Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Thursday, February 09, 2023

Creating Space for Nigerians in Nigeria ~







NEWSBUKA for all the burning topics in Nigerian society and beyond. GeT FREE EmAiL UpDaTeS."   Advertisement: booksss about boyz and girlz.  
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Wednesday, February 01, 2023

diaries












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Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Our daughter Ilhan...





...and hurrah for our son Rishi as he becomes the head of government in that other 'abroad' (UK)







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Wednesday, October 12, 2022

'From Consumption to Production' ?


LP (Labour Party) candidate, Peter Obi, is contesting to become the president of Nigeria in 2023.
The two major political parties are PDP and APC.


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Monday, September 30, 2019

advice for Haiti; advice for Nigeria




Is this how we will get to the promised land?  Hmmm.  

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Friday, June 07, 2019

Black People Getting Money

A   DANCE  CONCERT










Featuring:  Martinsfeelz, YangGang, FalztheBahdGuy, GrowWithGoogle, and others. 
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Friday, May 11, 2018

Calling women and youth

African Democratic Congress

The latest headline in the politics of the Nigeria project is that the new (January 2018) Congress for National Movement (CNM) founded by former president Obasanjo has now been fused into a political party called the African Democratic Congress (ADC)

Details here, please read

We can not give up, because we all know that:

Nigeria can do much better.  
Africa can do better.  
Black Lives matter.  

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Wednesday, October 04, 2017

Nothing new in the #news - The American presidency is still rubbish and the Nigerian presidency is still nonsense. #DumpTrump and #FireBuhari















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Monday, September 04, 2017

What can Buhari do to redeem his bonkom presidency? #HurricaneBadluck #BuhariCare

Inspired by various state-funded universal health provision programs e.g. #ObamaCare and now #RouhaniCare, I'm hoping that the Nigerian government can take similar measures to give our people a life worthy of citizens of The Giant Of Africa.
Hoping.  Hopeful. 



Obama CARES.  Rouhani cares.  DOES BUHARI CARE?  READ.


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Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Akoba, Adaba, ...

The legal dispute between a Silicon Valley VC and his former mistress is getting even uglier. 

Last week, Michael Goguen, a now former managing partner at Sequoia Capital, was sued for "sexually, physically and emotionally" abusing a woman for more than 12 years.

On Monday, Goguen filed a countersuit, alleging that the woman, Amber Laurel Baptiste, was extorting him...MORE from CNN/Money

Olorun ma je'a ri alakoba (translate) 

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Sunday, June 21, 2015

What will happen to oil money?

SLS, the Central Bank Governor, told the nation that, based on what he had calculated... up to $20bn of the money was not accounted for...more in This Yam, This Goat, This Country: PwC on NNPC – Part 1
http://nationalmirroronline.net/new/ptf-obj-absolves-buhari-of-corruption/
Abeokuta, January 2015

...Scatter The Place...it is not by force to have a national oil company...Since 1977 when it was established, the company has been a constant source of pain for the country.  My preference is for NNPC to be completely dismantled...And now is the best time to deal it a decisive blow from which it will never recover. More in This Yam, This Goat, This Country: Pwc On NNPC – Part 2

The Word On The Streets XIII: The Buhari Is Coming Edition
Lagos #Petrocalypse:
You are sitting in London and hearing there is fuel scarcity in Lagos...
I watched Nigerians, who are nothing if not resilient, wave the white flag of defeat to this one...
If you like high-profile gossip, you'll love The Word On The Streets XIII: The Buhari Is Coming Edition
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/02/world/africa/nigerian-president-elect-muhammadu-buhari-sets-out-his-agenda.html?_r=0
Kano, April 1, 2015
Guest Post: Agenda For The Next Petroleum Minister
The Petroleum Industry Bill addresses many of the reforms anticipated for NNPC to perform...
In your view, is this reasonable, wishful thinking, or conservative even?  See an anonymous Agenda For The Next Petroleum Minister

See more like this at aguntasolo.com
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Monday, May 11, 2015

Yet another tantalizing critique of Piketty's book

The English-language mondediplo.com site of Le Monde Diplomatique has Why Piketty isn't Marx. Well, of course I clicked and was rewarded with these gems of economics, scholarship, and criticism:
1.
We should not ignore the book’s merits. Every commentator must be impressed by the scale and quality of Piketty’s statistical work. But its principal virtue lies in the fact that it is a book. Most economists, driven by the need to publish, have unlearned the skill of writing books. Instead, they produce technical papers (not longer than the 15 pages allowed by academic journals) so standardised that they lose all meaning. Capital in the Twenty-First Century is the thousand-page culmination of 15 years of dedicated toil. The usefulness of social sciences is never so clear as when they contribute to the political debate with solidly established facts.
But all the methodological rigour in the world will not make up for the most basic deception, so obvious that it has passed unnoticed: the title. Piketty tells us he is going to discuss capital. He is aware that a well-known author has written a book about it before him. He seems to think “I can get away with this”. Unfortunately, it does matter: it’s fine to call a new book Critique of Pure Reason provided you are not writing about, say, herbal medicine.
Just what is capital? Piketty, not having really read Das Kapital, is only able to give a very superficial definition: the wealth of the wealthy. To Marx, capital was something else entirely, a mode of production, a complex social relationship which, crucially, adds employment relationships to the monetary relationships of simple market economies. These are based on private ownership of the means of production and on the legal myth of the “free worker”, who is deprived of any means of making a living independently and therefore forced to hire himself out to survive, and to submit to domination by an employer.
... That is what capital is, not just the Fortune 500. In the narrow sense of wealth, capital affects ordinary people through the obscene spectacle of wealth inequality. But as a mode of production and a social relationship, it affects them far more through the slavery it creates — an eight-hour working day takes up half their waking day. Redundant workers probably suffer less from seeing the rich parade their wealth than from the way their lives have been wrecked by the iron law of financial valuation. The same goes for those in work, who suffer under the tyrannical demands of productivity and profitability, constant threats of mass layoffs, delocalisation, restructuring — the energy-sapping precariousness and brutal nature of employment. None of this is even mentioned in the book.
The form and intensity of this slavery are determined by the historical circumstances under which capitalism is manifested — for in practice, there are many different kinds of capitalism. And it is the inseparably linked, changing economic and political factors that continually steer capitalism in new directions. But Piketty is quite unable to see things in a light that would show up the specifically political factors in the history of capitalism.

2. 
Piketty may repeat over his thousand pages that inequality increases when r(rate of return on capital) is greater than g (growth rate), but he has explained nothing because he doesn’t describe the factors that determine rates of return and growth in each era. These depend on the organisation of structures in the particular era, the result of political struggles — of class struggles.
3.
He is ill-equipped to tell the story.  Nothing in his career has prepared him for it: he cannot go overnight from a social-democratic, organic economist to being the Marx of the 21st century.
[La République des Idées, RI, for instance,]... has consistently taken great care never to raise any indecorous issues... talked about inequality for many years, weeping over the sufferings of the workers, but has blamed rapid technological innovation and lack of training, and praised the virtues of academic research. What about free trade and the devastation it brings? Or the tyranny of shareholder value? Or the EU, now in the final stages of neoliberalism? Not a word. RI thinks all these are our destiny. It has a strategy of evasion — and sleight of hand. Those who claim to be serious and are keen to maintain their influence and their reputation in the media never mention such things.
...
 Finance has been globalised and nobody had taken any notice, but it is now clear that everything is not rosy. The economist Daniel Cohen, like Piketty, after decades of silence on this, has suddenly realised that the design of the EU’s monetary union was “faulty from the start”... Their belated rectifications will have very little effect. Long-term intellectual and political habits are hard to overcome. Capital is riddled with them; Piketty skips over the political and social history that
...
The logical consequence of the strategy of evasion is that taxation becomes the only remaining tool available. Giving up on trying to change structures means taking palliative measures. Taxation has never been anything more than a social-democratic palliative — if we can’t tackle the causes, let’s at least try to alleviate the effects. Piketty, torn between the immediate problem and his desire not to disrupt anything fundamental, would like taxation to have greater virtues than it does, even the ability to regulate international finance. It’s hard to see what kind of tax could substitute for the necessary major assault on the structures of liberalised finance. What tax could replace bank separation, closure of some markets, a ban on securitisation?

4.
Piketty provides a scientific consecration, not only of the public perception that monetary inequality exists, but also of the theme around which the discussion of capitalism will revolve — around which it already revolves: even The Economist has had years of articles on monetary inequality, which will be the weakest link in the diagnosis, the point where the most inoffensive critiques converge. Monetary inequality has a great virtue: it makes it possible to avoid talking about the other inequalities created by capitalism, which are not accidental, but fundamental and constituent — the political inequalities in the true sense of hierarchical subservience in employment; that in business, some give orders and others must follow them. No tax, not even a global tax, will ever be able to address this.
To ask questions about this inequality, which is ultimately about the way lucrative property (capital), controls our lives, and of the pressure to be employed, is to ask the key question that the real Marx asks about capital. Or anyway the key question about capitalism’s current configuration, which a global financial tax (that will never happen) could do nothing about. Only a resumption of the struggle for popular sovereignty, by a single nation, or several nations together, according to political circumstances, would be able to do anything — by changing, through the transformation of structures, the balance of power that allows capital to hold society to ransom.
Piketty’s critique of wealth inequality touches on none of this. 
Isn't it funny how I've studied all these essays with pleasure and I still haven't read the book in question (Capital in the Twenty-First Century) yet.  I have, I should mention, studied Marx's Capital (usually known as Das Kapital) at least once.  I do not endorse every idea that I re-publish here, but I do endorse rigorous debate and critique.  To what extent does economics/business not know what the hell it's doing?  Do we even care?  (The usual answer is of course not.)  I think it is interesting too that this money blog (UpNaira / Money Talk) is becoming in some ways an anti-money blog, have you noticed?  

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References:
- Quotes 1-4 above taken from "Why Piketty isn't Marx", written by Frédéric Lordon in Le Monde Diplo May 12th 2015 (link)
The introduction/summary: Thomas Piketty’s thousand-page economics bestseller reduces capital to mere wealth — leaving out its political impact on social and economic relationships throughout history.

- Workers, a painting, by Olumide Oresegun

- Flower seller, and other paintings of labour(ers), by Diego Rivera

- What does Capital in the Twenty-First Century, the book, look like? 

Friday, April 03, 2015

This glorious summer of 2015 in Nigeria, incoming President Muhammadu Buhari will...

Having won the March 28th-29th Presidential elections, Retired General Muhammadu Buhari is expected to be sworn in on the 29th of May. 
Below is a campaign document detailing his pledge for the first 100 days of government.  

My 100 Days Covenant With Nigerians - Buhari  


Corruption and Governance
I pledge to:
  • Publicly declaration of my assets and liabilities
  • Encourage all my appointees to publicly declare their assets and liabilities as a pre-condition for appointment. All political appointees will only earn the salaries and allowances determined by the Revenue Mobilization and Fiscal Allocation Commission (RMFAC).
  • Personal leadership in the war against corruption
  • Inaugurate the National Council on Procurement as stipulated in the Procurement Act. The Federal Executive Council, which has been turned to a weekly session of contract bazaar, will concentrate on its principal function of policy making.
  • Review and implement audit recommendations by Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative including those on remittances and remediation.
  • Work with the National Assembly towards the immediate enactment of a Whistle Blower Act
  • Work with the National Assembly to strengthen ICPC and EFCC by guaranteeing institutional autonomy including financial and prosecutorial independence and security of tenure of officials. Make the Financial Intelligence Unit of the EFCC autonomous and operational.
  • Encourage proactive disclosure of information by government institutions in the spirit of the Freedom of Information Act.
  • Ensure all MDAs and parastatals regularly comply with their accountability responsibilities to Nigerians through the National Assembly.
  • All political officer holdersearn only the salaries and emoluments determined and approved by the Revenue Mobilization and Fiscal Commission RMFAC.
  • Work with the leadership of the National Assembly and the Judiciary to cut down the cost of governance.
  • I will present a National Anti corruption Strategy.
Insurgency and Insecurity
I have had the rare privilege of serving my country in the military in various capacities and rose to become a Major General and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. I defended the territorial integrity of our nation.
I pledge to:
  • As Commander-in-Chief, lead from the front and not behind in the comfort and security of Aso Rock to boost the morale of fighting forces and the generality of all Nigerians.
  • Give especial attention to the welfare of our armed forces and their families; lost heroes and their families and the victims of insurgency.
  • Boost the morale of the men and women in the field by public recognition of their efforts through memorabilia, stamps, statues, regular rotation, regular payment of allowances, regular communication between the men and officers of security agencies, provision of best health care and housing for families of deceased comrades.
  • I will present a marshal plan to the nation that will combat insurgency, ethnic and religious violence, kidnapping and rural banditry.
  • Provideof the best and appropriate military and other materials the country needs to combat insurgency, ethnic and religious violence, kidnapping and rural banditry.
  • Establish personal relationship with governors of the affected states by insurgency, with leaders of the countries in the region and with leaders around the world to coordinate efforts to combat insurgency, oil theft, piracy and criminality.
  • Restore confidence in the bilateral and multilateral partnerships in addressing insurgency including procurements.
  • Activate regular meetings of the National Police Council to ensure the discharge of its true constitutional role in a transparent and accountable way.
  • As a father, I feel the pain of the victims of insurgency, kidnapping and violence whether they are the widows and orphans of military, paramilitary, civilians and parents or the Chibok girls. My government shall act decisively on any actionable intelligence to #BringBackOurGirls.
Niger Delta
I pledge to:
  • Restore the integrity of the Niger Delta by implementing relevant sections of the Ledum Technical Committee on human capital development, resource management and distribution, governance and rule of law, reclamation and environmental and sustainable development.
  • Commit myself and my administration to the phased implementation of the United Nations Environment Program’s(UNEP) recommendations on Ogoniland.
  • Unveil a marshal plan for the regenerative development of the Niger Delta.
Diversity
Diversity refers to the inherent complexities of the variations in the social fabric of a people. Elements of poorly managed diversities include absence of cohesion, low capacity or political will to address resulting tensions, weak institutions of the state, in-equalities in every facet, impunity, breakdown of mutual trust, rising incidences of violence and total breakdown of law and order. To quickly reverse this observable trend in our society:
L incoming President Buhari / R outgoing Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
 I pledge to:
  • Continually acknowledge and consciously (?) equality and equity in all government businesses and activities.
  • Implement the National Gender Policy including 35% of appointive positions for women.
  • Work with National Assembly to pass a National Disability Bill, which I shall immediately assent, into Law.
  • Immediately charge relevant MDAs to implement new building codes to ensure that people with disability have easier access.
  • I will lead the campaign for restoration of mutual trust and cohesion for nation building, while also working with the National Assembly to make appropriation to strengthen institutions and platforms promoting dialogue and inclusion.
  • I will promote amendment to the provisions of section 14:3 of the Constitution to give effect to the expansion of the scope of representation to include women and persons with disabilities.
  • Work with National Assembly to pass the National Disability Act and the Equal Opportunities Bill.

Health
I pledge to:
  • Implement the National Health Act 2014,which guarantees financial sustainability to the health sector and minimum basic health care for all and ban medical tourism by government officials.
  • Launch special programme to improve availability of water and sanitation.
  • Review occupational health laws and immediately commence enforcement of the provisions to reduce hazards in the work place.
  • Unveil a health sector review policy to ensure the efficient and effective management of our health systems.
  • Mobilize the health workforce needed for the all-round implementation of our primary health programmes for rural communities.

Agriculture
I pledge to:
  • Make pronouncement to make agriculture a major focus of the government and lay the institutional foundation to attract large-scale investments and capital into the agricultural infrastructural sector
  • Launch a massive agricultural infrastructural investments plan that will focus on production, transportation infrastructure and marketing logistics across Nigeria
  • Launched a massive, well-coordinated and innovatively funded Youth in Commercial Agribusiness Programme.
  • Establish agricultural produce pricing and marketing mechanism and institutions
  • Work with State and Local Governments to launch Agricultural Support Programmes that will drive state level massive agricultural land development and mechanization agenda
  • Revamp, revitalize and continuous improvement on the national agricultural extension and rural support service system
  • Initiated a holistic project aimed at promoting and securing access of standardized agricultural products to both local and international markets
  • Lay the groundwork for a standardized market uptake and aggregation outlets for specific agricultural produce
  • Initiated a comprehensive revamp of key development banks (Bank of Agriculture, Bank of Industry and Nigeria Import & Export Bank) operations to fund inclusive agricultural value chain operations
  • Lay the groundwork for an ambitious, massive, seamless, accessible single-digit agricultural value-chain finance programme
  • Initiated the process to appropriately liberalise and expand agricultural and rural insurance system with premium subventions support to farmers
  • Revamp the agricultural cooperative system to drive rural agriculture and improves stakes for smallholder farmers
  • Launch appropriate tariff rectification instrument to support import-export anomalies
Management of the Economy for prosperity
Every Nigerian deserves to benefit from the running of our collective resources. We promise not to leave any Nigerian behind in our determination to create, expand and ensure equitable and effective allocation of economic opportunities. No matter the amount of funds we generate, unless there is an efficient and effective utilization, it will only create few billionaires.  Unless we fight corruption, the economy will only benefit the greedy in our society.
I pledge to:
  • Work with the legislature to strengthen constitutional provisions to make the meetings of the National Economic Council more periodic and predictable and its decisions more binding.
  • Present annual report on the state of the economy to the National Assembly and the Nigerian People.
  • The Preparation of Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and annual Budget will be guided by job creation projections.
  • Negotiate rule-based oil revenue management process, and adopt a rule based excess crude account management process, which will entail a fixed percentage (e.g. 10% or 20%) of oil revenue each year, and also set clear rules about where the proceeds will be domiciled, when the savings can be used, by whom, and what the savings can be used for.
  • Work with the National Assembly to adopt a rule based, realistic and predictable oil benchmark as a basis for a more transparent management of federation account revenue and excess crude account.
  • Launch a Small Business Loan Guarantee Scheme in partnership with Commercial Lenders to improve access to finance for SMEs.
  • Automate the business registration process to ensure sole proprietorships can be opened within 24 hours and incorporated business within 5 days.
  • Reduce the cost of company registration to a maximum of N10, 000 for sole proprietorships to encourage formalization.
  • Review and regulate import duty waivers to promote transparency and accountability;
  • Forge partnerships with state and local governments and private sectors to promote innovation, entrepreneurship and cottage industries;
  • Work with the National Assembly to review and finalize work on the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB);
  • Boost community and local participation in downstream through expansion and promotion of local content development;
  • Commence organizational reforms to curb corruption in NNPC and its subsidiaries
Industrial Relations
I pledge to:
  • Give political force to collective bargaining in all sectors of the economy, revive Tripartite Committee of Government, employers and workers organisations, whose task would be to constantly review matters of labour relations and the practice of industrial relations.
  • Undertake to institute an annual statutory tripartite body contribute towards formulation and implementation of broad macro-economic policies.
  • Reposition Ministry of Employment, Labour and Productivity and all relevant agencies mandated to manage labour dispute and grievance handling process to ensure pre-emptive strategies to halt the current frequent incessant strikes phenomenon.

Power
The power sector has become a monstrous demonstration of corruption. Despite investment of more than X there is nothing to show but few fat cats.
I pledge to:
  • War against corruption in the power sector
  • Tackle the issue of gas availability for the proposed power plants
  • Emphasis alternative sources of power such as small, medium and large hydro plants (Mambilla has capacity for 4,700 megawatts), wind, coal and solar. Efforts will be geared towards smaller and potable power supply.
  • Start an accelerated training of human resources for the power sector.
  • Work with PenCom to consider giving soft loans to power sector operators.

Youth and ICT Development
The youth are the salt of the nation. More than 60% of our population is categorized as being of youth age. The future of the nation depends on the brains of the youth and not on what is buried under the ground.
I pledge to:
  • Declare support for the appointment of young people with requisite qualification into key political offices to begin the incubation and mentoring for a successor political generation.
  • Unveil a policy that all federal contractors must employ at least 50% young people.
  • Work with the private sector to establish innovation fund for young people.
  • Encourage that girls’and boys’ education is prioritized in states where this is established to be a big problem.
  • Review and make pronouncements, with attendant political will and commitment, on the full implementation of the national youth policy.
  • Establish innovation centers in conjunction with proposed National Science Foundation and the private sector.
  • Include vocational skills in the curriculum of Almajiri schools so that they become self-employed.
  • Unveil a policy that will begin to multiply the efforts and effects of technology incubation centers to at least establish two of such centers in each of the geopolitical zone.
  • Establish a free-tuition and scholarship scheme for pupils who have shown exceptional aptitude in science subjects at O/Levels to study ICT-related courses.
  • Immediately establish linkages with friendly names to champion exchange programmes for the acquisition of IT related skills.
  • Extend the local content policies to cover software and hardware developments in the youth-driven markets. Put in place a quality assurance mechanism to ensure that standards are met and adhered to and make it a policy for companies to procure a % of their ICT needs from the local market.
  • Hold a summit of all ICT service providers, OEMs, etc both local and foreign that are doing business in Nigeria to device concrete skills transfer and capacity building models in a sustainable manner.
----------------------------------
God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

How has the New York Times reported the Central Bank Governor's sack? And what are Nigerians saying about Sanusi's legacy?

Governor of Nigeria’s Central Bank Is Fired After Warning of Missing Oil Revenue, by Adam Nossiter, NYTimes.com Feb 20, 2014

"President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria removed the governor of the country’s central bank from his post on Thursday, after the bank governor repeatedly charged that billions of dollars in oil revenue owed to the treasury was missing.
...
Oil yields 95 percent of the country’s total export earnings, and Mr. Sanusi has been saying for months that a substantial portion of the money was missing from public coffers...that the state-run Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, or N.N.P.C., had failed to turn over nearly $50 billion in revenue over an 18-month period, from January 2012 to July 2013, “in gross violation of the law.” Though oil prices were strong, official figures inexplicably showed declining revenue and falling reserves.
...
The sprawling company acts as the country’s oil buyer, seller, explorer, producer, processor and regulator, and is “at the nexus between the many interests in Nigeria that seek a stake in the country’s oil riches,” according to a 2010 Stanford University study.
The study said that while the company “functions well as an instrument of patronage,” it is neither competent nor efficient in its many operations. Mr. Sanusi went further, accusing it this month of “illegal and unconstitutional acts,” including transferring income from government-owned oil properties to “private hands.” "
Read the full article


Meanwhile, the backpage column of Nigeria's ThisDay Newspaper today has 'How Would You Remember Sanusi?'  by Simon Kolawole. 
"Can we ignore the fact that Sanusi restored some sanity to the banking industry? Can we ignore the fact that the so-called billionaires, who were heavily indebted to the banks and living like kings were exposed? Can we ignore the fact that, although it cost us heavily, no bank was allowed to go down and no depositor lost one kobo during the crisis, unlike in the past?
Or can we ignore the fact that the rogue bankers are now facing trial, even if their crafty lawyers and the judiciary are working against justice? Can we ignore the successful intervention of Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) which, under Mr. Mustapha Chike-Obi, has done a good job of cleaning up the mess created by these rogues? Can we deny that the stock market is now back to life and this is a major achievement of the Jonathan administration? Can we deny that inflation is now at single digit and the naira has been stable – owing to CBN’s macro-economic management? 
...
If I were to advise President Jonathan, I would tell him not to waste this great opportunity to install and instil accountability in the oil industry. It is tragic that we sell so much oil but cannot account for every kobo that comes in. We give NNPC 440,000 barrels per day when it can only refine 80,000. We then engage in questionable swap deals that apparently short-change us. The NNPC dips its hands into funds that should go directly into the federation account. These are serious issues. In my opinion, we can fault Sanusi’s method but we should never fault the message: NNPC is a disgrace. This has been going on for decades and has to stop. If this controversy will serve as the turning point for the oil industry, so be it."
Read More Opinions of the Nigerian people Re: The Sack of CBN Governor Sanusi
Read More on the NNPC Thefts, Diversions, or Missing Revenue

Previously on UpNaira

 

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