• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Startups
  • Funding
  • Sponsored
okere

Opinion Piece: Nigeria, A Chance for re-awakening

8 months ago
Legal Lens - techbuild

Legal Lens is saving Cost on Legal Fees for South Africans

9 mins ago
Godo hub - techbuild

GoDo Hub opens call for Mentors

2 hours ago
Founder Institute
Science and Technology Innovation Challenge - techbuild

Nigerian student? Apply for Science and Technology Innovation Challenge 2021

3 hours ago
Highest Currencies in Africa - techbuild

10 Highest Currencies in Africa (2021)

5 hours ago
COVID-19 - techbuild

COVID-19: Digitalization of Economic Sectors will kick-start a New Growth Cycle – AfDD’s Report

13 hours ago
UK-Nigeria Tech Hub - techbuild

UK-Nigeria Tech Hub launches Virtual Capacity Building Programs

21 hours ago
Communications Service Providers - techbuild

Customers demand more Digital Engagement from Communications Service Providers – Amdocs Survey

22 hours ago
Autochek - techbuild

Nigerian Startup Autochek opens in Accra to support Ghana’s Automotive Industry

1 day ago
AWEC - techbuild

Apply: African Women Entrepreneurship Cooperative (AWEC) 2021

1 day ago
Next Health Accelerator - techbuild

African Entrepreneur? Apply for Next Health Accelerator Program (USD 15,000)

1 day ago
Ayoba - techbuild

African Messaging App ayoba assures Users of Full Privacy Protection

1 day ago
Ethereum - techbuild

Reasons Ethereum is hitting High in 2021

1 day ago
Founder Institute Founder Institute Founder Institute
  • Home
  • About
  • Partners
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Signup to receive updates
  • en English
    en Englishfr Frenchar Arabicsw Swahilipt Portuguesede Germanes Spanishzh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
Innovation | Start-ups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Funding
  • Women Tech
  • Hubs
  • News
  • Interviews
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Funding
  • Women Tech
  • Hubs
  • News
  • Interviews
No Result
View All Result
Innovation | Start-ups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa
No Result
View All Result
Home General

Opinion Piece: Nigeria, A Chance for re-awakening

Guest Writer by Guest Writer
11th May 2020
in General
okere

okere

Why can’t we fix our educational system and send our children to schools here? And fix our hospitals and treat our sick here, instead of our notoriety as big spenders on medical tourism?

Nigerians are gradually coming to terms that the cheese has indeed moved this time.

The days of lucre and easy money, fuelled by petrodollars are far behind us; no thanks to shale oil and other sources of energy.

The aimless swagger has been replaced by a renewed sense of purpose and the need to produce in order to survive. No wonder Agriculture seems to be the only game in town these days.

okere1

To borrow from the words of Pravin Gordhan, Finance Minister of South Africa, it is now Agri-Cool.

All manner of yesterday’s nose thumpers now proudly call themselves farmers; it is beginning to have a nice ring and tone to it.

Unlike other oil boom and busts, it seems that this particular bust is here to stay. We seem to be in a stalemate.

If we cut production to shore up prices, the shale producers will seize the opportunity to increase their own production and drive the prices right down.

Not to talk of the conscious global effort towards cleaner renewable energy, and the significant improvement in its technology and adoption.

COP 21 in Paris cemented the commitment to clean environment and green energy.

Time there was not too long ago in Nigeria, when first class and business class seats on commercial airlines were filled way before economy seats, and private jets littered all our airports.

But how did we get here and how did we subsequently fall from such deluded Olympian heights?

The recurrent mistake we keep making as a nation is failing to anticipate and plan for our oil windfalls.

There have been many boom opportunities since Nigeria joined the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in 1971.

Oil prices increased by 400% in six short months after the Yom Kippur War following the Arab Oil Embargo.

Crude prices doubled from $14 in 1978 to $35 per barrel in 1981 following the Iran/Iraq war.

The price of crude oil spiked in 1990 with the uncertainties associated the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and the ensuing Gulf War – the so called ‘Gulf War windfall’ under then Head of State Ibrahim Babangida.

The report of the panel of enquiry headed by the eminent Dr. Pius Okigbo in 1994 was critical of the government’s role in mismanaging the $12.4b windfall. Perhaps most of it had gone with the wind.

Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration shows that the latest windfall happened between February 2011 and August 2014, under the Goodluck Jonathan presidency, when oil prices were much in excess of $100 per barrel.

Another golden opportunity was squandered, characterised by organised kleptocracy of epic proportions as has now come to light.

There is a saying in my native Igbo culture that an abomination that endures for long enough becomes part of the culture. Corruption came close to achieving this status in Nigeria.

Our inflated egos were matched with the adventure into GDP rebasing in 2014 which put Nigeria as the largest economy in Africa, overtaking poster boy South Africa.

Alas this new status, propped up by an artificial exchange rate sustained by huge foreign reserves did not last.

As the reserves dwindled, partial reality in the foreign exchange rate has wiped away close to half of the estimated $510b GDP, and along with it our bragging rights.

