Tuesday, 30 May 2017

How Nigeria can overcome recession –Kalu

  
     Former Abia State governor, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, has, listed way the country could diversify its economy to come out of recession.  He listed tourism as one of the sectors that could be a boast to the economy, citing the Gambia, as one country that survives on it.


It has been two years since the All Progressives Congress (APC) came into power, how would assess the present administration in terms of governance?
    We have experienced both the good and the bad. Overall, the APC administration, honestly, has also done fairly well in terms of where they want us and the country to be. The APC came into power on the premise of fighting corruption; premise of diversifying the economy. It came on the premise of trying to build a New Nigeria, which has always been what every administration will say. Yes! There has been some improvement in terms of addressing the security challenges in the North East and partially the Niger Delta.

    But we are not yet there! And the most difficult thing or challenge has been the economy. Again, gradually, we are making some progress. Government needs to go into massive investments on roads and infrastructure; which is what the APC government is doing now. So, I am hoping that gradually, slowly but steady, we will be easing out of recession. Recession does just go in one day. It’s funny when I hear people say we will ease out of recession in three months. It’s what takes couple of years and gradually, we will see the gains. Both the World Bank and the IMF are seeing that we are gradually going to ease off.

   I used to be a good advocate of devaluation the naira to get it right, but today, I think the Western countries cannot continue to ask us to devalue the naira because we have a mono- economy. We have a single product we are selling to them, so at every time, the naira is on the receiving side. In the last 20 years, I have never heard the dollar being devalued; I have never heard the British pound being devalued. Something is wrong somewhere, something is wrong for Africa.  The only currencies being devalued are mostly African countries. What parameters do they use to market this stability of our currencies?

     The government, on the other hand, needs to do something about the issue of rule of law. Obeying court ruling or order will go a long in deepening our democracy. If the court says you should release Sambo  Dasuki, you must release him!  It’s the order of the court and that’s the beauty of democracy. For example if the say you must detain Orji Uzor Kalu, you must detain me, because that is what the court says. The people are only seeing the hardware of democracy we have not been able to build the software. The software of democracy is respect to our human rights, court orders

 As an entrepreneur of note, what quick major steps do you think government ought to take in the short term to address key economy challenges?  

   China for example, 30 to 40 years ago, started by first producing enough food for people to eat. We should look for a strategy, go into massive food production, then after feeding ourselves, the second thing will be to export.  And we have the capacity!  The government should go to places like Aba, Onisha and Abeokuta where people are conversant with technology and invest.

There are many technologies we are importing that we don’t need; we can manufacture them here. As a governors, I continued to encourage ex president Obasanjo to invest and return back all those engineers that fought in Biafra to the Kaduna defence corporation to start manufacturing equipment and arms for exports. These are things that we can use to come out of recession; we don’t need to believe in oil. This country is enormously very rich such that we don’t need the crude oil. The country can make money if there is stability and security. If people can move from Sahara desert to Atlantic Ocean without anybody molesting them, people will like to come from Sweden, U.S, everywhere to invest.

Tourism can bring in $100 billion investment every year in Nigeria. Go to small countries like Gambia they don’t have any other thing than tourism because there is stability. The hospitality industry in Gambia has already employed almost everybody there. I am telling that hospitality industry alone can employ 20-25% of our young people leaving schools but the issues is that there is no security you go to the east, they are telling you about kidnapping, about the Niger Delta Militant. A country cannot leave this way, the president should do more.

The greatest disservice that has being done to this economy is by not giving us electricity. Electricity is a big setback and there is nothing we can do to develop without electricity.

 Talking about electricity, the Obasanjo administration pumped huge amounts of money into the power sector yet nothing came out of it. Then there was  the call for privatisation. Today, we have more darkness than we experienced in the past?

To be honest with you, the privatisation of the power sector was not the right thing to do. I had suggested that major corporations should take over our electricity. If you want to help Nigerians, bring a company like General Electric and tell them that you will own 55 per cent and others can own 45 per cent. So all these DisCos and GenCos will be part of the process. If I were to make that decision, federal government at all time will retain 25 percent on all the generating set. The Nigerian populace will invest 30 percent, the foreign companies will invest the rest and they will be able to manage and run it.
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