I have just read the wide media coverage regarding the
recommendations of the National Economic Council (NEC) as well as the
Senate on the ways to reboot the economy out of the current recession.
Times such as this require all brains at work and all hands on deck.
Consequently, I commend both institutions for their patriotic duty in
advising the President. Surely, the proposals are still mere advice or
recommendations, and not approval as wrongly reported by some media.
Only the President can approve any of those recommendations to become
policy (both NEC and Senate are advisory bodies on matters of national
economic policy). Without a doubt, several of the proposals deserve
serious consideration. In particular, the Senate suggestion for active
coordination between monetary and fiscal authorities is urgent.
Furthermore, the suggestion to urgently review legislations that impede
the economy and enact new ones is commendable. The National Assembly and
the Presidency should declare an emergency on these legislations and
ensure that they deliver on them over the next 100 days for the sake of
Nigeria. I expected this to have been done within the first 100 days of
this administration.
I am not in the habit of joining issues except when I consider the
matter critical. Specifically, I am troubled by the proposal to sell
some valuable national assets in order to “build reserves and provide
funds for immediate spending” and thus ensure that this recession will
be the “shortest” ever. Some people had bandied the same suggestion in
the past, but I largely dismissed it as a joke. But when the Senate and
NEC joined the convenient but flawed call for asset sale, I have a
citizen duty to join others in letting our voice be heard. Part of the
legacy of the oil resource curse on matters of public finance is a
mindset that resorts to easy, albeit lazy approach to ‘quick fixes’ ---
with a gaze on the short term even when the issues are structurally
long-term. So, I understand the mental framework that drives such a
proposal, especially given the pressures to show immediate results.
But for the record, it is our considered view that the proposal is
based on a false foundation. Our thesis is that in extreme, exceptional
circumstances, sale of certain assets could be a last resort option but
that Nigeria is currently not near that threshold and the institutional
framework for its effective use is also not in place. Furthermore, we
argue that any sale of assets now amounts to chasing pennies when by
acts of omission or commission, we are losing pounds. Such a hasty
auction of national assets can only benefit a privileged few with cash
and access while jeopardizing Nigeria’s long-term economic interests.
It will be a historic mistake for the reasons stated below.
Let me start by noting that the objective of policy is mistakenly
identified in terms of getting the economy out of recession. Recession
is short-term. With good rains and bumper agricultural harvest, GDP
growth can easily recover with tepid positive growth and bingo, we are
out of recession! A GDP growth rate of even 0.01% next quarter will mean
that we are out of the recession. What does this actually mean for the
average Nigerian? Really very little! The fundamental issue to focus
the attention of policymakers is that the economy has dramatically
compressed by more than 50% in US dollar terms. The GDP compressed in
dollar terms from about $575 billion (as at the time this government
took over) to about $252 billion currently—depending on the exchange
rate used (currently estimated to be about third largest economy in
Africa after South Africa and Egypt; with per capita income closer to
$1,300 from over $3,000 in 2014).With the current policy regime, it will
be a miracle if the current government can, after eight years in office
by 2023, succeed in returning Nigerian economy just to the size of GDP
(in US dollars) it met it in 2015. To be fair, the wheels of the
economy were already falling off by the time this government took over
plus other complications of the oil sector and I sympathize with them.
But it is also fair to note that some of its policy choices have made
matters worse. Now that the government is showing seriousness in
tackling the crisis, focusing on short-term next quarter GDP growth
misses the key point and has the danger of understating the serious work
required.
Second, there is little basis for the figures being bandied (only God
knows how they did the valuation and by whom to get $10- 15billion
expected from the asset sales), and there is no basis for the
expectation that shoring up reserves by this amount will magically
restore investor confidence and stop speculation on the naira. What
they seem to suggest is that there is a sense of “optimal level of
reserves for confidence” such that once investors see $35 billion or $40
billion as reserves, they will stop speculation. This is a strange
argument. Private economic actors are much smarter. There is more to
investor confidence than temporary boost in stock of reserves when
everyone knows that the underlying political environment as well as the
policy regime and its credibility make the flow of reserves
unsustainable. The IMF calculates reserve adequacy in terms of the
amount to finance at least three months of imports especially for
countries with flexible exchange rate (which we claim to have), and of
course also enough to cover short term forex liabilities for countries
with open capital account. Nigeria currently has much more reserves to
cover even six months of imports (size of imports also depends on
exchange rate). So, what is the problem?
