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Lai: It is good to move away from past mistakes

Lai Mohammed, minister of information and culture, says “it is pertinent to learn, understand and move away from past mistakes,”.

Mohammed said this on Tuesday as he identified  Nigeria’s over-dependence on oil as responsible for the present economic recession the nation is passing through.

He said the prevailing economic situation was not about trading blames, saying “those who understand, knew that this recession was bound to happen in such circumstance”.

He said the crash in global price of oil exposed the country’s defective economic policy, with oil accounting for over 60 per cent of the nation’s Growth Domestic Product (GDP).

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The minister stated that the situation was further compounded by inadequate reserves to cushion the effect of oil “misfortunes” on the country.

“We have a very defective economic structure, which depended largely on a single platform of crude and fuel,” he said at a news briefing in his residence in Oro, Irepodun local government area of Kwara state.

“Crude oil accounts for between eight and 12 per cent of our GDP and another 53 per cent of the GDP which we call non-oil, unfortunately also depend on the same oil.

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“When the price of oil crashes in the international market, definitely you are bound to have this kind of shock in the economy.”

He decried the citizens’ preference for imported goods to local products, saying that substantial amount of the country’s foreign exchange earnings was being expended on importation of goods and services.

Mohammed also blamed past administrations’ inability to achieve massive investment on infrastructure to assist manufacturing industries and boost agriculture production for part of current problem.

He said such inadequacies are responsible for the socio-economic imbalance being experienced in the country today.

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The minister, who acknowledged that there was growth in the nation’s economy between 2010 and 2014, said the growth was only fueled by consumption.

“The growth was not fuelled by production or fuelled by investment, and that explains why it was short lived,” he said.

Mohammed said the present administration inherited a whooping debt of N67 billion on fertilizer procurement alone.

He listed part of the administrations palliative reforms to include massive investment in infrastructure and agriculture production.

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“In the whole of 2014 the government then, expended about N18 billion on roads, but spent N35 billion on travels,” he said.

“This year alone, we have spent N70 billion on roads.

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“People say why are these steps not being felt immediately; it is because the last government refused to pay contractors between 2012 and 2015 even when crude was selling at 100 dollars per barrel.

“Out of the N70 billion being owed Julius Berger, we have paid N14 billion.

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“If government was not owing Julius Berger in the past, and we paid N14 billion to them, you would have seen them busy on the roads.”

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