off.
“The president comes into this economic philosophy on the premise
that he does not want the poor to suffer. I can relate to that, a leader
must not allow the poor to suffer, especially a leader who knows that
most of his votes came not from the elite but from the poor.”
“The problem though is that the intention and the outcome are diverged.
“The weakest and the most vulnerable suffer the impact of inflation
the most. Enormous power is being abused as a result of opaque economic
policies.
“Companies are suddenly finding themselves unable to produce because
they’re unable to access foreign exchange,” Mrs. Ezekwesili said.
Mrs. Ezekwesili, therefore, urged Mr. Buhari to sit down with his
administration officials and reconsider the impact his polices have had
on the nation’s economy, quoting an American parlance that says if
something is not broken there’s no need fixing it”.
“Mr. President should sit with his team and look at the economic
evidence that speaks loudly. It’s time to sit back and review the
well-intended idea of command and control economic principle.
“He should do what the Americans say that if it ain’t broken, don’t fix it,” Mrs. Ezekwesili said.
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