No amount of reserves can stop currency speculation in a poor policy
environment. There is much more to confidence than absolute or relative
size of reserves. Look at our West African neighbors that are doing far
better in economic terms and check out the size of their reserves (even
as a percentage of GDP). Until 2004, Nigeria never had more than $10
billion in reserves, and we have survived oil prices below $10 without
selling Nigeria. The British pounds has been down for months against
major currencies since the Brexit vote in June, while China (with
trillions of dollars in reserves) experienced major stock market and
currency attacks recently and the Yuan had to be devalued. Before the
2008/2009 crisis, Russia had robust reserves, but it lost tens of
billions struggling to defend the local currency and eventually yielded
to the market.
We spent one year trying to reinvent the wheel of macro management
and exchange rate regime at a time of adverse terms of trade shocks with
twin deficits. Finally, we have admitted that we had used the Nigerian
economy and Nigerians as guinea pigs in the futile experimentation with
tried but failed policy—and the dead bodies are littered everywhere with
a recession, escalating unemployment and factory closures, rising
inflation and poverty. Now we have started to make some progress with
so-called ‘flexible exchange rate’ but still combined with a black list
of 41 items ineligible for forex as well as other crude controls, and
the consequent huge parallel market premia that is one of the highest in
the world. The parallel market exchange rate has now become a very
important leading indicator in the economy. There is a saying that
“confidence grows at the speed that a coconut tree grows but falls at
the speed a coconut falls”. Investor confidence is not like a tap you
can turn on and off. Restoring policy credibility by swiftly correcting
the persisting errors and demonstrating commitment to sound macro
management rather than the “trial and error” mode will be the first
important step forward. If we sell assets and lodge into the reserves
under the current policy framework, I am willing to take a bet that in a
few months’ time, it will be frittered away and we will be in even a
bigger mess as economic agents know that we have nothing else to resort
to.
Furthermore, if building reserves or budget revenue is the objective,
it seems to me that we are chasing pennies through asset sale while
losing pounds. How much are we losing each day in oil production/sales
through the disruptions in the Niger Delta? We need to broker a deal
urgently on this matter. Can someone explain why the cost per barrel of
oil production in Nigeria is several times the cost in Ghana, Equatorial
Guinea, Saudi Arabia, Iran, etc and how many billions of dollars are
being “lost”? What does it cost to fund the security vessels to protect
oil companies vis-à-vis equipping the Navy to do its job, and how many
billions of dollars can be saved from that over time? How many hundreds
of millions or billions of dollars are being lost through inappropriate
pricing and auctioning of the telecommunications spectrum assets? How
much is being lost by way of portfolio/ FDI inflows and export revenue
due to the incoherent, inconsistent and distorting export and exchange
rate policies? Indeed, the amount of capital flight out of Nigeria is
estimated to be far in excess of the expected revenue from asset sales.
We know that government non-oil revenue has averaged 3% of GDP over
the years (because we relied upon the easy oil rents for revenue and
abandoned tax collection) while many African countries without oil
average 18- 25% of GDP in tax revenue. Such countries also have a larger
informal sector than Nigeria. Several of them are doing close to
double digit GDP growth. How did Dr. M.I Okpara, Ahmadu Bello and
Obafemi Awolowo as well as Dennis Osadebey and Samuel Akintola in the
regional governments or even the federal government of Nigeria then fund
their budgets without oil? It is good news that the Federal Inland
Revenue Service (FIRS) has announced its intention to make 700,000
companies pay tax for the first time. That is a good effort, but the
bulk of the money is in the informal sector (and we must learn how other
African countries do it). The list is long, but our point is a simple
one: sale of assets is the easy short-term option to earn peanuts while
ignoring the hard work to earn the sustainable revenue required to move
the economy forward.
