Nigeria’s future is the subject of
current sabre-rattling by the government and the people on two sides of the
divide. With much tough-talking and
misinformation on both sides, the real mission to secure Nigeria’s future and
better our today is being relegated to the
background. Gradually, more people are getting fixated on the price of
petrol as the crux of the campaign. People are chanting “on 65 naira we stand”.
The battle is not for the price of petroleum products. It is a battle for the
rudder of the Nigerian ship, a wake-up call to the government, buckle up lest we sink!
Every casual supporter of the
current people’s action against the government is likely to think this mass action is directed at Jonathan Goodluck’s
government. Far from it, this pent-up anger is directed at the perennial recklessness
of government and the impunity of asking the people of Nigeria to suffer more
while a few opportunists in power
acquire more booties of rulership. Because government is a
continuum, an ongoing entity that inherits both assets and liabilities of its
predecessors, Jonathan Goodluck must face the good luck of being the president
of Nigeria at a time like this and facing the challenge. He must also think
about it creatively, almost paternalistic in carving out solutions. He must see
this not as an affront to his authority but as direct feedback from his
constituents. He must harness this people power to undertake earth-shaking
reforms he promised in the polity. He must enlist the people of Nigeria in
fashioning out solutions to our collective challenges. The solutions must be
owned by the people, signed off in a comprehensive charter and monitored by an
independent body.
The solutions to Nigeria’s problems
are multi-dimensional and require an eclectic mix ingenious solutions woven together into an integrated
strategy to wean Nigeria off oil dependency, create an infrastructure paradise,
diversify the economy, create employment and attack poverty. It is called the
P.I.E.S strategy.
The P.I.E.S strategy stands for the
four areas of implementation which will drive initiatives and tangible results to the people of Nigeria:
·
Political
·
Infrastructure
·
Economic
·
Social
This plan
is based on a phased withdrawal of the fuel subsidy over a twenty for month
period during which the government must take pre-planned steps in the four
areas of strategic importance. The plan starts by moving the price of petrol to
eighty five naira immediately, one hundred naira in another six months, one
hundred and twenty naira in eighteen months and one hundred and forty naira in the
twenty-fourth month. This plan addresses the deficit balance of trust which the
Nigerian government currently enjoys by allowing the people to see and evaluate
the steps taken by the government before moving to the next level. It also
allows the government to plan its revenue and phase its promises, rather than
promise everything to everyone at the same time.
Why should
we increase the price of petroleum products? It is clear to everyone that any
form of subsidy compromises both both economic and fiscal success especially in
a nation where corruption and inadequate monitoring allows a privileged few to
corner the gains and enrich themselves. It is also clear that the economics of
subsidy is not sustainable on the long run as it encourages inefficiencies and
creates abracadabra econometrics. It allows people to feel at ease with our
comatose refineries and import petroleum products for West Africa while Nigeria
pays. The policy it too juicy to be transparent and has several points of
failure and compromise.
It is also
clear that the global economics of oil, the vicissitudes of the global
financial system and the turbulence of the oil prices dictate that we must
achieve internal price parity on the
long run while ensuring that Nigerians get value for the volume of trade in this commodity. To achieve this,
Jonathan Goodluck’s government must galvanise action in the following areas:
Political
Nigeria’s
political structure as it stands now is big, bogus and financially unsustainable.
But it has constitutional backing! The constitution supports several duplicated
functions and bodies. The government needs to consult widely and take action on
the drain pipes of waste. The
following questions are poignant:
·
Do we really need a government this big ?
·
Do we need really need a minimum of 36 Ministers ?
Some of these portfolios are so narrow, they do not need a minister and some of
them have two ministers. Water resources
could be merged with Agriculture.
·
Do we actually need 36 states? It is a touchy issue
but I think we should explore the matter. Nigeria is just as big as one big
state in America!
·
Do we need all the ministries and parastatals ? We
need to prune down the number of agencies. We have Nigeria Boundary Commission
and a Nigeria Border Community Development Agency.
·
Prune down the Budget! More than half of the 4.2
Trillion naira in the 2012 budget is pork, meant for needless, phantom
expenses. I have looked at the budget provisions and it is appalling that we are spending close to two billion for food in
the presidency. We are also buying furniture for the Vice President with over 300
Million naira. If we continue to budget like that, we will soon be bankrupt,
even if we paid 500 naira for a liter of petrol. There is too much financial
laxity in our budget and it cuts across every Ministry, Department and Agency.
·
Reduce the perks of political office holders. It is an
absurdity that our senators earn more than the American president. Let every political
office holder take a 70 percent pay cut. Just to remind us, we are a borrower
nation!