Nigeria - cfamedia

I say ‘partial reality in the foreign exchange rate’, because I still feel that a differential of over 60% between the official rate and the parallel rate to the dollar seems to suggest that one of the rates is way off the mark.

The acute shortage of the ‘Official Dollar’ seems to suggest that the parallel rate is closer to the mark.

The thing about the market is that you can distort it for a while, but you cannot hold it back for long. The market is like water; it will always find its level.

The earlier we let this happen the better for our economy. Within the period of a decade, I have witnessed the British pound at close to £1 to $1.9 and now as low as £1 to $1.22; and yet the British government is not scrambling to shore up the pound by all means (including expensive subsidy of the currency).

It should be understood that such distortions open huge arbitrage opportunities for those with access, which distract from productive pursuit.

Rent seeking from allocation of dollars creates a new crop of overnight billionaires akin to those created during the era of petroleum subsidy. In the long run, it blows no good wind.

I have always argued that more important than the exchange rate, is the stability of the rate, which removes uncertainty, and attracts investment.

As it is, we are inadvertently inviting more pressure on the naira because even locals are saving their money in dollars, albeit at zero interest rates.

And why not? They have figured out that even at the relatively high interest rates on treasury bills and fixed deposits, savings are halved in real terms due to the fast deteriorating exchange rate of the naira.

We have to understand that the exchange rate is an indicator of the perception of performance, and opportunity in the economy.

To shore it up you have to do the hard work of better economic management. Removing the alert on the dashboard of your car that tells you that the oil level is low, puts out the irritating light, but does not guarantee that the engine will not knock further down the road.

There is now a fervent glamour for buying Nigerian and growing what we eat. About time too. According to the Minister of State for Agriculture, Heineken Lokpobiri, Nigeria spends about $22bn annually on food imports.

How can a country with a huge population of over 170 million people (a viable consumer market by any standard), squander such a whopping amount on imported food, and in the process export much needed jobs in the agriculture value chain?

This is despite the huge fertile landmass and favourable climate?

Nigeria - cfamedia

It is no different in the Education and Health sectors. It was estimated that Nigerians studying in British and American Universities spent over N137billion on tuition and living expenses in 2014.

There were also about 71,000 Nigerian students who paid tuition fees in excess of N160billion in Ghana during the same period (these may have easily doubled in the past year due to the deteriorating foreign exchange rate).

And yet the Nigerian Government’s total budget for education in 2017 is N540b (a paltry $1.1b against South Africa’s $22b)

Why can’t we fix our educational system and send our children to schools here? And fix our hospitals and treat our sick here, instead of our notoriety as big spenders on medical tourism?

I understand that luxury shop owners in Dubai and London are asking loudly ‘where are the Nigerians?’ Well, the Nigerians are at home, confronting the new realities of basic survival.

You only have to look into the eyes of the average Nigerian to glean the pain of adjustment.

This difficult period is too painful to waste. We must seize the opportunity of this painful reality check, for a reawakening and realignment towards doing the right thing.

As Maria Robinson said “Nobody can go back and start a new beginning, but anyone can start today to make a new ending”. Let us begin today to write the ending we want for our country.

About the Author

Austin Okere is the Founder of CWG Plc, the largest ICT Company on the Nigerian Stock Exchange & Entrepreneur in Residence at CBS, New York. Austin also serves on the Advisory Board of the Global Business School Network, and on the World Economic Forum Global
Agenda Council on Innovation and Intrapreneurship. Austin now runs the Ausso Leadership Academy focused on Business and Entrepreneurial Mentorship


Don’t miss important articles during the week. Subscribe to cfamedia weekly digest for updates.

Related Posts

Godo hub - techbuild
General

GoDo Hub opens call for Mentors

2 hours ago
Highest Currencies in Africa - techbuild
General

10 Highest Currencies in Africa (2021)

5 hours ago
COVID-19 - techbuild
General

COVID-19: Digitalization of Economic Sectors will kick-start a New Growth Cycle – AfDD’s Report

13 hours ago
UK-Nigeria Tech Hub - techbuild
General

UK-Nigeria Tech Hub launches Virtual Capacity Building Programs

21 hours ago

SIGNUP FOR UPDATES

RECENT

  • Legal Lens is saving Cost on Legal Fees for South Africans
  • GoDo Hub opens call for Mentors
  • Nigerian student? Apply for Science and Technology Innovation Challenge 2021
  • 10 Highest Currencies in Africa (2021)
  • COVID-19: Digitalization of Economic Sectors will kick-start a New Growth Cycle – AfDD’s Report

PREVIOUS

Join Founder Institute Join Founder Institute Join Founder Institute
ADVERTISEMENT
Innovation | Start-ups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa

© 2013-2021 techbuild.africa. All Rights Reserved.

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Sitemap
  • Terms of Service

Follow us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Funding
  • Women Tech
  • Hubs
  • News
  • Interviews

© 2013-2021 techbuild.africa. All Rights Reserved.

en English
en Englishfr Frenchar Arabicsw Swahilipt Portuguesede Germanes Spanishzh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.