In addition, the government is yet to demonstrate seriousness in
tackling the conundrum in our public finance. Over the past few years
especially 2009- 2014 (part of the years of high oil prices), total
recurrent expenditure exceeded total government revenue, meaning that
not a penny of the oil boom was used for infrastructure/ capital
expenditure and we even borrowed to fund consumption (literally every
penny of capital/infrastructure spending was borrowed). The trend has
not changed under the current government. Funds are fungible, and
reasonable people are right to fear that indirectly the proceeds from
asset sale will end up funding current consumption.
The argument that sale of assets is the only way to reflate the
economy out of recession is troubling, and suffers what economists might
call policy myopia or time inconsistency problem. First, imagine if
previous governments used asset sales as a strategy to ‘reflate the
economy’ during previous periods of economic recession or crisis.
Alternatively, if we auction away some valued national assets for the
short term goal of reflating the economy out of recession, what will
happen during future cycles of recessions and economic crisis? The
global economic system is inherently and cyclically crisis-prone.
Prudently managed economies are preparing for the next cycles of global
crisis, and the IMF has already warned of persisting vulnerabilities.
What shall we sell then?
Besides, a hasty auction of the assets will short change Nigeria.
Privatization of national assets is not an ideological matter for me. It
is plain pragmatism. Reasonable people can have a good debate about the
composition of public assets for sale at any time. Although government
is yet to be definitive about the assets being proposed for sale, it is
reasonable to object to any scheme that will hurriedly sell performing
public assets that guarantee future flows of revenue and forex to future
generations such as the NLNG, AFC shares, JVs in oil and gas sector,
etc. Even for non-performing assets, when privatization is forced and
assets auctioned on an emergency basis to meet short-term needs, the
danger signs are there for all to see. Nigeria will never get value for
money under the circumstance. We all know what happens when someone
urgently needs to sell his or her property to meet an emergency. What
happens to the valuation/pricing? If we price them properly and wish to
go through proper due process, the deal might take several years to
conclude thereby defeating the advertised purpose of immediate spending.
On the other hand, if we insist on forced sale because we need cash
urgently, we can as well imagine how the valuation will be done and how
buyers will bid for them.
In all, the proposal is largely self-serving and convenient. For some
privileged private sector operators with cash and access, the temporary
rump up of reserves as well as temporary strengthening of the Naira
will enable them to take whatever forex they can get (at the official
rate) knowing that it is just a temporary elixir. They can then
roundtrip same a few weeks after and rake in billions. Furthermore, the
attempt to sell valuable national assets under duress guarantees these
same interests to cherry-pick the assets on the cheap. For our Senators
and government, it is very convenient in the sense that it provides easy
money to continue with the expenditure trends. So, for both government
and its private sector collaborators in this scheme, it is a win-win.
The only losers are Nigerians and the economy. In this apparent
short-termism or myopia, no one seems to care about tomorrow.
This brings me to the issue of inter-generational equity. I read an
argument that a private company would normally sell its assets when it
is in distress. Well, there is a world of difference between managing a
firm/company (a micro operation with profit maximization as objective
and which can easily go through bankruptcy/liquidation) and managing a
national economy with multiple and often conflicting objectives,
including social and inter-generational equity. Oil and gas, solid
minerals and other depleting national assets belong to present and
future generations of Nigerians in perpetuity. In less than 40 years,
oil may be history in Nigeria. But the current generation has basically
been consuming what belongs to them and their great grand-children. In
various policy proposals (which obviously did not see light of the day
because again, they were not convenient) I have argued that Nigeria
should adopt the Norwegian model whereby we invest 100% of the proceeds
from oil, privatization, and other sale of assets into a sovereign
wealth fund. Each generation can only spend the returns from the fund as
revenue. This way, we can guarantee that generations unborn will also
enjoy the gift of nature to the country and truly force us, out of
necessity, to diversify the economy. For the Senate to glibly suggest
sale of national assets without first providing a robust legislation on
how to invest the proceeds to protect future generations is very
disappointing. We have sold many national assets in the past (under
privatization programme) and does anyone remember what we did with the
proceeds? At some point, this country must start learning and not repeat
the same mistake year in year out.
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