Culled from Nairaleak
If Buhari
gets a nomination he will have my vote. I will vote for him not, like some have
averred, because he is a northerner and a Muslim or because I think his
candidacy is good for the north and Islam; I will vote for him not because I
think he will make a good democrat or that he was not a dictator. I will vote
for Buhari as a Nigerian for a leader who restored my pride and dignity and my
belief in the motherland. I will vote for the man who made it undesirable for
the “Andrews” to “check out” instead of staying to change Nigeria. – Sanusi
Lamido Sanusi
Continue..
BUHARISM:
Economic Theory and Political Economy By Sanusi Lamido Sanusi [LAGOS]
I have
followed with more than a little interest the many contributions of
commentators on the surprising decision of General Muhammadu Buhari to jump
into the murky waters of Nigerian politics. Most of the regular writers in the
Trust stable have had something to say on this. The political adviser to a late
general has transferred his services to a living one. My dear friend and
prolific veterinary doctor, who like me is allegedly an ideologue of Fulani
supremacy, has taken a leading emir to the cleaners based on information of
suspect authenticity. Another friend has contributed an articulate piece, which
for those in the know gives a bird’s eye view into the thinking within the IBB
camp. A young northern Turk has made several interventions and given novel
expressions to what I call the PTF connection. Some readers and writers alike
have done Buhari incalculable damage by viewing his politics through the narrow
prism of ethnicity and religion, risking the alienation of whole sections of
the Nigerian polity without whose votes their candidate cannot succeed.
With one or
two notable exceptions, the various positions for or against Buhari have
focused on his personality and continued to reveal a certain aversion or disdain
for deeper and more thorough analysis of his regime. The reality, as noted by
Tolstoy, is that too often history is erroneously reduced to single
individuals. By losing sight of the multiplicity of individuals, events,
actions and inactions (deliberate or otherwise) that combine to produce a set
of historical circumstances, the historian is able to create a mythical figure
and turn him into an everlasting hero (like Lincoln) or a villain (like
Hitler). The same is true of Buhari. There seems to be a dangerous trend of
competition between two opposing camps aimed at glorifying him beyond his
wildest dreams or demonizing him beyond all justifiable limits, through a
selective reading of history and opportunistic attribution and misattribution
of responsibility.
The
discourse has been thus impoverished through personalization and we are no
closer at the end of it than at the beginning to a divination of the exact
locus or nexus of his administration in the flow of Nigerian history. This is
what I seek to achieve in this intervention through an exposition of the
theoretical underpinnings of the economic policy of Buharism and the necessary
correlation between the economic decisions made and the concomitant legal and
political superstructure.
Taxonomy
Let me begin
by stating up front the principal thesis that I will propound. Within the
schema of discourses on Nigerian history, the most accurate problematization of
the Buhari government is one that views it strictly as a regime founded on the
ideology of Bourgeois Nationalism. In this sense it was a true off-shoot of the
regime of Murtala Mohammed. Buharism was a stage the logical outcome of whose
machinations would have been a transcendence of what Marx called the stage of
Primitive Accumulation in his Theories of Surplus Value. It was radical, not in
the sense of being socialist or left wing, but in the sense of being a
progressive move away from a political economy dominated by a parasitic and
subservient elite to one in which a nationalist and productive class gains
ascendancy. Buharism represented a two-way struggle: with Global capitalism
(externally) and with its parasitic and unpatriotic agents and spokespersons
(internally).
The struggle
against global capital as represented by the unholy trinity of the IMF, the
World Bank and multilateral “trade” organizations as well that against the
entrenched domestic class of contractors, commission agents and corrupt public
officers were vicious and thus required extreme measures. Draconian policies
were a necessary component of this struggle for transformation and this has
been the case with all such epochs in history. The Meiji restoration in Japan
was not conducted in a liberal environment. The Industrial Revolution in Europe
and the great economic progress of the empires were not attained in the same
liberal atmosphere of the 21st Century. The “tiger economies” of Asia such as
Taiwan, South Korea, Indonesia and Thailand are not exactly models of
democratic freedom. To this extent Buharism was a despotic regime but its
despotism was historically determined, necessitated by the historical task of
dismantling the structures of dependency and launching the nation on to a path
beyond primitive accumulation. At his best Buhari may have been a Bonaparte or
a Bismarck. At his worst he may have been a Hitler or a Mussolini. In either
case Buharism drawn to its logical conclusion would have provided the bedrock
for a new society and its overthrow marked a relapse, a step backward into that
era from which we sought escape and in which, sadly for all of us we remain
embedded and enslaved. I will now proceed with an elaboration of Buharism as a
manifestation of bourgeois economics and political economy.
