Monday 28 January 2013

Fed Govt blasts Ezekwesile


Fed Govt blasts Ezekwesili
Alleged squandering of $67bn reserves
•Says ex-minister’s accusation self-indictment 

The Federal Government has reacted to comments by former education minister,, Mrs. Obiageli Ezekwesili, at the 42nd University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) convocation, alleging that the Musa Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan administrations squandered $67 billion in foreign reserves.
This is even as it also accused her of hypocritically lambasting the poor education sector which she was part of and that despite receiving N458.1billion between 2006 and 2007, nothing is there to see in terms of achievements. The government equally said the statement from Ezekwesili, former World Bank vice president, on the decay in the education sector, was self-indictment that she made no impact while she was minister.
The government described Ezekwesili’s allegations on the financial handling of the Yar’Adua and Jonathan administrations as “outlandish and clearly fictitious”. Addressing a Press conference yesterday in Abuja, the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, in company with the Senior Special Assistant on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, Economic Adviser to the President, Prof. Nwanze Okidegbe and Special Adviser on Performance Monitoring, Prof. Sylvester Monye, said the allegations of Ezekwesili were curious in the light of the fact that she had been part of governance in the past as the vice president of World Bank. Maku said it was curious to note that some people find solution to challenging matters after leaving office, adding that her statement in Nsukka was “self-indictment”.
“If she says education has not worked, it means she is saying she did not work”, he noted. Maku said the government rather than focus on the motive of Mrs. Ezekwesili’s allegations, it will state the facts to Nigerians. According to him, the former education minister betrayed a surprisingly limited understanding of government finances in her comments at Nsukka. “These statements are even more curious in light of the fact that she has held senior positions in government, and more recently, a position as a vice president of the World Bank. However, rather than speculate about her motives, we would focus on the facts.
“The statement by the former World Bank vice president that the governments of Presidents Musa Yar’adua and Goodluck Jonathan have squandered $67 billion in reserves (including $45 billion in external reserves and $22 billion in the Excess Crude Account) left by the Obasanjo administration at the end of May 2007, is factually incorrect. At the end of May 2007, Nigeria’s gross reserves stood at $43.13 billion – comprising the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) external reserves of $31.5 billion, $9.43 billion in the Excess Crude Account, and $2.18 billion in the Federal Government’s savings. These figures can be independently verified from the CBN’s records. The figure of $67 billion alleged in her statement is therefore, clearly fictitious.
“However, since President Obasanjo left office, the reserves have experienced fluctuations, rising from $43.13 billion in May 2007, peaking at $62 billion in September 2008 during the Yar’adua/Jonathan administration when oil prices peaked at $147 per barrel, and falling subsequently to a low of $31.7 in September 2011. This fall in reserves was a result of the vicissitudes of the global financial crisis which caused CBN interventions in the currency market to defend the value of the naira.
The Excess Crude savings, a component of the reserves, was also used to stimulate the economy at the height of the global financial crisis to the tune of about $1 billion (or 0.5 per cent of our 2009 GDP). As a result, Nigeria is one of the few countries in the world that did not seek assistance from international financial institutions. It should be noted that the fiscal stimulus used to shore up the economy during that period was shared by all the three tiers of government, including commitments of about $5.5 billion made under the Obasanjo administration for power projects. “On the use of reserves, it is fallacious to say that the nation’s external reserves were dipped into or misapplied by the Federal Government. It is important to note that the Federal Government cannot dip its hands into external reserves. Like in other countries, the management of external reserves is one of the statutory mandates of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
“Section 2 sub-section (c) of the CBN Act (2007) states that the bank shall ‘maintain external reserves to safeguard the international value of the legal tender currency’ – in other words, to defend the value of the naira. No President since the democratic dispensation has contravened this Act. Other uses of the reserves are to settle both public and private sector foreign currency (e.g. payment of goods and services, settlement of external debt, etc) it must provide the naira equivalent to the CBN before the bank sells the required foreign currency. As a former World Bank vice-president for Africa, surely, Mrs. Ezekwesili must have known this.
“We also found Mrs. Ezekwesili’s interrogation of the education system somewhat disingenuous and borderline hypocritical. During her tenure as minister of education between 2006 and 2007, she collected total sum of N352.3 billion from direct budgetary releases. In addition, she received about N65.8 billion under the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) Fund, and over N40 billion from the Education Trust Fund (ETF) during her time as minister of education. “In view of these humongous allocations, few legitimate questions arise.
What did she do with all these allocations? What impact did they have on the education sector? One wonders if our education system would have been better today if these allocations were properly applied. No one disputes that Nigeria still faces challenges, most of which were built up over a long time. But we need to acknowledge the significant achievements of this administration in the aftermath of difficult, but necessary macro-economic and structural reforms being implemented in the country.
“This administration has restored macro-economic stability against the backdrop of global economic uncertainty, slow growth in the United States and high unemployment and unsustainable debt in Europe. In the first three quarters of 2012, Nigeria’s economy grew by about 6.4 per cent and is set to continue at a similar pace in 2013 according to independent forecasts. We have reduced our fiscal deficit to only 2.17 per cent of GDP in the 2013 budget, while rebalancing our spending in favour of capital expenditure.
These achievements have already received strong endorsement from international rating agencies. At a time when many advanced and emerging markets are being downgraded, Fitch and S&P have upgraded our sovereign credit ratings. The inclusion of Nigeria’s sovereign bonds in the emerging market bond indices of JP Morgan and Barclays also testifies tßo the growing confidence of the international investment community in our economy. “This administration is squarely focused on promoting a stable, non-inflationary, and inclusive economic environment for Nigeria to ensure that Nigerians can live better and more fulfilled lives”, Maku said.

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