Barely 24 hours after the Senate reconvened and recommended to the
federal government to sell some national assets to raise funds as one of
the ways to bring the country’s economy out of the woods, some Senators
yesterday took a different position.This happened as President
Muhammadu Buhari, while addressing a large gathering of political and
business leaders from the United States, Africa and other regions of the
world at the Second United States-Africa Business Forum in New York,
yesterday, organised by the United States Department of Commerce and
Bloomberg Philanthropies, said the country’s economic recession is an
opportunity for Nigeria to diversify its economy, achieve sustainable
growth and prosperity.
The president also assured potential
investors that Nigeria would soon be one of the most attractive places
for investment as his administration had embarked on significant
economic reforms to realise that goal.
Senate President, Bukola
Saraki, had while addressing plenary on Tuesday, listed measures to be
taken by the executive to turn the economy around. One of the
recommendations was the sale of some of the countries assets, including
the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Holdings, sale of government’s
stakes in the African Finance Corporation and the privatisation and
concession of major/regional airports and refineries.
But at
resumption of plenary yesterday, some of the senators averred that no
country ever sold its assets as a way out of economic recession.
Deputy
Senate president, Ike Ekweremadu, during the debate on the state of the
economy, led the pack of Senators who argued that sale of national
assets was not the way out.
He cited an example of the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) which according to him, “does not even allow you
close to oil wells let alone sell them.”
“For a country like
Saudi Arabia, its budget each year is run by investments from oil
revenue. Other countries are investing; I am sure we will not be fair to
the next generation if we sell off our assets. If we must sell, we have
to sell the non-performing assets so that people can turn them around
and create employment,” Ekweremadu added.
The deputy Senate
president further pointed out that the economic recession had buttressed
the importance of savings, and called for amendment of the revenue
sharing formula between the federal and state governments to encourage
savings.
“We need to amend section 162 especially from 3,4,5,6 where each money in the federation account is made to be shared,” he said.
He
also called on President Buhari to re-jig his cabinet by putting square
pegs in square holes especially in the area of economic management, and
particularly identified the duo of the Minister of Budget and Planning,
Udoma Udo Udoma, and his counterpart in the Ministry of Finance, Mrs
Kemi Adeosun, as knowledgeable people but unfit for their current
positions, given their professional backgrounds, saying that they are
rather better suited for other ministries.
“The president needs
to look at his cabinet. He has to put square pegs in square holes. Your
excellency, distinguished colleagues, Udo Udoma is my friend, an
accomplished lawyer for that matter but in fairness to him, I believe he
can do better in another ministry especially like Trade and Investment,
certainly not Budget and Planning.
“The minister for finance can
do much better in another ministry. At this critical time we need
somebody who is more experienced to man the ministry of finance so that
he will be able to coordinate the strategies for this recovery,”
Ekweremadu said.
In his contribution, Senator George Akume cautioned those making calls for sale of assets
He said rather than opt for sale of its assets, the country should focus on recovering stolen funds.
“If
we want to sell our oil assets at this time when the price of oil
crashed, how much are we going to realise? We are making a mistake here;
what we are doing is to ensure that those who are within the bracket of
the stolen dollars will still come to buy,” he pointed out.
He
suggested industrialisation through agriculture as one way out and also
advocated the review of the revenue sharing formula to encourage
savings, saying states should not insist on sharing revenue.
But
Senator Shehu Sani, in his presentation, disagreed with the deputy
Senate president, saying that removing both Adeosun and Udoma was not a
solution to the biting economic hardship.
Sani said instead of
swapping ministers, there was the need to chart a new national
direction. He also decried the over-dependence on oil as the only source
of revenue for too long, saying there was the need for urgent
diversification of the economy.
The Kaduna lawmaker noted that it
was high time interest rates were cut and small scale industries were
supported to produce goods for exports, adding that the current “sharing
formula federalism” led the nation to the present dire situation
confronting Nigerians today.
On his part, Senator Dino Melaye called for the sack of non-performing ministers.
Earlier,
the Senate Leader, Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume, who opened the
discussion by giving his colleagues a general overview of the situation,
said the current recession was not peculiar to Nigeria, adding that the
country is just one of the 15 oil-dependent countries of the world
experiencing same.
“This is a global phenomenon that is not only
affecting our country but all countries dependent on oil,” Ndume said,
even as he blamed the immediate past government for the economic crisis,
by not leaving anything behind in the nation’s reserves.
Ekweremadu,
in his presentation, had also offered what he called short-term, medium
and long term strategies as panacea for the situation.
According
to him, these include the injection of money into the economy by the
government; usage of the monies that have accrued to TSA as well as
about N3 trillion recovered loot; re-negotiation with oil majors on
terms of engagement in the industry; confidence-building and change of
attitude, among others.
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