The Economic
Theory of Buharism
One of the
greatest myths spun around Buharism was that it lacked a sound basis in
economic theory. As evidence of this, the regime that succeeded Buhari employed
the services of economic “gurus” of “international standard” as the architects
of fiscal and monetary policy. These were IMF and World Bank economists like
Dr. Chu Okongwu and Dr Kalu Idika Kalu, as well as Mr SAP himself, Chief Olu
Falae (an economist trained at Yale). At the time Buhari’s Finance Minister, Dr
Onaolapo Soleye (who was not a trained economist) was debating with the pro-IMF
lobby and explaining why the naira would not be devalued I was teaching
economics at the Ahmadu Bello University. I had no doubt in my mind that the
position of Buharism was based on a sound understanding of neo-classical
economics and that those who were pushing for devaluation either did not
understand their subject or were acting deliberately as agents of international
capital in its rampage against all barriers set up by sovereign states to
protect the integrity of the domestic economy. I still believe some of the key
economic policy experts of the IBB administration were economic saboteurs who
should be tried for treason.
When the IMF
recently owned up to “mistakes” in its policy prescriptions all patriotic economists
saw it for what it was: A hypocritical statement of remorse after attaining set
objectives. Let me explain, briefly, the economic theory underlying Buhari’s
refusal to devalue the naira and then show how the policy merely served the
interest of global capitalism and its domestic agents. This will be the
principal building block of our taxonomy.
In brief,
neo-classical theory holds that a country can, under certain conditions, expect
to improve its Balance of Payments through devaluation of its currency. The IMF
believed that given the pressure on the country’s foreign reserves and its
adverse balance of payments situation Nigeria must devalue its currency.
Buharism held otherwise and insisted that the conditions for improving Balance
of Payments through devaluation did not exist and that there were alternate and
superior approaches to the problem. Let me explain.
The first
condition that must exist is that the price of every country’s export is
denominated in its currency. If Nigeria’s exports are priced in naira and its
imports from the US in dollars then, ceteris paribus, a devaluation of the
naira makes imports dearer to Nigerians and makes Nigerian goods cheaper to
Americans.
This would then lead to an increase in the quantum of exports to the
US and a reduction in the quantum of imports from there per unit of time. But
while this is a necessary condition, it is not a sufficient one. For a positive
change in the balance of payments the increase in the quantum of exports must
be substantial enough to outweigh the revenue lost through a reduction in
price.
In other words the quantity exported must increase at a rate faster than
the rate of decrease in its price. Similarly imports must fall faster than
their price is increasing. Otherwise the nation may be devoting more of its
wealth to importing less and receiving less of the wealth of foreigners for
exporting more! In consequence, devaluation by a country whose exports and
imports are not price elastic leads to the continued impoverishment of the nation
vis a vis its trading partners. The second, and sufficient, condition is
therefore that the combined price elasticity of demand for exports and imports
must exceed unity.
The argument
of Buharism, for which it was castigated by global capital and its domestic
agents, was that these conditions did not exist clearly enough for Nigeria to
take the gamble. First our major export, oil, was priced in dollars and the
volume exported was determined ab initio by the quota set by OPEC, a cartel to
which we belonged.
Neither the price nor the volume of our exports would be
affected by a devaluation of the naira. As for imports, indeed they would
become dearer. However the manufacturing base depended on imported raw
materials. Also many essential food items were imported.
The demand for imports
was therefore inelastic. We would end up spending more of our national income
to import less, in the process fuelling inflation, creating excess capacity and
unemployment, wiping out the production base of the real sector and causing
hardship to the consumer through the erosion of real disposable incomes. Given
the structural dislocations in income distribution in Nigeria the only groups
who would benefit from devaluation were the rich parasites who had enough
liquidity to continue with their conspicuous consumption, the large
multi-national corporations with an unlimited access to loanable funds and the
foreign “investor” who can now purchase our grossly cheapened and undervalued
domestic assets.
In one
stroke we would wipe out the middle class, destroy indigenous manufacturing,
undervalue the national wealth and create inflation and unemployment. This is
standard economic theory and it is exactly what happened to Nigeria after it
went through the hands of our IMF economists under IBB.
The decision not to
devalue set Buharism on a collision course with those who wanted devaluation
and would profit from it-namely global capitalism, the so-called “captains of
industry” (an acronym for the errand boys of multinational corporations), the
nouveaux-riches parasites who had naira and dollars waiting to be spent, the
rump elements of feudalism and so on. Buharism therefore was a crisis in the
dominant class, a fracturing of its members into a patriotic, nationalist group
and a dependent, parasitic and corrupt one. It was not a struggle between
classes but within the same class. A victory for Buharism would be a victory
for the more progressive elements of the national bourgeoisie. Unfortunately
the fifth columnists within the military establishment were allied to the
backward and retrogressive elements and succeeded in defeating Buharism before
it took firm root. But I digress.
Having
decided not to devalue or to rush into privatization and liberalization
Buharism still faced an economic crisis it must address. There was pressure on
foreign reserves, mounting foreign debt and a Balance of Payments crisis.
