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Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times - Politics - Nairaland

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Tinubu Inherited A Bleeding, Dead Economy. Buhari Borrowed Massively - Onanuga / Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy, CBN Under Buhari Printed Money Illegally – Soludo / Tinubu Govt Inherited "Dead Horse But Standing Economy" - Charles Soludo (2) (3) (4)

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Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by NwaNimo1(m): 5:23pm On Jun 16
The Presidency has reacted to a report published in the New York Times criticising the Nigerian economy as facing the worst trajectory in a generation.

Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, on Sunday reacted to the report credited to Ruth Maclean and Ismail Auwal’s.

According to the Presidency, the feature story with the title, ‘Nigeria Confronts Its Worst Economic Crisis in a Generation’, published on June 11, reflected the typical predetermined, reductionist, derogatory and denigrating way foreign media establishments reported African countries for several decades.

The Special Adviser on Information and Strategy said because of the ‘misleading’ slant of the report, the government needed to clear up some misconceptions conveyed by the reporters as regards the economic policies of the President Bola Tinubu administration that came into power at the end of May 2023.

He said one significant aspect of the report was that it painted the dire experiences of some Nigerians amid the inflationary spiral of the last year and blamed it all on the policies of the new administration.

He also said the report, based on several interviews, is at best jaundiced, all gloom and doom, as it never mentioned the positive aspects in the same economy as well as the ameliorative policies being implemented by the central and state governments.

Onanuga went on to say that Tinubu did not create the economic problems Nigeria faces today.

According to the presidential aide, Tinubu inherited them.


“As a respected economist in our country once put it, Tinubu inherited a dead economy. The economy was bleeding and needed quick surgery to avoid being plunged into the abyss, as happened in Zimbabwe and Venezuela,” he noted.

Onanuga said this was the background to the policy direction taken by the government in May/June 2023: the abrogation of the fuel subsidy regime and the unification of the multiple exchange rates.

According to the presidential aide, for decades, Nigeria had maintained a fuel subsidy regime that gulped $84.39 billion between 2005 and 2022 from the public treasury in a country with huge infrastructural deficits and in high need of better social services for its citizens.

Onanuga also alleged that the state oil firm, NNPCL, the sole importer, had amassed trillions of Naira in debts for absorbing the unsustainable subsidy payments in its books.

He said by the time Tinubu took over the leadership of the country, there was no provision made for fuel subsidy payments in the national budget beyond June 2023.

“The budget itself had a striking feature: it planned to spend 97 percent of revenue servicing debt, with little left for recurrent or capital expenditure. The previous government had resorted to massive borrowing to cover such costs. Like oil, the exchange rate was also being subsidized by the government, with an estimated $1.5 billion spent monthly by the CBN to ‘defend’ the currency against the unquenchable demand for the dollar by the country’s import-dependent economy.

“By keeping the rate low, arbitrage grew as a gulf existed between the official rate and the rate being used by over 5000 BDCs that were previously licensed by the Central Bank. What was more, the country was failing to fulfil its remittance obligations to airlines and other foreign businesses, such that FDIs and investment in the oil sector dried up, and notably Emirate Airlines cut off the Nigerian route,” he said.

Onanuga said to deal with the cancer of public finance, Tinubu on his first day rolled back the subsidy regime and the generosity that spread to neighbouring countries. Then, his administration floated the naira.

He said, “After some months of the storm, with the naira sliding as low as N1,900 to the US dollar, some stability is being restored, though there remain some challenges. The exchange rate is now below N1500 to the dollar, and there are prospects that the naira could regain its muscle and appreciate to between N1000 and N1200 before the end of the year.

“The economy recorded a trade surplus of N6.52 trillion in Q1, as against a deficit of N1.4 trillion in Q4 of 2023. Portfolio investors have streamed in as long-term investors. When Diageo wanted to sell its stake in Guinness Nigeria, it had the Singaporean conglomerate, Tolaram, ready for the uptake. With the World Bank extending a $2.25 billion loan and other loans by the AfDB and Afreximbank coming in, Nigeria has become bankable again. This is all because the reforms being implemented have restored some confidence.

“The inflationary rate is slowing down, as shown in the figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics for April. Food inflation remains the biggest challenge, and the government is working very hard to rein it in with increased agricultural production.

“The Tinubu administration and the 36 states are working assiduously to produce food in abundance to reduce the cost. Some state governments, such as Lagos and Akwa Ibom, have set up retail shops to sell raw food items to residents at a lower price than the market price.

“The Tinubu government, in November last year, in consonance with its food emergency declaration, invested heavily in dry-season farming, giving farmers incentives to produce wheat, maize, and rice. The CBN has donated N100 billion worth of fertiliser to farmers, and numerous incentives are being implemented. In the western part of Nigeria, the six governors have announced plans to invest massively in agriculture.

