Re: Buhari Vs Jonathan Beyond The Election - By Dr. Kayode Fayemi
We
commend Professor Chukwuma Soludo’s for his insightful and incisive
article published in the Vanguard and Nation Newspapers of January 26th
under the above title. We agree with Professor Soludo that if the
political parties, including ours, must justify the overwhelming
enthusiasm of Nigerians about the 2015 elections we must remain focused
on the issues that matter most to them, which is the progress of our
country and the well being of our people. Indeed, this has been the
driving conviction of our party and our campaign all along.
While
we accept his critical comments on our party, more for the intentions
than for the letters, we believe some clarifications would be quite
necessary. We wish to emphasise that our party, the All Progressives
Congress (APC), presents a real option to Nigerians. Professor Soludo
expressed the sentiments of most Nigerians when he spoke about the
incalculable damage that the PDP under President Jonathan has done to
the Nigerian economy and the unprecedented hardship that his six years
of the locust has brought upon Nigerians.
However, the
APC does not intend to ride into power on a mere rhetoric of ‘change’.
The change that we propose is fundamental in many ways as it is critical
to the very survival of our country. This in itself presents a major
distinction between our party and the PDP. Perhaps, the most compelling
argument against the People’s Democratic Party today is that its
government and leadership does not even see that Nigeria is in trouble.
While majority of our people wallow in abject poverty, and the gap in
inequality gets ever wider by the day, yet PDP has basked in
self-celebration of imagined accomplishments. How can a party or a
government even begin to solve a problem that it does not believe exist?
Like in all things, PDP is stuck in denial.
APC does
not promise Eldorado. Neither our candidate nor our manifesto has made
such promise. Our programs are based on the critical awareness of the
difficult task ahead, while holding out a ray of hope to our people. The
promises that we make reflect our innermost belief that the people must
be at the centre of development. Especially, we believe that any
economic growth that leaves the majority of the people behind, and does
not protect the weakest and the vulnerable among us, is merely
delusionary.
Professor Soludo has drawn our attention
to the striking but unfortunate similarity in the nation’s economy in
1982-1984 period and what we are experiencing today. Back then, a period
of sustained high crude oil prices had also ironically led to
unsustainable debt levels and introduction of the austerity measure.
Just as it happened more than three decades ago, it is difficult to
explain how a sustained period of oil boom should ultimately lead to
austerity measure except to say that huge opportunities that the period
of boom presented were frittered away by mindless profligacy, wanton
corruption and bad economic choices made by the PDP government, which
has rewarded a protracted period of boom with uncertainty and austerity
and is still asking for another mandate to do more damage.
If
we sound upbeat in our manifesto, it is because we recognise that this
crisis period also presents us a great opportunity to restructure the
economy in a way that improves the quality of lives of our people by
ensuring that our economic growth is job-led. Our party has identified
job creation as a critical priority of government. We have noted with
concerns that Nigeria’s unemployment rate of 23.9% should be seen as a
national crisis. And if this government was more sensitive to the
enormity of the challenge that this presents, it would be reluctant to
jump all over the place in self celebration while so many of our youths
are wasting away. In the immediate future, our priority is to tackle
unemployment and provide good jobs by embarking on a massive programme
of public works, building houses, roads, railways, ports and energy
plants. Over the long term, we believe we must wean Nigeria off its
dangerous addiction to oil, which currently provides 80% of our spending
leaving us at the mercy of volatile international oil prices. Even as a
federalist party, we believe that an economy that is dependent on a
commodity that is so dangerously exposed to price volatility must always
prepare for eventuality through savings and investments once the agreed
thresholds are met. What we disagree with is the unilateral and
arbitrary deductions in accruable revenues in a way that hampers the
development of the federating States.
Going by the
government’s own statistics, is it mere coincidence that the three
States with the lowest unemployment rate – Osun, Lagos and Kwara – are
all APC States? This is
evidence of our Party’s ability to tackle this problem head-on. APC’s
policy thrust will create an enabling environment and incentives for the
formal and informal sectors to lead the quest for job creation. This
will be done in addition to skills acquisition and enterprise- training
to ensure our youths are equipped with the appropriate skills to take
these jobs. Merely introducing a National Qualification Standards would
power a whole new world of opportunities for our artisans by launching
them into the international job markets. We note the issue that
Professor Soludo picked with our figure of 720,000 jobs. We need to
clarify that this is limited to immediate direct employment
opportunities from public projects and maintenance works only. Our
manifesto actually promises a lot more jobs but we see that as the
product of the enabling environment we seek to create for private
sector-led job creation, especially in high opportunity sectors like
agriculture, construction, entertainment, tourism, ICT and sports. APC
economic policy is driven by an overwhelming concern for the level of
inequality in our country today. Specifically, to quote from our
manifesto, we intend to achieve our job-creation agenda through:
•Massive
public works programme especially the building of a national railway
system (complete with tramline systems for our major cities), interstate
roads, and ports. These projects must commence early in the life of the
new administration.
•Establishing a new Federal
Coordinating Agency – Build Nigeria – to fast track and manage these
public works programmes with emphasis on Nigerian labour.
