Emir of Kano, Muhammad Sanusi II, on Friday
berated the President Buhari-led government for seeking to borrow $30 billion
from International financial institutions. At a policy dialogue forum organised
by Savannah Centre for Diplomacy, Democracy and Development in Abuja, the Emir
stated that nobody in the International community will borrow Nigeria such an
amount of money.
According to him, the poor
state of our economy will not make any lender take Nigeria serious, adding that
even if the National Assembly eventually grants the request for Nigeria to
borrow such a loan, no global financial institution will offer such a loan to
Nigeria.
“I can tell you for free,
if the Senate today approves that we can borrow $30 billion, honestly, no one
will lend us. It should be approved and I will like to see how you will go to
the international market with an economy that has five exchange rates. There is
one rate for petroleum marketers, there is Interbank rate, there is another for
money market operators such as western union, money gram, there is bureau de
change rate and there is a special rate you get when you call the CBN for a
transaction. So who will borrow you when they don’t know your exact reserve and
exchange rate? I want to see who will borrow you money when the Niger Delta
bombing of oil is there when the main source of the loan repayment is oil”he
said
However in a swift reaction to the Emir of Kano's
comment, Senior Special Assistant to President Buhari on Media and Publicity,
Shehu Garba, in a statement released today, said the monarch does not have his
facts right regarding the state of the economy. Garba's statement below
"With every respect to
the Emir, you know he is my ruler, because I come from Kano. He doesn't have
his facts as far as those issues are concerned. The issue in CBN, that
government has overdrawn its Central Consolidated Account is true, but the
overdrawing is within limits. The overdraw does not exceed 1.5 trillion. It is
incorrect to say, as he did that the account was overdrawn by 4.5 trillion. But
even assuming that he was correct. This is a government that has money in
excess the amount he mentioned in the Treasury Single Account, TSA. It is just
like you, a bank customer operating two accounts, one in the red and the other,
well funded to the point that it can at any time wipe the indebtedness on the
other. Would any bank manager lose their sleep over this? This, I am told is
what the IMF found at the CBN and they said it is perfectly normal. As for his
opposition to the USD 30 billion loan, I'm aware that the Minister of Finance
is responding to that. As a private citizen, I want to read his statement
again. I thought that the borrowing is for projects that include the railway
development in Kano, his own city".

No comments:
Post a Comment