“With all the plans being executed, inflation, especially food inflation, will soon be tamed.

“Nigeria is not the only country in the world facing a rising cost of living crisis. The USA, too, is contending with a similar crisis, with families finding it hard to make ends meet. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen raised this concern recently. Europe is similarly in the throes of a cost-of-living crisis. As those countries are trying to confront the problem, the Tinubu administration is also working hard to overturn the economic problems in Nigeria.

“Our country faced economic difficulties in the past, an experience that has been captured in folk songs. Just like we overcame then, we shall overcome our present difficulties very soon.”

https://dailypost.ng/2024/06/16/tinubu-inherited-dead-economy-presidency-replies-new-york-times/

1 Like

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Xscape1993(m): 5:25pm On Jun 16
The evil party call APC is a big curse to humanity. A known drug master, certificate forger, agbero, tout and strange man without economy knowledge has nothing to offer. The deadliest political mistake ever made in Nigeria was in 2015.

13 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Iabis: 5:26pm On Jun 16
Before you take over a company as a good manager you should have what it takes to analyse their current challenges and how to solve it. dat is what makes you a manager


Only in Africa do you see people with passion to rule not Lead!

People want the title, not the heat

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by NwaNimo1(m): 5:27pm On Jun 16
Iabis:
From which political party


CPC?

9 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by franchasng: 5:28pm On Jun 16
But the same people supporting Tinubu today supported Buhari and even swore with their lives that Buhari performed excellently.


And Tinubu said Buhari performed and that he would continue where Buhari stopped, so who is deceiving who?


Tomorrow after Tinubu completes his failed tenure, they will start blaming Tinubu and will tell us that they have found another Savior called Shettima yet they call themselves lovers of Nigeria cheesy

23 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by rayvelez(m): 5:31pm On Jun 16
How far Manna Tinubu presidency talk say they inherited dead economy from your darling daddy Buhari Presidency nah true or false?

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by SpecialAdviser(m): 5:32pm On Jun 16
Tinubu: I will continue where Buhari stopped
Buhari: Support Tinubu he will do well.
Presidency : Tinubu inherited bad economy from Buhari.
Agbadoriians: Peter Obi is to blame
Me: All of una dey mad

What a Bala blu?

28 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by phorget(m): 5:34pm On Jun 16
APC blaming APC after they've successfully blamed PDP... nah wa o.

10 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by ManOfMan: 5:36pm On Jun 16
rayvelez:
How far Manna Tinubu presidency talk say they inherited dead economy from your darling daddy Buhari Presidency nah true or false?


We really need that Manna something guy to reply

1 Like

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Nonny95: 5:38pm On Jun 16
He inherited dead economy from Buhari Of APC.

Seunmsg Madridguy LegendHero Paraman FreestuffNG Trutharena Okoroawusa Mannabbq Helinues

Are you guys aware of this?

7 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by givedemwotowoto: 5:40pm On Jun 16
cool
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by babasolution: 5:41pm On Jun 16
But the SW were saying igbos were unjustly criticising Buhari, and the Fulani.

But here we are tinubu admitting the destructive regime of Buhari.

The Fulani and BUHARI unjustly and undeservedly destroyed Nigeria.

The Yoruba fully supported this destruction

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Blaze14k: 5:41pm On Jun 16
Its really shocking that we have alot of people who defend this administration at all cost. How can tinubu blame buhari when both of them formed the party. Have u ever seen Joe bidden blaming Barrak Obama. I can't believe in my wildest dreams I would think of buying 5pcs of tomatoes for 1k. If tinubu is actually putting things in order we would have seen it by now.

Honestly it's so unfortunate. This is the same man who they said built Lagos.

6 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by jmoore(m): 5:42pm On Jun 16
Mumu! Dead economy that gives Tinubu almost a million naira daily for feeding allowance.

Dead economy and you spent 21 billion naira to build a house for vice president.

If Tinubu inherited a dead economy, then he has kept it in a mortuary. Na to bury am remain. Nextyear Ebi n pa wa will be harder. Everyone better get prepared.

Babablu we hail thee.

2 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Oilwell(m): 5:43pm On Jun 16
Toh.
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Objectivist04: 5:44pm On Jun 16
Tinubu is displaying the double faced nature of average Yoruba man.
You supported the last government, never disagreed with them in any of their policy even for one day and even told anybody that cares to listen that you will continue from where the administration stops only for you to turn back and tell us that they are the course of our dwindling economy.

Each time this man meets with Buhari he kept ensuring him that he is continuing from where he stops.
I don't understand if he thinks that everyone is like his daft supporters that can not think for themselves.
It is clear that APC has failed this country.
APC blaming APC. Very pathetic.

