The International Monetary Fund has
warned that the current economic crisis in Nigeria may spill over to the
rest of West Africa with negative consequences.
It also raised the alarm that Nigeria
was spending too much of her revenue to service debts, noting that this
was not sustainable.
The Assistant Director and Head of
Fiscal Policy and Surveillance Division, Fiscal Affairs Department, IMF,
Catherine Pattillo; and the Director, Fiscal Affairs Department, IMF,
Vitor Gaspar, said this on Wednesday at a press conference on the IMF
Fiscal Monitoring Report as part of the World Bank/IMF Annual Meetings
in Washington DC, United States.
They insisted that the fact that about
45 per cent of the Federal Government’s revenue was being paid as
interest on the nation’s debt was a worrying development.
Pattillo said, “The slump in oil
production and slow growth have created challenges for Nigeria. But one
statistic that is quite striking to me is that the debt profile is
weakening and the interest account payment is more than 45 per cent of
the Federal Government’s revenue. The priority is a big challenge.
“On the fiscal side, the important
priority should be in safeguarding fiscal sustainability, which means,
importantly to increase non-oil revenues and implement an independent
price-setting mechanism that minimises fuel subsidy. So, these are two
priorities, while also of course, improving public service delivery so
that citizens can see the benefits of good governance and services
financed by the government.
“So, these are the challenges. As you
know, Nigeria is a very important economy in the African region and its
success has positive spill over for the region, particularly in West
Africa, and its challenges create difficulties for its neighbours.”
On his part, Gaspar said, “Message
number one is that if you look at the global debt and deficit landscape
in the world, you’ll see that the countries that have the highest public
sector deficit are oil exporters; Nigeria is in debt and it is a
country much hit by very low oil prices.
“That is a general message because it
applies to oil exporters in general; the group of oil exporters have
shared some characteristics.
“The most important point, in my view,
is that for countries in sub-Saharan Africa to deliver on the SDGs, the
key challenge is the building up of revenue mobilisation capacity
through tax capacity building; that’s a key priority.”
He added, “These countries must improve
their capacities to raise revenue, and why is that so? Because there is
such need in term of public infrastructure, there is such need in terms
of public education; there is such need in terms of health.
“For these group of countries, public
finance/fiscal policy is part of the overall development strategy, and
in that, tax capacity is a fundamental cornerstone.”
Meanwhile, the Minister of Finance, Mrs.
Kemi Adeosun, has condemned multilateral funding agencies and Western
nations for blocking an attempt by Nigeria to generate electricity from
coal on the excuse that the project is not ‘green’.
She said this at the ongoing annual
meetings of the World Bank/International Monetary Fund in Washington DC,
United States of America on Wednesday.
According to her, it is hypocritical to block the project at a time Nigeria needs power most.
Although Adeosun did not give details of
the project, she said it was blocked because of its likely contribution
to carbon emission, but noted that most developed countries still
relied on coal as a means of generating electricity.
The minister, who spoke on
infrastructure funding for Africa, said, “I think there is a need for
consistency around bankable projects that can attract investments. Yes,
we do need macroeconomic stability. We also do need consistency of
policies by the multilateral institutions and Western countries.
“Let me give you an example. In Nigeria,
we have coal and there is power inadequacy. It doesn’t take a genius to
work out what it will take to get coal-fired power. Yet, we are being
blocked. I think there is some hypocrisy in that. We have an entire
Western industrialisation that was built on coal-fired energy and that
is the competitive advantage that has been used to develop Britain,
where I grew up. Now, Africa wants to do it, and they are saying it’s
not green, we can’t do it and that we should go and do solar and wind,
which are the most expensive power projects in the world.
“Yes, we are going to have the narrative
around infrastructure; we must invest in infrastructure, but we must
also make sure the playing field is level. The West, after polluting the
atmosphere for 100 years, and when Africa wants to explore its
resources, they say no.
“Yes, we would come up with bankable projects and we would behave ourselves, but I think we also need to be firm.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment