Patrick Utomi, a Nigerian professor of political economy, took to his
Facebook page to express his concern over the continuous decline in the
Nigerian economy. A former presidential candidate is convinced that
Nigerian politicians are failing to learn from its 1983-85 financial
crisis due to the knowing-doing gap.
There
are significant gaps between what they know and what they actually do
How does Nigeria
always manage to lose institutional memory, and what is responsible for the
Knowing-Doing gap that seems to prevent us from properly handling routine
problems without generating crisis of earthshaking proportions. Surely we
do not need Harvard Business School Professors Jeffrey Pfeffer and Robert I
Sutton to see that there is a huge Knowing – Doing gap in the policy arena in Nigeria .
Pfeffer and Sutton had in year 2000 wondered how come so many firms show
significant gaps between what they know and what they actually do. You can
see this applies to governments the moment you go to the many talk shops of Nigeria and
from there cast a glance at the policy action arena. When at one of these
events recently someone reminded me of another one a few months before when it
seemed a vow to defend the Naira was being taken.
There
are alternatives to devaluation of the Naira
He reminded me that I had said pressure on the Naira, with a significant
dollar earnings dip, was not the end of the world but that a floating “managed”
exchange rate mechanism Bismark Rewane had talked about was appropriate
response and also that in addition a clear game plan on how the financing from
declining Oil receipts, could be bridged to tide over a temporary challenge by
quick borrowing of dollars to shore up supply with other measures to block
leakages could boost confidence. I suggested teams of people credible in
economic and financial circles, head off to critical global capitals to show
where we were going. I was convinced that would have stimulated confidence
in Nigeria
at a time the gap between the nominal exchange rate and our purchasing power
parity line was no more than six Naira, as Bismark Rewane pointed out.
Had the teams out there telling the world about the new thrust of policy
and growth potential in which decline in contribution of dollars from a sector
contributing to a small portion of GDP was causing tightness, investment flows
will make up for Foreign exchange supply lost, just as a little borrowing could
bridge the financing gap and stave of currency speculations. It seems to me
that instead of focusing on a clear strategy of short, medium and long term
perspective plan anchored diversification of the base of the economy and the
tactics to hold off raiders of the currency by inspiring confidence based on
plans for the future we slipped into this spurious discussion of symptom called
devaluation of the Naira.
Nigerians
should learn from 1983-85 crisis
I never could understand why knowledge from 1983-85, in Nigeria, and the
Asian financial crisis, failed to inform the passions spewing out or the
subject from people with access to people who could better inform them. How
about our national institutions that went through similar experiences with external
shocks and managing access to Foreign Exchange in the before past. Why did they
behave they had learnt nothing before.
One of the truly enduring explanations of how Nigeria went into
de-industrialization from the 1980s, even before becoming fully industrialized
is a comparison of Nominal exchange rate divergence from purchasing power
parity. A review will show that the regions of the world where nominal
exchange rates and the Purchasing Power Parity line were a close fit had more
growth and prosperity. Between Africa, Latin America and Asia in the 1980 and
1970s South East Asia was that zone. What
I found even more paradoxical was that those who favour state centrals to drive
development and therefore should embrace some of the postulates of the South
Korean Economist at Oxford Ja Joo Chang are signing off on the European Union
ECOWAS Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). This is quite curious. Lets hope
enlightenment descends upon us all.”
Source: Naija.com
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