New York times was very wrong, this is not the worst economy in a generation but in the history of this country.
You can't imagine a cup of beans is 500 naira while a cup of rice goes for 400 naira .
All these and Nigerians are keeping quiet, I wonder if what triggered the Arab spring is half as worse as what we are currently going through in this country.

4 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by NeckingNgulping(m): 5:44pm On Jun 16
Be a man and call the name of the person that
was in charge of the failed economy.

Now, is one year not enough time to execute agendas that will set the economy on the right path and make it to prosper?

Yes, Buhari was one of the worst things that ever happened to this country, but Tinubu came to finish us completely.

APC and blame games are inseparable.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Bobloco: 5:48pm On Jun 16
If Tinubu inherited a dead economy, then he buried it

2 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by EnEnPeecee: 5:51pm On Jun 16
The president in the presence of the press told the whole world that he intends to continue from where useless buhari stopped from. He did not tell us then that he will be inheriting a dead economy. Even if the economy is dead as the idiot puts it, is it my business to fix it? Did he not campaigned that he will fix economy as shetima look into security?

These rogues in the APC are taking us for a fool. Useless people

3 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by helinues: 6:00pm On Jun 16
Toh

That should have been comatose instead of dead
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by fuckingAyaya(m): 6:06pm On Jun 16
helinues:
Toh

That should have been comatose instead of dead
comatose you supported for 8years, true or false?

1 Like

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by helinues: 6:07pm On Jun 16
fuckingAyaya:
comatose you supported for 8years, true or false?

My support my headache.
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by fuckingAyaya(m): 6:09pm On Jun 16
helinues:


My support my headache.
you are supporting another comatose for 8years, now ask yourself who are the real enemies of the state? May God have mercy on u

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by helinues: 6:09pm On Jun 16
fuckingAyaya:
you are supporting another comatose for 8years, now ask yourself who are the real enemies of the state? May God have mercy on u

That should be my headache not yours
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Artscollection: 6:11pm On Jun 16
Dead company and theïr where companies then but now companies are leaving everyday
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Gadafii: 6:20pm On Jun 16
APCs Lame excuses and shifting blames

Was it not tinubu that brought it the gworo chewing Fulani herdman, campaigned and supported him for two terms.. tinubu even boasted that if not him Buhari wouldn't have become president with his 'olule' remark so why is presidency now trying to shield tinubu from the rot he helped propagated


Didn't tinubu claimed he was going to continue from where Buhari stopped, APC has to be the most demonic political party in the history of humankind and it's supporters are the most wickedest of mankind

2 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Objectivist04: 6:22pm On Jun 16
EnEnPeecee:
The president in the presence of the press told the whole world that he intends to continue from where useless buhari stopped from. He did not tell us then that he will be inheriting a dead economy. Even if the economy is dead as the idiot puts it, is it my business to fix it? Did he not campaigned that he will fix economy as shetima look into security?

These rogues in the APC are taking us for a fool. Useless people
My annoyance is that he did not only made the continuity comment while contesting, else I would have said he wanted to enjoy Buharis support but he made the comment as a candidate, repeated it as a president elect and have made the comment more than once as an incumbent president.
Only to come back to blame the past administration whenever it suits him.

This is really annoying

3 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by taobudao(m): 6:24pm On Jun 16
NwaNimo1:
The Presidency has reacted to a report published in the New York Times criticising the Nigerian economy as facing the worst trajectory in a generation.

Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, on Sunday reacted to the report credited to Ruth Maclean and Ismail Auwal’s.

According to the Presidency, the feature story with the title, ‘Nigeria Confronts Its Worst Economic Crisis in a Generation’, published on June 11, reflected the typical predetermined, reductionist, derogatory and denigrating way foreign media establishments reported African countries for several decades.

The Special Adviser on Information and Strategy said because of the ‘misleading’ slant of the report, the government needed to clear up some misconceptions conveyed by the reporters as regards the economic policies of the President Bola Tinubu administration that came into power at the end of May 2023.

He said one significant aspect of the report was that it painted the dire experiences of some Nigerians amid the inflationary spiral of the last year and blamed it all on the policies of the new administration.

He also said the report, based on several interviews, is at best jaundiced, all gloom and doom, as it never mentioned the positive aspects in the same economy as well as the ameliorative policies being implemented by the central and state governments.

Onanuga went on to say that Tinubu did not create the economic problems Nigeria faces today.

According to the presidential aide, Tinubu inherited them.


“As a respected economist in our country once put it, Tinubu inherited a dead economy. The economy was bleeding and needed quick surgery to avoid being plunged into the abyss, as happened in Zimbabwe and Venezuela,” he noted.

