Let us use this windfall wisely this time. Let
us invest in infrastructure. Let there be electricity that does
not fail. Let us rebuild our four refineries and stop importing
gasoline. Let us invest in Petrochemicals in an attempt to begin
to industrialize. Let us build roads and open up the rural areas.
The Oil Windfall this time Around by Tunde Adenodi.
T
he Bush family has done some good for
Nigeria in the last 20-odd years. Not because they wanted to; but
because they had to, if they must do some good for themselves.
Father and son are into oil and Dick Cheney, their surrogate. Of
course, Nigeria swims in oil; probably even chokes with oil! And
Nigeria has the best oil, sulfur free and more amenable to the
basic procedure of separating the different components called
fractional distillation.
In 1991, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait against
the objection of the whole world. He refused to withdraw his
troops from Kuwaiti soil. Even when Saudi Arabia, the custodian of
the holy Kaaba allowed coalition troops to establish a base in
that country and most Arab countries urged him to withdraw,
Hussein still did not get it. He swore to fight the “mother of all
wars” and win against the awesome military powers of the United
States. By the time the smoke cleared and the dust settled, Saddam
was found in a rat hole in the out-skirts of Baghdad, dishevel and
haggard. Consequent upon Saddam’s invasion, Nigeria’s petroleum,
the best in the market, gave her a 12 billion dollar windfall that
General Babangida lavished on his pet project of perpetuating
himself in office for ever. He did not even admit there was a
windfall until the Oputa panel sat and indicted his government for
the loss of that money.
Before 1991, we had had a windfall presided
over by General Gowon. The Saudi government decided to politicize
their oil after Israel defeated the Arabs in the 6 day-war of
1967. He declared that money was not the problem for Nigeria, but
how to spend it. He spent on FESTAC, cement that caked at the
wharf, on demurrage on ships that could hardly float and yes, he
spent on the Udoji Awards that served as the catalyst for
unprecedented inflation in the history of Nigeria.
Gowon, unlike Babangida, believed in spreading
wealth. So he gave money to everyone and offered arrears that was
as much as a year. Suddenly, civil servants had a lot of money to
play with. They went shopping and purchased all manner of
electronics, cars, motor cycles. There was so much money chasing
very few goods. The sudden “wealth” or illusion of wealth was not
as a result of improvement in Gross Domestic Product. Nor was it
reflective of dynamic economic activities. It was simply the
result of putting excess money into the market. No investment in
the Petrochemical industry that is almost always the catalyst for
industrial development. The consequence was that people in the
rural areas all over the country abandoned their villages and
flooded the towns and cities across the country. The farms were
deserted and food was imported. Lagos exploded. Infrastructures
became inadequate particularly NEPA. Lagos traffic came to a halt.
What a way to spend the windfall?
In the last 5 years since President Bush’s
Iraqi misadventure, the price of crude oil has exploded beyond the
wildest imagination of all oil pundits. Today, the price of oil is
USD 126.00 per barrel. Oil watchers believe that the lowest it can
be by year’s end is between $95 and 100.00 per barrel. And the
price has been over 70.00 per barrel for over two years running.
It has been established that Nigeria produces 2 million barrels of
crude petroleum every day. At $126.00 per barrel, we accrue a cool
sum of $252 million every single day 24/7 and for 365 days.
For the purpose of this essay, let us assume
that we have sold crude oil at $70.00 (an arbitrarily chosen
figure) for the last 2 years only. Theoretically, we rake in a sum
of $ 140 million daily and approximately $51 billion annually or
$104 billion in the last 2 years. Is spite of the effort to
discredit former President Obasanjo on many grounds some of which
he richly deserves, he must be credited with putting our fiscal
house in order for the government of President Yar’Adua. He paid
our debts to the International Monetary Fund and all the other
debts accumulated from Shagari to Abdusalami Abubakar. He cleared
the debts and left in the treasury a healthy foreign reserve
bequeathed to Yar’Adua. And for the first time in the last 20
years, we are currently having a growth in our economy of 8 per
cent and inflation is in the single digit category.
At this time, it is necessary to remind
President Yar’Adua about what happened to the oil windfalls under
Gowon and Babangida. It is also hoped that the he will strive to
be on the right side of history by being frugal in his spending of
our collective holdings. But Yar’Adua has not quite started well.
He seems to shy away from taking a bold and decisive move to
permanently check inflation. One major move Ghana made to check
inflation was to simply shift the decimal point to the left by
two. The sum of N1000.00 simply becomes N100.00 with all goods and
services rationalized in that manner. Soludo had primed the
economy for this eventuality. But the President had a second
thought which was not borne out of economic necessity. It was as a
result of tremendous pressure put on him by the illegal traders in
foreign currency who are strictly his kinsmen north of the Niger!
He balked under pressure and almost got Soludo fired for his
audacity in making an announcement about the policy prematurely.
This policy is working in Ghana. It is hoped that love for Nigeria
rather than love for criminals who undermine the nation’s economy
at our airports all over the country will motivate him to
inaugurate this policy soonest.
Meanwhile, Iraq is still burning. Iran is
building nuclear weapons and thumbing its nose on the whole world.
Israel is watching with keen interest as the United States is
sending air craft carriers to the Gulf in a demonstration of force
to the bellicose Iranians. Oil speculators are still at work in
London, New York and Paris. India and China are buying up oil from
all sources. Indications are that this trend will continue and
prices of crude oil will continue to rise. Nigeria will continue
to accrue millions of dollars from the sale of petroleum for the
foreseeable future.
Let us use this windfall wisely this time. Let
us invest in infrastructure. Let there be electricity that does
not fail. Let us rebuild our four refineries and stop importing
gasoline. Let us invest in Petrochemicals in an attempt to begin
to industrialize. Let us build roads and open up the rural areas.