
IMF
IMF gives Tinubu’s economic reforms pas mark, says Buhari, Jonathan, Obasanjo dodged implementing policies

The International Monetary Fund said President Bola Tinubu is on track with necessary socio-economic policies to save Nigeria from the brink of collapse.
The IMF blamed past Nigerian leaders, including ex-Presidents Muhammadu Buhari, Goodluck Jonathan and Olusegun Obasanjo for shying away from implementing the the needed structural reforms to save the nation’s economy.
The IMF said: “The new administration has made a strong start, tackling deep-rooted structural issues in challenging circumstances. Immediately, it adopted two policy reforms that its predecessors had shied away from: fuel subsidy removal and the unification of the official exchange rates.”
A statement summarising its assessment of the Nigerian economy, published on Friday, stated that the IMF projects the country’s economic growth to reach three per cent in 2024.
According to the global financial institution, “Growth is projected at 2.9 per cent for 2023 and 3 per cent in 2024, as hydrocarbon performance revives, including from better control of theft.
“If the authorities succeed in developing and implementing a comprehensive reform agenda, the medium-term outlook would be much improved.”
However, IMF admitted that “per-capita growth in Nigeria has stalled, poverty and food insecurity are high, exacerbating the cost-of-living crisis. Low reserves and very limited fiscal space constrain the authorities’ option space.”
IMF added, “President Tinubu has moved ahead with important structural reforms: removing fuel subsidies and unifying the various official foreign exchange windows. He appointed a Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee to make proposals for raising domestic revenue to support investments in infrastructure, health, and education.
“To ease the impact of rapidly rising inflation on living conditions, the government has released cereals from the grain reserve, provided subsidized fertilizer to farmers, capped retail fuel and electricity prices—thus partially reversing the fuel subsidy removal—implemented a civil service wage award, and suspended the VAT on diesel.”
The IMF said Nigeria faces a difficult external environment and wide-ranging domestic challenges like many other countries, noting that external financing (market and official) is scarce, and global food prices have surged, reflecting the repercussions of conflict and geo-economic fragmentation.
It stressed that the CBN “has set out on a welcome path of monetary tightening,” adding that the apex bank’s governor, Olayemi Cardoso, “has committed to making price stability the core objective of monetary policy, and the CBN has taken actions to mop up excess liquidity.
Raising the monetary policy rate until it “is positive in real terms would be an important signal of the direction of monetary policy,” said the IMF.
The government’s focus on revenue mobilisation and digitalisation would improve public service delivery and safeguard fiscal sustainability,” the IMF report stated, with an envisaged reduction in the overall deficit in 2024, which would help contain debt vulnerabilities and eliminate the need for CBN financing.
It said temporary and targeted support to the most vulnerable through social transfers “is needed, given the ongoing cost-of-living crisis.”
Though the IMF and other experts have continued to laud Tinubu’s economic policies, Nigerians have witnessed increased hardship as food prices skyrocket due to rising economic inflation.
Only, last week, Nigerians embarked on street protests over economic hardship in Niger, Kano and Lagos States.
In response to public outcry on the rising cost of food driven by skyrocketing inflation in the country, Mr Tinubu had directed the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security to release about 42,000 metric tonnes of grain, including maize, millet and garri.
On Sunday, Tinubu vowed to make Nigeria a net exporter of food in Africa through aggressive mechanised agriculture.
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