Dons, economists slam Buhari over $29.9bn loan
A cross-section of economists, including university dons from across the country have expressed their displeasure with President Muhammadu Buhari’s proposal to borrow $29.9bn to get Nigeria out of recession, saying it would mortgage the future of coming generations.
Some of the economists also noted that it was risky for the country to take such a loan as there was no national plan for it.
Buhari had sent a request to the Senate for the approval of external borrowing to the tune of $29.9bn, but the lawmakers voted against the loan request due to technical issues.
However, the Leader of the Senate, Ali Ndume, recently
expressed shock that the request suffered such a setback, while expressing
optimism that the issues would be resolved and the request would be represented.
But economists said adding a $29.9bn loan to Nigeria’s
debt burden would create problems for future generations.
A professor of Economics, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago
Iwoye, Ogun State, Sheriffdeen Tella, described the $29.9bn loan proposal as
“no small amount.”
“Moreover, there is no national plan for the loan. There
ought to be a long-term national plan on what the loan is meant for. I am not
in support of the loan because it will only create problems for the coming
generations,” he said.
Prof. Abayomi Adebayo of the Department of Economics,
Obafemi Awolowo University, also said he was not in support of “Nigeria taking
loans to bail itself out of recession.”
“We are already in a recession and I don’t believe we can
go lower than this. I believe that if we confront the situation squarely, we
can get out of recession,” he said.
Head, Department of Economics, Landmark University,
Omu-Aran, Kwara State, Dr. Elizabeth Oloni, and the HOD, Economics, Kwara State
University, Prof. Kaita Lansana, also kicked against the loan proposal,
in separate interviews with our correspondent.
They stated that the loan, if approved and accessed, would
mortgage the future of Nigeria.
Oloni said the future generations of Nigeria would not
forgive their parents if Buhari took the loan.
Lansana said it would be a risky venture for Nigeria to
take the loan.
He stated that with the fall in the prices of crude oil in
the global market, Nigeria would be paying so much to service and eventually
pay back the loan.
Lansana said, “Government should be trying to get as much
money from those who have taken too much money for themselves.
“It is a risky venture at this stage to add to our debt
burden,” he said
Also, the Head, Department of Economics, Coal City
University, Enugu, Mrs. Ebele Ndubuisi, said the proposed loan would put the
country’s future generations in trouble.
“If the Federal Government takes that loan, Nigeria’s
future generations will suffer because the burden of the debt will fall on
them. The loan will put the future generations in trouble,” Ndubuisi warned.
An economist in Akwa Ibom State, Ime Ekpoattai, asked
Nigerians to resist the loan request Buhari made to the National Assembly,
saying its burden “will fall on future generations which may last up to 25
years or more.”
Ekpoattai said that experience had shown that previous
Nigerian governments failed to use such loans for serious investments.
Similarly, a lecturer at the Department of Economics, Osun
State University, Dr. Temitope Akintunde, said government resorted into seeking
loans because it was looking for a short route to addressing the economic
crisis.
Akintunde said government could also raise fund by looking
internally but decided to go for loans, which she described as a quick solution
with its own disadvantages.
She said, “Developed countries also borrow but they don’t
borrow for recurrent expenditure, they borrow to build infrastructure.”
In Ondo State, Mr. Olusegun Akinwale, a retired banker,
also urged the government to look for alternative means of generating money
internally rather than obtaining loan, saying there was no need for borrowing
as the country has the “resources to generate money.”
Punch
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