·
We must limit the size of government cabinet at all
levels.
·
We must stop all frivolous foreign trips no matter the
guise. We do not need to travel to get
medical attention if we fixed our own hospitals.
·
Create a fast-track court to try corruption cases and
impose very stiff penalties combining jail time and forfeitures of illicit wealth.
·
Can we have local government chair persons serve as
members of the house(s) of assembly in each state, sitting on Mondays alone,
without all the frills and thrills of the current theatre ?
·
Create a special purpose account for the revenue
accruing from the proceeds of the petroleum products and inaugurate an
independent mix of technocrats, labour unions and international consulting
firms.
·
Implement the KPMG report on the NNPC. Privatise the
NNPC through a joint venture agreement. Make the organization a lean and
professional organization, able to compete with the oil majors.
The
government must send a graduated
constitutional amendment to the National Assembly and ensure that all of this in
six months after the initial increase.
Infrastructure
The sore
point of Nigeria’s nationhood is her underdeveloped infrastructure base. The
government must come up with a twenty four month infrastructure development
plan that will change the current level of infrastructural decay. The
government must prioritise the following projects into short term, medium term
and long term objectives:
·
Category One Roads Repairs: Federal Roads must get
immediate attention. Six months from the implementation of the first phase of
subsidy renewal, all category one roads must be repaired in their current state
while we plan on expanding or building new ones within 24 months. The
Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the Sagamu-Benin Expressway, the Onitsha-Enugu-Port
Harcourt and the Abuja-Kaduna-Kano expressway are in this category
·
Our Airports and Seaports require urgent attention.
They should be given to international firms to build, operate and transfer. We
should have port capacity to serve the entire West African sub-region and make
our airports aviation hubs in West Africa.
·
We must expand our transportation options beyond
roads. We must invest heavily in the rail sector and include safe marine travel
in our transportation model. Each state
should come up with a unique transportation model and draw funds from the “subsidy
fund” to implement under supervision.
·
Our petroleum jetties, stations and pipeline require urgent
attention. They should be phased for attention. Some of them require expansion (Atlas
Cove Jetty) while some of them require outright redevelopment (Mosimi Depot)
·
Health and Emergency Services must be shored up
immediately. Just like the PTF interventions, we must highlight primary,
secondary and tertiary health institutions for immediate assistance. We must
identify some specialist institutions for special capacity building and
equipment support to become areas of competence in healthcare, capable of competing
with renowned institutions in the world. Once this is achieved within twelve
months, political office holder will not be allowed to travel out of Nigeria,
even for health reasons. We must institute and implement a robust emergency
management agency, capable of responding to minor road accidents and major
natural disasters.
·
Power projects must be prioritized and pursued for
completion with vigour. The government will publish a list of power projects to
be commissioned within a cycle of subsidy withdrawal. These will include all
gas-powered turbines, dams and coal-powered power plants. As government has
started deregulating the sector, a strong monitoring mechanism should be put in
place to ensure that Nigeria and her citizens get the best value from investors
in terms of investment and service quality.
·
Education is an area of critical need. The government
must create a comprehensive development plan for Nigerian universities with the aim of making
at least six Nigerian universities to be the best in Africa in the next ten
years. This requires a roadmap which must be properly articulated and
implemented.
Economy
It is clear that the economy needs
to be diversified to move away from the
mono-economic lame duck that we
currently have. The government needs to implement the following:
· Make it
easier to start a company in Nigeria. We are currently one of the worst places
to start a business.
· We must
provide a mix of incentives for SME’s by
providing low-interest loans for this sector
· We must
provide adequate incentives for the agricultural sector with an understanding
of the potential of the sector to become a very important mainstay of the
economy.
· We must
revisit the role of export promotion agencies and banks, providing access to
loans for exporters and monitoring for actual implementation.
· We must create
hubs for technological advancement, innovation and entrepreneurship.
SOCIAL CHANGE
The withdrawal of the subsidy will
not be complete until the government targets specific programmes at the
vulnerable poor and aim to alleviate the pains. The government must do the
following:
· Provide fuel
vouchers for indigent people who register with their state government.
· Provide
transport vouchers for minors and senior
citizen who are above 60 years of age
· Run
campaigns for Nigerians to share transportation and use less fuel.
· Run campaigns
to encourage Nigerians to use public transportation.
This plans takes into the Nigerian
refineries into consideration as the government has signed agreements for their
Turn Around Maintenance. When they come
up and start refining again, it still possible that the price of petroleum
products will fall due to the forces of demand and supply.
Just a plan to consider, because
there is no magic wand!
3 comments:
For this that have ears let them hear.......
Pls jona, do the needful before yaws gas
I hope d president can see dis,
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