Kemi
Adeosun, The Minister of Finance, today, reacted to remarks by former vice
president of the World Bank, Oby Ezekwesili, that the Muhammadu Buhari
administration’s “archaic and opaque” economic policies are hurting the poor.
Speaking as a guests at The Platform, a public policy forum in
Abuja on Saturday, Mrs. Ezekwesili, also a former minister of education, had
accused President Buhari of rehashing his “command and control” approach to
economic issues adopted during his first time as military Head of State in
1984.
Mrs. Ezekwesili said inflation had spiraled during that period,
amid huge loss of jobs and a massive dip in economic growth level.
“What did not work in 1984 cannot possibly be a solution in a
global economy that’s much more integrated,” Mrs. Ezekwesili pointed out. “The
same ‘command and control’ approach towards economic issues has left the
country’s economic indices worse off since he assumed office almost year ago.
“In over one year, the president is still holding to the premise
that command and control is the only way out. In a year, we have lost the
single digits inflation status we maintained in past administrations,” she
said.
But, speaking on Channels TV programme, Sunrise, today, Mrs
Adeosun disagreed with Mrs Ezekwesili, saying although there were no quick
remedy to the country’s economic challenges, the Buhari administration was
handling the issues with a planned strategy.
“I disagree with Mrs Ezekwesili,” Mrs. Adeosun said. “The
present government has a planned economy and does not operate a command and
control economic system as alleged by the former minister.
“There are
no quick solutions to the current economic woes. We are going to pump N350
billion into the economy until we see growth. The job will be done painstakingly,
and we will come out of it better,” she assured.
The Minister said one of the biggest challenges the government
was facing was leakage of revenues in ministries departments and agencies.
Mrs. Adeosun said the government expects to see the expenditure
of N64 billion on official travels in 2014 drop by about N13.88 billion.
She said such savings from official travels, which should
ordinarily not be a major expense item for the government, would become
available for investment in capital projects, such as roads, power, railways
and public health facilities.
To reduce the high incidence of cash transactions in government
business, the minister said deployment of Ministerial Debit Cards would soon
debut to reduce stealing by government officials and to enable easy tracing of
e-expenditures.

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