The President and Secretary General of the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Bala Kaigama and Musa Lawal, have warned President Buhari to be careful in his dealings with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
This is coming on the heels of a closed door meeting
between Buhari and the IMF boss, Christine Lagarde at the Presidential
Villa, Abuja.
In the meeting, Lagarde offered to assist Nigeria trace stolen funds, restructure the country’s tax system and block revenue leakages.
The TUC leaders think otherwise.
They said “This warning is informed by our bitter
past experience with the financial body. Our country is already in dire
straight and cannot cope with the IMF’s characteristic shylock
conditionalities attached to its credit facilities, and must not accept
same if that is what the visit is about.
“For the umpteenth time, we wonder aloud: Can’t we
solve our challenges as a nation without foreign intervention? Must the
Brettonwood institutions be the ones to always determine and tell us
when our economy is doing well and when to devalue the naira?”
They also asked “Why must they suggest to us how our
economy can be fixed, whereas their recipe has consistently tended to
end up impoverishing more Nigerians than ever before?
“Why has it become so difficult to produce good and
quality rice and other local products for domestic and export needs?
Since when did it become rocket science for our once functional
refineries to produce at more than 30 percent of installed capacity and
make petroleum products available?”
The union leaders insinuated that the IMF boss was here to try to convince Buhari to take loans, an insinuation Lagarde denies.
She said “Let me make it clear that I am not here (in
Nigeria) nor is my team in this country to negotiate a loan with
conditionality. We are not into programme negotiations and frankly at
this point in time, given the determination and resilience displayed by
the President and his team, I don’t see why an IMF programme will be
needed.”
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is an
organization of 188 countries, working to foster global monetary
cooperation, secure financial stability, facilitate international trade,
promote high employment and sustainable economic growth, and reduce
poverty around the world.
Source : AFRIC Vibes
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