• Report shows Nigeria is sinking under Buhari, says PDP
Iyobosa Uwugiaren in Abuja
A report by Steve
Hanke, an economist from John Hopkins University in Baltimore, United
States, has listed Nigeria, Venezuela, Iran, Brazil and others among the
first 10 miserable countries in the
world with Nigeria assuming the
sixth position.
According to the
report, Venezuela was listed as the most miserable country in the world,
saying: “Venezuela holds the inglorious title of the most miserable
country in the world in 2018, as it did in 2017, 2016, and 2015.”
Reacting to the recent
report, the main opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP),
yesterday described Steve Hanke’s report as a vindication of its
position all this while, adding that the country has sunk into a new low
since President Muhammadu Buhari assumed power in 2015.
Iran took third in the
ranking while Brazil made it to the fourth position. Turkey took fifth
position as the giant of Africa, Nigeria, emerged sixth.
The Misery Index was calculated using economic indices, including unemployment, inflation and bank lending rates.
For Nigeria, unemployment rate was the major contributing factor to its miserable state.
The report added: “The
first Misery Index was constructed by an economist, Art Okun, in the
1960s as a way to provide President Lyndon Johnson of US with an easily
digestible snapshot of the economy. That original Misery Index was just a
simple sum of a nation’s annual inflation rate and its unemployment
rate.
‘’The index has been
modified several times, first by Robert Barro of Harvard University and
then by myself. My modified Misery Index is the sum of the unemployment,
inflation and bank lending rates, minus the percentage change in real
GDP per capita.
“Higher readings on
the first three elements are bad and make people more miserable. These
are offset by a good (GDP per capita growth), which is subtracted from
the sum of the ‘bads’. A higher Misery Index score reflects a higher
level of misery, and it’s a simple enough metric that a busy president,
without time for extensive economic briefings, can understand at a
glance.
“The accompanying
table contains Misery Index rankings for the 95 nations that report
relevant data on a timely basis. For consistency and comparability, and
with few exceptions, data were retrieved from the Economist Intelligence
Unit.”
Reacting to the report
in a statement by PDP’s spokesman, Kola Ologbondiyan, the party tasked
the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) to perish the thought of the
planned increment in Value Added Tax (VAT), saying such would only make
life more difficult for the ‘already traumatised Nigerians’.
“That report is a
vindication of the position of the PDP all these while. The economy has
virtually collapsed under President Buhari, and the man is even mooting
the idea of piling more pressure on Nigerians.
“Nigerians have never
suffered like they are suffering today because those charged with the
responsibility of managing the economy have failed completely. They have
no idea of what it takes to manage an economy like ours.
“As an opposition
party, we call on the presidency to take urgent steps to fine-tune the
economy, create jobs for our teeming youths if only to justify that a
government is in place.
“In the interim, we
advise them to stop their plan to increase VAT as that would only fetch
millions of Nigerians additional pain and discomfort,” PDP added.
While noting that
democracy is essentially about the people, Ologbindiyan added that
rather than improving on the living conditions of Nigerians, the APC-led
administration of President Buhari appears to be deriving pleasure from
inflicting pains and misery on the people.
No comments:
Post a Comment