Site icon Nairametrics

What Nigeria’s next President needs to do – Kingsley Moghalu

The next President of Nigeria needs to restructure debt, remove fuel subsidies, tackle security challenges, and pursue other economic imperatives.

This was disclosed by Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the President of the Institute for Governance and Economic Transformation.

Moghalu stated this during an interview with Channels TV on Monday night, noting that doing everything he highlighted would be necessary towards reducing inflation and ensuring a better economy for the country.

He also urged that reducing fuel subsidies must also come with projects to cushion the effect of rising fuel prices, including a subsidized public transport system.

The current economic situation is gloomy: Moghalu stated that the present Nigerian economic situation is gloomy, citing that the economy is in a state of collapse due to high debt costs, inflation and poor productivity. He said:

News continues after this ad

News continues after this ad

How we got here: He added Nigeria got here through weak economic thinking and improper measurement of growth.

Nigeria’s debt restructuring: He urged that Nigeria’s next President must restructure Nigeria’s debt, which must be done by competent hands to curb waste and free up more resources for social development spending.

Need for tax reform: Moghalu said Nigeria must expand its present tax bracket and show transparency with government spending to enable more Nigerians to pay taxes.

Infrastructure funding: Moghalu advised that the next president should stop using borrowed money on mega projects, but instead handle it through public-private partnerships, he explained:

Removing fuel subsidy: He added the subsidy must go as there is no economic case for subsidizing petrol consumption in Nigeria, urging that almost half of what is spent is a fraud. He revealed the racket has existed for decades.

He urged if we invested N500 billion wisely, the FG and states can come up with a subsidized public transport system, something that will help the poor cushion the immediate impact of the removal of subsidy.

Exit mobile version