Onanuga said this was the background to the policy direction taken by the government in May/June 2023: the abrogation of the fuel subsidy regime and the unification of the multiple exchange rates.

According to the presidential aide, for decades, Nigeria had maintained a fuel subsidy regime that gulped $84.39 billion between 2005 and 2022 from the public treasury in a country with huge infrastructural deficits and in high need of better social services for its citizens.

Onanuga also alleged that the state oil firm, NNPCL, the sole importer, had amassed trillions of Naira in debts for absorbing the unsustainable subsidy payments in its books.

He said by the time Tinubu took over the leadership of the country, there was no provision made for fuel subsidy payments in the national budget beyond June 2023.

“The budget itself had a striking feature: it planned to spend 97 percent of revenue servicing debt, with little left for recurrent or capital expenditure. The previous government had resorted to massive borrowing to cover such costs. Like oil, the exchange rate was also being subsidized by the government, with an estimated $1.5 billion spent monthly by the CBN to ‘defend’ the currency against the unquenchable demand for the dollar by the country’s import-dependent economy.

“By keeping the rate low, arbitrage grew as a gulf existed between the official rate and the rate being used by over 5000 BDCs that were previously licensed by the Central Bank. What was more, the country was failing to fulfil its remittance obligations to airlines and other foreign businesses, such that FDIs and investment in the oil sector dried up, and notably Emirate Airlines cut off the Nigerian route,” he said.

Onanuga said to deal with the cancer of public finance, Tinubu on his first day rolled back the subsidy regime and the generosity that spread to neighbouring countries. Then, his administration floated the naira.

He said, “After some months of the storm, with the naira sliding as low as N1,900 to the US dollar, some stability is being restored, though there remain some challenges. The exchange rate is now below N1500 to the dollar, and there are prospects that the naira could regain its muscle and appreciate to between N1000 and N1200 before the end of the year.

“The economy recorded a trade surplus of N6.52 trillion in Q1, as against a deficit of N1.4 trillion in Q4 of 2023. Portfolio investors have streamed in as long-term investors. When Diageo wanted to sell its stake in Guinness Nigeria, it had the Singaporean conglomerate, Tolaram, ready for the uptake. With the World Bank extending a $2.25 billion loan and other loans by the AfDB and Afreximbank coming in, Nigeria has become bankable again. This is all because the reforms being implemented have restored some confidence.

“The inflationary rate is slowing down, as shown in the figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics for April. Food inflation remains the biggest challenge, and the government is working very hard to rein it in with increased agricultural production.

“The Tinubu administration and the 36 states are working assiduously to produce food in abundance to reduce the cost. Some state governments, such as Lagos and Akwa Ibom, have set up retail shops to sell raw food items to residents at a lower price than the market price.

“The Tinubu government, in November last year, in consonance with its food emergency declaration, invested heavily in dry-season farming, giving farmers incentives to produce wheat, maize, and rice. The CBN has donated N100 billion worth of fertiliser to farmers, and numerous incentives are being implemented. In the western part of Nigeria, the six governors have announced plans to invest massively in agriculture.

“With all the plans being executed, inflation, especially food inflation, will soon be tamed.

“Nigeria is not the only country in the world facing a rising cost of living crisis. The USA, too, is contending with a similar crisis, with families finding it hard to make ends meet. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen raised this concern recently. Europe is similarly in the throes of a cost-of-living crisis. As those countries are trying to confront the problem, the Tinubu administration is also working hard to overturn the economic problems in Nigeria.

“Our country faced economic difficulties in the past, an experience that has been captured in folk songs. Just like we overcame then, we shall overcome our present difficulties very soon.”

https://dailypost.ng/2024/06/16/tinubu-inherited-dead-economy-presidency-replies-new-york-times/
grin grin who made it dead
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by OkCornel(m): 6:25pm On Jun 16
Can someone remind us of APC’s promises in 2014?

Is 216 naira to the USD okay?

2 Likes

Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Feintline: 6:26pm On Jun 16
Inheriter of dead economy, take it back to the dead economy.
Get out of the place.
You triggered a curse on the nation with your desecration of the land and your criminal grab and quest for power.

Get out of the place . The nation needs to be repaired so the curse can be taken away
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by genesishouse: 6:27pm On Jun 16
Bayo Onanuga who killed the dead economy you inherited?
You should be ashamed to be saying this if you can't perform then resign.
Re: Tinubu Inherited Dead Economy – Presidency Replies New York Times by Mrtaye: 6:28pm On Jun 16
helinues:
Toh

That should have been comatose instead of dead
Nigerians were actually looking for who to revive the dead economy and not who will bury it

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