Garba Shehu urges foreign media to report beyond crime, conflict and disease
One would imagine that business papers
like economic success stories; apparently not. Instead, they feast and
thrive on negatives. Financial Times, for instance, is worried about a
government policy that
is enabling boom in rice production in Nigeria.
And the Economist is panicky about toothpick manufacturers springing up
following tariffs that protect local manufacturers to get off the ground
and compete globally.
Both papers only see negatives.
Specifically,Economist dwells on out-of-date statistics. Deliberately it
turns away from the positives as it will complicate already tailored
narratives. Some foreign correspondents keep the storyline simple:
Africa is home for all bad things: poverty, disease and crime. And
unremitting bleakness lives on the continent, and success is the
aberration.
Since only negative reports on Africa make it to the international
media, a backward picture of a nation is painted succinctly and efforts
at growth in different ramifications, both investment and diplomacy are
ignored. From the content of these stories, readers must be baffled that
Nigerians know toothpicks, let alone be able to manufacture them.
The fact remains that with squeeze in
media budgets there are not enough knowledgeable foreign correspondents
based on the continent to report accurate news and uphold journalistic
standards. And the parachuting style clearly defies ethics and quality.
To cut cost, many media houses rely on the expedience of technology. The
highly revered and sacrosanct fact-checking skill of journalism slips
as a result. Anyone with a laptop is trusted as credible source. Cogent
arguments no longer have a place, instead we have jumbled and emotive
criticisms.
For instance, the Financial Times
declares proudly that President Buhari failed to spur rice growing,
whilst stating that production was at record levels up 60 per cent in
2018 from what we had in 2013. TheEconomist talks about overdependence
on oil, yet criticises policies such as subsidies or financial
incentives that allow local businesses to compete and diversify the
economy. It frowns at power shortfalls, but turns around to attack
Alhaji Aliko Dangote – the man building the world’s largest oil refinery
and improving power infrastructure in Nigeria.
Fundamentally, the foreign
correspondents fail to appreciate context – understandably if they have
to cover a large “patch’’ with shoe-string budgets, but never-the-less
it is impermissible as facts must remain sacred. The Economist states
that the economy was “sputtering’’ when President Buhari’s first term
began in 2015, and still concluded he made a “bad situation worse”.
“Sputtering’’ sounds euphemistic. The reality is that the economy was on
its knees. The overdependence on oil, paired with impending global
commodity crash, made the entry into recession at the beginning of the
term inevitable. Now, however, the first quarter growth of 2019 has been
the strongest.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
recently said analysts and onlookers must recognise “how deep the shock”
was to the economy. As a famous American business magnate observed:
“Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”
Indeed, Nigeria had been awash in oil dollars (over $100 a barrel), yet
previous governments failed to add muscle to the economy.
Since the recession struck (crude oil
went below $40 per barrel), the government has taken measures to redress
weaknesses in our economy. The IMF goes on to praise the strong
diversification in the economy and welcome the focus on public
investment. For instance, the government has spent record figures on
infrastructure in the past two years and capital expenditure is now
around 30 per cent of the budget, rather than inadequate 10 per cent in
2015.
There has also been a drive to self-sufficiency where possible. It
makes no sense for Nigeria to import rice, yet foreign shipments were
dumped to maintain dependency. Farmers needed help: strategic tariffs
were applied to allow for initial competition, whilst the Central Bank
of Nigeria financial initiatives allowed growers to access capital for
fertilizer and equipment. Over the past three years, production has
risen year-on-year. Nigeria, as of 2018, is Africa’s largest producer of
rice. Self-sufficiency has almost been attained.
From reading some foreign articles, you
would be surprised to find these success stories mentioned; amazed that
anyone would cheer the decision on tariffs to ward off desolation. And
the failure to see or present any achievement perpetuates stereotypes
that serve as disincentives to Foreign Direct Investment and
partnership.
Granted, there are challenges in
Nigeria. The country is a large and diverse nation with structural
challenges that have been passed down through decades. But foreign
reports ignore the complexity, and instead offer platitudes as
solutions. This diminishes the difficulties facing those in governance:
they must merely “stamp out corruption” or “improve governance” – common
advice amongst those quick to criticise, but barren in tangible and
measurable solutions.
Similarly, we are told to “harness the
vim of Nigerians’’ – which is true. But this seems obvious as to even
need mentioning. It is – to be sure – how you do that. We in governance
have no illusion about this. Vim is harnessed when a nation has decent
infrastructure that connects the economy, and thousands of miles of road
have been constructed, as well as the expansion and upgrading of
colonial-era railway network. When children have good education; we are
currently ensuring nine million free school meals daily across the
nation and it has boosted enrolment and attendance. And when business
reforms create enabling environment; already Nigeria has gone up 24
places in Ease of Doing Business ranking since 2018, and the country is
currently one of the top 10 global reformers, which is good news!
––Shehu is Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media & Publicity
––Shehu is Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media & Publicity
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