- Jega noted that while it is good to relate with the World Bank and other organizations, “we should not swallow hook, line, and sinker what they bring to us”.
An erstwhile Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega, has warned President Bola Tinubu against heeding every advice from global financial powerhouse.
He noted that while it is not entirely a bad thing to engage the Bretton Woods institutions – the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, IMF — the Tinubu government must be careful how it goes about such engagements, lest it plunges the nation into economic ruins.
The former INEC boss spoke while speaking at the ongoing 2024 Annual Directors’ Conference with the theme, ‘Good Governance as a Catalyst for Economic Recovery, Growth, and Development’, organised by the Chartered Institute of Directors of Nigeria, CIoD.
He also called for a reform of the leadership recruitment process, saying the major challenge confronting Nigeria is that most of the leaders are not prepared for leadership.
The Bretton Woods institutions have been accused of pushing President Bola Tinubu to implement economic policies, especially the removal of subsidy from PMS as well as the floating of the naira, that have caused unprecedented inflation and cost of living crisis and tanked the economy.
The hardship in the country has been blamed on the ‘anti-people’ policies suggested by the World Bank and IMF.
But the IMF’s African Region Director, Abebe Selassie, had, at a briefing on the sidelines of the IMF and World Bank Annual Meetings in Washington DC, US, claimed that the organisation did not advise Tinubu to remove fuel subsidy.
“The decision was a domestic one. It was President Tinubu’s decision. We don’t have programmes in Nigeria. Our role is limited to regular dialogue, as we have with other nations like Japan or the UK,” he said.
Jega advised Nigerians to pay serious attention to nurturing and entrenching democratic governance, rather than merely good governance, as being promoted by the World Bank.
“This is the only way to place Nigeria on a sustainable trajectory of what I call ‘People-oriented development processes.
“We must be very careful in terms of what measures they have suggested to us because if we don’t do that we may advertently or inadvertently fall into greater medium and longer-term problems even if we think we are seeing short-term benefits from that kind of engagement,” he stressed