•Embarking vigorously on industrialization, public works and agricultural expansion.
•Diversifying
the economy through a national industrial policy and innovative
private-sector incentives that will move us away from over reliance on
oil into value-added production especially manufacturing.
•Reviving textile and other industries that have been rendered dormant because of inappropriate economic policies.
•Reinvigorating the solid mineral sector by revamping our aged mining legislation and attracting new investment.
•Developing a new generation of domestic oil refineries to lower import costs, enhance our energy independence and create jobs.
•Working
with state governments to turn the country into Africa’s food basket
through a new system of grants and interest free loans, and the
mechanization of agriculture.
•Encouraging and promoting the use of sports as a source of job creation, entertainment and recreation.
•Creating
a knowledge economy by making Nigeria an IT /professional/Telecom
services outsourcing destination hub to create millions of jobs.
•Filling the huge gap in middle level technical manpower with massive investment in technical and tradesmen’s skills education.
•Ensuring that all foreign contractors to include a plan of developing local capacity (technology transfer).
•Creation
of six Regional Development Agencies covering the country with
representatives from the Federal Government, States and the private
sector to manage a new N300billion growth fund.
Our
obsession with job creation stems from the fact that we believe we must
focus on actions that would serve the twin purpose of closing the gap in
inequality and creating opportunities for our people, especially the
youth.Our current situation is dangerous for the stability of the
country. The Human Development Index position ranks Nigeria 152 of 169
countries surveyed. This is incompatible with the present
administration’s insistence on celebrating GDP growth and our absolute
economic size hinged on a routine rebasing exercise. As many
commentators have pointed out, rebasing the GDP is not an achievement.
Rather, it is a mere statistical adjustment that does not impact on the
real or imagined standards of living of the people. So, we also wonder
what this PDP government is celebrating. And maybe it is not that
difficult to explain when one discovers that a small elite has captured
the state and converted our commonwealth into private gain, becoming
disproportionately rich from massive corruption while poverty has
deepened. The income gap and illicit capital flight are growing
alarmingly. Instead of investing in modernizing our economy, massive
theft has starved the country of desperately needed resources for
infrastructure and public services and left us dangerously dependent on
fluctuating global oil prices for our economic survival. For the
ordinary Nigerian, the much-touted economic growth cited by the present
administration has not translated into employment or development. Over
100 million Nigerians are struggling to make ends meet on a regular
basis.
Furthermore, we understand Professor Soludo’s
concern on the cost of implementing our various programmes, especially
those relating to social welfare. The enormity of this challenge is not
lost on us. We also know that sometimes, going into government is like
buying a “no testing” electronic equipment. You may never know the true
state of what you are buying until you get in. We want to assure
Professor Soludo and other likeminded Nigerians that our policy team is
looking at all the options – including the worst-case scenario of a
completely empty treasury. We are however confident that by blocking
avenues of wastages and corruption alone, savings could run into
billions of Naira that could be deployed for productive use. Even so, we
agree with Professor Soludo that savings from corruption alone will not
tackle the enormous challenges we are likely to confront in government.
We are however comforted by the fact that a four-year period provides
opportunity for phased implementation while growing the resource base as
well as changing the culture of graft while reducing the cost of
governance.
Quite significantly, we know that periods
of economic downturn also potentially provide opportunity to lay the
foundation for real economic restructuring and development; and we can
reflect on how Singapore under Premier Lee Kuan Yew and the United
States of America under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt used
historic moments of economic downturn in their countries to launch a
period of sustained development and a new deal for their people. General
Buhari has never claimed to have the magic wand nor the answers to all
of the country’s problems. His greatest assets would be his moral
authority borne out of his self-sacrificing integrity, his sincerity of
purpose and his patriotic zeal to return Nigeria to the path of progress
and genuine development. He
is committed to utilize competent and committed people of integrity
wherever he may find them. This is precisely why he promised when
flagging off his campaign in Port Harcourt on January 5, 2015 that if
voted into power, it would be an opportunity to, in his words, “finally
assemble a competent team of Nigerians to efficiently manage this
country”. This is a clear sign that a meritocratic process will govern
the appointment of those that would be entrusted with managing our
economy and country. His stint as Head of State shows a track record of
using self-sacrificing professionals in his governance team. His
previous cabinet included the likes of Dr. Onaolapo Soleye, Professor
Tam David-West and Professor Ibrahim Gambari.
The All
Progressives Congress (APC) is determined to lead Nigeria in the
direction of change that is so urgently required. And even as we prepare
for the immediate rescue mission in 2015, our minds are also set on
building the necessary democratic institutions that would entrench our
ideological conviction as a progressive and people-centred party. A
National Progressives Policy Institute is part of this plan in the near
future but we are very clear about the enormity of the task ahead. We
would not seek to underplay it. We are supremely confident that we are
equal to the task and we appreciate the commitment of majority of
Nigerians to this quest for change.
—Dr. Kayode Fayemi heads the Policy, Research and Strategy Directorate of the APC Presidential Campaign.
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