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The Trumpet Newspaper Issue 602 (July 26 - August 8 2023)

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Page14 <strong>The</strong><strong>Trumpet</strong> JULY <strong>26</strong> - AUGUST 8 <strong>2023</strong><br />

Opinion<br />

<strong>The</strong> Positive Sides of Tinubunomics<br />

By Reuben Abati<br />

<strong>The</strong> other day President Bola<br />

Tinubu announced that<br />

Nigerians are going through<br />

the equivalent of childbirth pains,<br />

but his administration is determined<br />

to ameliorate the pains, provide<br />

succor and make life better for all.<br />

During his Presidential campaigns,<br />

he told Nigerians – emi lo kan, that<br />

is in Yoruba -“it is my turn”. He also<br />

told us “e lo fokan bale”, that is<br />

don’t worry, I would be there for<br />

you as he explained that phrase. He,<br />

practically, spiritually wished<br />

himself into power and has since his<br />

assumption of office with all the<br />

baggage about unresolved court<br />

matters, confronted, through<br />

proxies, big challenges from the<br />

People’s Democratic Party and the<br />

Labour Party (LP).<br />

What we see is that the President<br />

has continued to play “Rose Garden<br />

politics”, grab the power, hold it,<br />

and be seen to be taking charge and<br />

be seen also to be doing so, even as<br />

the opposition continues to raise<br />

questions of legitimacy. It is the<br />

courts that would determine that,<br />

eventually, but more than any other<br />

time in Nigerian history, the judex is<br />

in the eyes of the storm, exposed to<br />

the most excruciating scrutiny.<br />

Indeed, the judiciary in spite of itself<br />

has been dragged right to the bottom<br />

of the arena, in what when reviewed<br />

would come across, as one of the<br />

most difficult moments in the<br />

history and trajectory of the<br />

Nigerian judiciary. Our Lordships<br />

are in a difficult place. <strong>The</strong>y carry a<br />

burden to do justice, and they also<br />

have to be seen to be doing so. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

are faced with a political arena<br />

where expectations about risks and<br />

outcomes are the subjects of<br />

confrontation. <strong>The</strong> judex are<br />

expected to be above board at all<br />

times and to dispense justice<br />

without minding whose ox is gored.<br />

<strong>The</strong> more liberal characters in this<br />

conversation claim that they are<br />

looking for justice, and that justice<br />

is the “be-all-and end-all” of the<br />

judicial process. But really, what is<br />

justice? Pontius Pilate asked “what<br />

is truth? And I wager a bet that the<br />

present imbroglio over the <strong>2023</strong><br />

Presidential elections would not be<br />

resolved on the basis of questions of<br />

legitimacy, but law, public policy<br />

and public interest. I stand to be<br />

corrected if the pendulum swings<br />

otherwise.<br />

This piece however is not<br />

necessarily about Tinubunomics,<br />

stricto senso, as the title indicates. It<br />

is about what I consider the satirical<br />

sides of the same phenomenon.<br />

Abroad, out there are the details that<br />

Nigeria’s inflation rate is now<br />

22.79%. Fitch, an international<br />

rating agency tells us that we should<br />

in fact be looking at 25.1% in due<br />

course, and that real GDP growth is<br />

likely to slow down to 2.7% in the<br />

face of high living costs. Debt<br />

service to revenue ratio is about<br />

97%, so high that members of the<br />

Afenifere, a socio-cultural group,<br />

have also now become emergency<br />

economists - much better than<br />

stoking the fires of ethnic difference<br />

- and are now offering economic<br />

counsel about how to eliminate debt<br />

and increase productivity, growth<br />

and values. Meanwhile, the<br />

Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)<br />

has just met – the first MPC since<br />

Bola Ahmed Tinubu<br />

President Bola Tinubu assumed<br />

office, the first to be presided over<br />

by Mr. Folashodun Shonubi as<br />

Acting Central Bank Governor.<br />

Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) stands<br />

at 18.5%, and this is the first MPC<br />

meeting in a long while without the<br />

embattled, suspended Governor of<br />

the Central Bank, Godwin Emefiele.<br />

Foreign Exchange Rate is as high<br />

as N868 to the dollar in the parallel<br />

market. Jobs and productivity are<br />

negatively impacted. Money supply<br />

is at an all-time high at over N9<br />

trillion, pressuring the FX market.<br />

What should be our expectations<br />

then, today as the MPC concludes<br />

its meeting? What is the balance of<br />

risks? Nigeria’s MPC faces a<br />

dilemma like never before now: to<br />

tighten, ease or retain? Whichever<br />

way the MPC decides today, the<br />

signs look ominous. Traditional<br />

orthodox economics has not worked<br />

here for as long as we can remember<br />

because the fundamentals of this<br />

economy are askew, the necessary<br />

alignments between fiscal and<br />

monetary policies are not in place,<br />

productivity is low, growth is<br />

abysmal. Let us leave the economic<br />

jargons to the economists. If you<br />

have two or three of them in this<br />

space, they will express different<br />

opinions, quoting dead theories<br />

lacking connection with<br />

contemporary Nigerian realities and<br />

claiming, each one of them, to be<br />

right. You are better off avoiding<br />

their voodoo and mischief. Nigerian<br />

economists are only good when they<br />

gather to pick up appointments at<br />

the Policy Advisory Committees<br />

that the Federal and State<br />

Governments often set up or when<br />

they hold their annual peppersouping<br />

and jollof-ing conferences<br />

where they write reports that are at<br />

best photocopies of statements from<br />

the IMF, the World Bank, and the<br />

rating agencies. Many of them<br />

would soon show up as government<br />

appointees at both Federal and State<br />

levels, to collect government<br />

patronage and shake heads like<br />

experts. I doubt how much of an<br />

economist anybody can be in this<br />

environment, mouthing dead<br />

theories that don’t work here! Even<br />

Afenifere, a socio-cultural group is<br />

trying to fill the void! In some<br />

states, governments have declared<br />

shorter working days as if that is the<br />

solution. <strong>The</strong> economist and their<br />

clients have failed this country.<br />

It is therefore about time that we<br />

brought this thing out of their<br />

textbooks and face hard reality to<br />

console ourselves as the affected<br />

people. <strong>The</strong>re seems to be an<br />

emergency consensus that<br />

Tinubunomics, or “Jagabanomy” as<br />

it is otherwise known, is not<br />

working, 60 days in the making and<br />

implementation. We have been told<br />

“e lo fokanba le”- our hearts are<br />

already palpitating. Mr Bayo<br />

Onanuga and Senator Dayo<br />

Adeyeye have both appealed to us<br />

to be patient, and that after these<br />

initial pains, there would be<br />

“everlasting joy”. Which everlasting<br />

joy, please, Senator Adeyeye? Our<br />

grandchildren are destined to pay<br />

back all the money that the APC<br />

government has borrowed with all<br />

the accrued interests? Nigeria is at a<br />

Continued on Page 15>

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