Clearly the demand for foreign exchange outstripped its supply. The government
therefore adopted demand management measures. The basic principle was that we
did not really need all that we imported and if we could ensure that our scarce
foreign exchange was only allocated to what we really needed we would be able
to pay our debts and lay the foundations for economic stability. But this line
of action also has its drawbacks.
First, there
are political costs to be borne in terms of opposition from those who feel
unfairly excluded from the allocation process and who do not share the
government’s sense of priorities. Muslims for example cursed Buhari’s
government for restricting the number of pilgrims in order to conserve foreign
exchange.
Second, in
all attempts to manage demand through quotas and quantitative restrictions
there is room for abuse because there is always the incentive of a premium to
be earned through circumvention of due process. Import licenses become “hot
cake” and the black market for foreign exchange highly lucrative. This policy
can only succeed if backed by strong deterrent laws and strict and enforcible
exchange rules. Again it is trite micro-economic theory that where price is
fixed below equilibrium the market is only cleared through quotas and the
potential exists for round tripping as there will be a minority willing and
able to offer a very high price for the “artificially scarce” product. So again
we see that the harsh exchange control and economic sabotage laws of Buharism
were a necessary and logical fallout of its economic theory.
Conclusion
I have tried
to show in this intervention what I consider to be the principal building
blocks of the military government of Muhammadu Buhari and the logical
connection between its ideology, its economic theory and the legal and
political superstructure that characterized it.
My objective is to raise the
intellectual profile of discourse beyond its present focus on personalities by
letting readers see the intricate links between disparate and seemingly
unrelated aspects of that government, thus contextualizing the actions of
Buharism in its specific historical and ideological milieu.
I have tried to
review its treatment of politicians as part of a general struggle against
primitive accumulation and its harsh laws on exchange and economic crimes as a
necessary fallout of economic policy options. Similarly its treatment of drug
pushers reflected the patriotic zeal of a bourgeois nationalist establishment.
As happens
in all such cases a number of innocent people become victims of draconian laws,
such as a few honest leaders like Shehu Shagari and Balarabe Musa who were
improperly detained. The reality however is that many of those claiming to be
victims today were looters who deserved to go to jail but who would like to
hide under the cover of a few glaring errors. The failure of key members of the
Buhari administration to tender public and unreserved apology to those who may
have been improperly detained has not helped matters in this regard.
This raises
a question I have often been asked. Do I support Buhari’s decision to contest
for the presidency of Nigeria? My answer is no. And I will explain.
First, I
believe Buhari played a creditable role in a particular historical epoch but
like Tolstoy and Marx I do not believe he can re-enact that role at will. Men
do not make history exactly as they please but, as Marx wrote in the 18th
Brumaire, “in circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from
the past.” Muhammadu Buhari as a military general had more room for manoevre
than he can ever hope for in Nigerian Politics.
Second, I am
convinced that the situation of Nigeria and its elite today is worse than it
was in 1983.Compared to the politicians who populate the PDP, ANPP and AD
today, second republic politicians were angels.
Buhari waged a battle against
second republic politicians, but he is joining this generation. Anyone who
rides a tiger ends up in its belly and one man cannot change the system from
within. A number of those Buhari jailed for theft later became ministers and
many of those who hold key offices in all tiers of government and the
legislature were made by the very system he sought to destroy. My view is that
Nigeria needs people like Buhari in politics but not to contest elections.
Buhari should be in politics to develop Civil Society and strengthen the conscience
of the nation. He should try to develop many Buharis who will continue to
challenge the elements that have hijacked the nation.
Third, I do
not think Nigerians today are ready for Buhari. Everywhere you turn you see
thieves who have amassed wealth in the last four years, be they legislators,
Local Government chairmen and councilors, or governors and ministers. But these
are the heroes in their societies. They are the religious leaders and ethnic
champions and Nigerians, especially northerners, will castigate and discredit
anyone who challenges them. Unless we start by educating our people and
changing their value system, people like Buhari will remain the victims of
their own love for Nigeria.
Fourth, and
on a lighter note, I am opposed to recycled material. In a nation of 120million
people we can do better than restrict our leadership to a small group. I think
Buhari, Babangida and yes Obasanjo should simply allow others try their hand
instead of believing they have the monopoly of wisdom.
Having said
all this let me conclude by saying that if Buhari gets a nomination he will
have my vote (for what it is worth). I will vote for him not, like some have
averred, because he is a northerner and a Muslim or because I think his
candidacy is good for the north and Islam; I will vote for him not because I
think he will make a good democrat or that he was not a dictator.
I will vote
for Buhari as a Nigerian for a leader who restored my pride and dignity and my
belief in the motherland. I will vote for the man who made it undesirable for
the “Andrews” to “check out” instead of staying to change Nigeria. I will vote
for Buhari to say thank you for the world view of Buharism, a truly nationalist
ideology for all Nigerians. I do not know if Buhari is still a nationalist or a
closet bigot and fanatic, or if he was the spirit and not just the face of
Buharism. My vote for him is not based on a divination of what he is or may be,
but a celebration of what his government was and what it gave to the nation..
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