Retrenchment: Sanusi fires back at critics
December 6, 2012
The
Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, Mallam Lamido Sanusi, on Wednesday
fired back at those calling for his removal, saying they missed the
point.
The CBN governor said his removal would
not change the political structure of the country which he said could
not guarantee economic development in its current form.
“So if you sack the Governor of Central
Bank, does it change anything? It is not the solution; the solution is
to face this reality,” Sanusi said at the financial regulators forum
debate at the 18th edition of the Nigerian Economic Summit in Abuja. He
insisted that the country had a bloated recurrent expenditure.
Sanusi had stirred the hornet’s nest
recently when he called for the sack of 50 per cent of federal workers
at the Annual Capital Market Retreat in Warri, Delta State.
He had said 70 per cent of the country’s
earnings was being consumed by federal appointees, and stressed that
cutting the workforce by half would assist in reviving the national
economy.
Sanusi had consequently come under
criticisms from many groups and individuals with the Nigeria Labour
Congress president, Abdulwahed Omar, accusing him of always making major
pronouncements to pursue anti-people policies.
But Sanusi at the debate on Wednesday said he was being pummelled for saying what would help the country’s development.
At the debate were the Director General,
Securities and Exchange Commission, Ms Arunmah Oteh; Director General,
National Pension Commission, Mr. Muhammad Ahmad; and Managing Director,
Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane, among
others.
The CBN governor said, “People say
everything is about politics and let us go to the politics of it. For
those of you who were in Warri, this is a country where we have 774
local government councils. In each council you have a chairman and a
vice-chairman and maybe 10 councillors and some other aides.
“Take a state like Kano which used to be
one state. But now it is Kano and Jigawa. When it was one state where
you had one governor and maybe nine or 10 commissioners, I went to
King’s College and Ahmadu Bello University on Kano State government
scholarship. My parents didn’t pay, I was in King’s College and the
state government even paid for my rail ticket from Lagos to Kano and
back and I wasn’t the only one.
“Now what do you have? That one state
has become two states, two governors, two deputy governors, 40
commissioners, maybe 80 legislators and only God knows how many special
advisers and assistants they have.
“This is not about NLC or Trade Union
Congress or the President or the National Assembly, but it is about us
as a country deciding whether this constitution that we have chosen
makes sense.”
He said the Nigerian constitution which
made it compulsory that each state must have a minister had also
contributed to the problem of the country, adding that no meaningful
development would be made unless the problem was looked at critically.
He said, “The constitution says that
there must be a minister from every state of the federation. Let me ask
you, as intelligent and as educated human beings, what is the connection
between the number of states and the number of ministries at the
federal level.
“We are talking about federal character,
so if you have 50 states today, must we have 50 ministries, if we have a
100 states must we have 100 ministries?
“I want to understand so if we create a
state for the South-East since they say they want one more state, and
then you must have one more minister and create a ministry even if we
don’t need it. So because you have created one more state, the Federal
Government must have a minister from that state.”
He pointed out that with the way
political appointments were made in the country, it would be difficult
for the people to remember who headed what ministry in the past.
Sanusi said, “Let us be realistic,
between 1999 and now how many ministers have we had? You have 42, you do
cabinet reshuffle and bring in another 42 and I am sure between 1999
and now we have had more than 200 ministers and how many of them can we
really remember.
“Just to give you an idea of how
ridiculous this is, if I ask you to name between 1999 and now the
Nigerians who have been ministers how many can you remember? Why?
Because they are so many and their jobs are so poorly defined and you
cannot remember what they did because the only way to remember a man is
based on what he did.”
He said political issues such as the federal character principle which had occupied the place of merit needed to be addressed.
“We cannot develop if government is
spending 70 per cent of the nation’s revenue on itself and spending 30
per cent on the people. Is that a sensible situation?” Sanusi queried.
He said rather than calling for his sack
the issue of bloated recurrent expenditure should be looked into,
adding that no country in Africa used Nigeria’s political model because
of its expensive nature.
Source ;Punch newspaper
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