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Written By Yushau A. Shuaib
ENOUGH OF ECONOMIC
SLAVERY
The
Democrat February 1 & 3, 1995
SHAME -Shame indeed is what foreign economic
experts have plunged Nigeria into. Their economic programmes and policies geared
towards Africa are nothing but woes upon woes. Their media too never help
matters. Instead of lambasting their masters on the crises they have put our
country into as an experimental ground for practising their half-baked concocted
economic theories, the foreign press crucify our government with the usual
clichés that we lack “sense of direction, accountability and transparency.”
Imagine, recently when the British
Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) came from London on official assignment to Abuja,
instead of zooming their camera lenses on gorgeous edifices and completed
structures (the pride of our nation), they were busy taking shots of uncompleted
(not abandoned) projects still under construction and few potholes which were
necessitated by the ongoing installation of traffic lights on the major highways
in the capital city. If they had no predetermined agenda, what is the impression
they wanted to create in the minds of their global listeners and viewers?
While their media see nothing newsworthy about
the country’s development efforts except economic misfortunes such as hunger,
starvation, famine, war and disease, foreign financial institutions relish our
being indebted to them as to remain foolishly enslaved, perpetually stagnated
and economically milked dry.
It is undeniable that Nigeria as a developing
country has undergone a series of economic changes as an attempt to grapple with
the issues of economic development. Over the decades, we were forcefully led to
implement tough, politically risky, bitter pills economic measures, which were
anticipated to lay the groundwork for economic recovery. But the result of those
policies of foreign financial institutions, most especially the World Bank, IMF
and Paris Club, with their strict conditionality, is untold hardship on the
populace that exacerbated poverty.
Nigeria has recognized the failure of foreign
economic policies and accepted the need for fundamental policy reforms, which
include a regulated economy being operated in the country, with a view to
satisfying the aspirations of Nigerians and the international community at
large. The so-called world economic experts are still condemning these worthy
reforms.
The Minister of Finance and Economic
Development, Chief Anthony Ani and the Minister of State, Alhaji Abu Gidado
realizing the implication of blindly following their doctrines have, in
different fora urged the international community to give the country a chance to
solve its economic problems in its own way. He pointed out that Nigeria has
currently evolved the best approach, which includes putting in place appropriate
programmes and policies that would eventually reduce the economic problem.
Even though the country has consistently been
challenged by two aspects of adjustment - how to make it more socially and
politically sustainable and how to ensure it reduces the poverty level in what
is already seen as one of the world’s most impoverished nations, still the fruit
of uncountable foreign economic pills, so far swallowed by the government is yet
to ripen while the hardship goes on unabated. It is obvious in our faces.
The naked propaganda and childish claim by the
International Monetary Fund that the condemnable Structural Adjustment Programme
is the only hope for economic development of Nigeria and other African
countries, after its woeful failures in the countries it has so far been
operated, is an attempt, if we accept it, to keep us at bay, to subjection,
re-colonization and enslavement.
In one of his articles recently, Professor
Bade Onimode, Chairman Institute for African Alternative (IFAA) clearly pointed
out the ironic achievements of Structural Adjustment Programme in African
countries which include the death of millions, especially women and children,
drastic fall in real income, widespread hunger, malnutrition and stunted growth;
excessive and pauperizing inflation; collapse of social services and falling
enrolment of all levels of education, huge and rising unemployment, declining
export earning; destruction of public services, from inhuman retrenchment
exercises; the de-industrialization of African countries; widespread repression
needed to impose SAP on un-working population; threatened social disintegration
from rising crimes and drug pushing.
In fact, the catastrophic effectsof IMF on our
lives is a gory tale of abandonment, rejection and lamentation. It is high time
for Nigeria mindful of adapting ideas and concepts to suit her own historical
and cultural peculiarities in terms of acceptability to our existence, instead
of consuming all the world dictates to our detriment.
It will be a worthy step if we vehemently
reject and refuse to accept what they don’t operate in their own countries like
massive and persistent currency devaluation to make our raw materials and other
services very cheap to their advantage; total rejection of the so-called import
liberalization where we open our borders for goods and services, while they are
closing their own against our products and opposition to dogmatic privatization
of public enterprises, whether profitable or not.
This reminds me of how our foreign partners
made a mockery of Nigeria’s Enterprises Promotion Decree, which was enacted to
encourage Nigerians to take active part and control the national economy. The
Nigerians and the foreigners were expected to participate meaningfully in the
ownership and management of economic activities in the country, but due to the
hanky-panky tricks the policy was thwarted.
The decree dictated areas where foreigners
could associate with Nigerians to do business and areas where the right and the
security of the government were needed for combination with foreign investors
and Nigerian citizens. At the end, the foreign partners used Nigeria as fronts
to enable them to siphon money and maintain high level of ownership and control
of such establishment. In addition, they twisted the laws to their advantage
through various false sales of shares.
For how long shall we be dictated to like
foolish docile helots? For how long shall we continue to be in bondage of
economic slavery? It is high time Nigeria, with other African countries, woke up
from their slumber and realized these catastrophic policies of Western economic
experts and strictly and firmly stand on any decision that would easily revamp
our economies without soliciting for their ever-failing consultancy.
African countries should stand behind the
proposal of the Economic Commission for Africa on the correct road to rapid
recovery and genuine development. It is necessary for Nigeria to begin the
search for an alternative way of development that is intrinsically Nigerian and
could be used as an alternative to existing structures which is capable of
taking us into the new century, not only in maintaining the status of being the
giant of Africa but as a world economic power.
If the World Bank, IMF and other Financial
Institutions want the country to take them seriously, they must do more to adopt
Nigeria’s concern as their own and make sure that it is seen to be more
forcefully acting on behalf of the country’s economic developmental priorities.
The immediate cancellation of all our foreign debts will be enough and
justifiable as part of the reparation payment for the days of slavery legally
due to us.
The two parties, Nigeria and foreign financial
institutions, should recognize that the failure of one is also the failure of
the other. Moreover, we should point out to them that the sovereignty of our
country, as Professor Onimode rightly pointed out, includes the right to design
our budget and economic policies in the best interest of our country without
interference. “Chike nan Kurrum”.
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