Friday, September 20, 2024 -Edo State Governor, Godwin Obaseki, has declared that Nigeria is "technically bankrupt" and urged the Federal Government to embrace structural reforms for economic progress.
Speaking during an interview on
Channels Television's Politics Today on Thursday evening, Obaseki criticized
the current fiscal management, stating that the government neither earns nor
has enough to cover its expenditures, with spending remaining unchecked.
Obaseki emphasized the need for a
decentralized approach to resource management, advocating for individual states
to tap into economic opportunities rather than relying on centralized control.
He further argued that the Federal Government was "stuck in the past"
and needed to adopt a new structure to better manage the nation's economy and
drive development.
He said;
“Nigeria is technically bankrupt. And
I mean it. When you are bankrupt anywhere in the world, like in the United
States, you file for what they call Chapter Eleven. You restructure your
affairs so that you can reorganise and meet your obligations. Nigeria is not
restructuring in that sense; it still behaves as if it had money like it used
to.
“It (Nigeria) has been in trouble for a
while. I won’t say insolvent, but technically so, in the sense that we don’t
have enough to cover our expenditure, we are not reducing our expenditure, and
we are not earning more.
“First, the Federal Government does not have the capacity to manage the economy
at the scale and in the way it is currently doing. You’re producing 1.3 million
barrels of oil, right? Because you are trying to do it centrally. We have 147
oil wells in Edo, and only 53 or fewer are producing.
“Unless you create a new design that allows
the individual states to take advantage of the economic opportunities they
have, stressing the assets of this country and paying what they need to pay to
the central government, the federal government cannot sit and try to
micromanage the country and its assets. It has shown that it cannot. It doesn’t
have the capacity to do so.
“I think for me, it’s like this federal
government is stuck, and stuck in the past. Because you cannot resolve a
malignant problem using the same tools you have used over the years.
“It’s not that the people there are not
smart; it’s not that they’re stupid. It’s more that they just don’t have the
courage to make the decisions they need to make.
“The problem with Nigeria today is
structural. The structure we have is expired; it’s outdated. We need a new
structure to run the economy of the state. If it doesn’t happen, we are not
going anywhere,”
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