Life
Without Debt
By
Peter Alexander
Egom
culled from
GUARDIAN, August 14, 2005
"Moneylenders
oppress my people and their creditors cheat them" -Isaiah 3:12;Good News
Bible.
Are there any macro-economic theorems which help us to make sense of the
past, present and future of the global economy? Yes, there are. In fact,
there are three theorems in all, two for the macro-economics of exclusion
and one single theorem for the macro-economics of inclusion. Thus, for
instance, the interest parity theorem and the import parity pricing theorem
are the two theorems of macro-economic exclusion which, respectively, make
global moneylenders and creditors of the financial convertible currency
nations of the West and global money-borrowers and debtors of the
non-convertible currency nations of the South, Nigeria inclusive. But, the
purchasing power parity theorem is the single theorem of macro-economic
inclusion which makes every commercial convertible currency nation of the
globe to embrace the Rothschildian ethos of "neither a lender nor a borrower
be" and to then go on to live without debt.
Besides, just as the interest parity theorem is the nature and cause of
the wealth of the financial convertible currency nations of the West and the
import parity pricing theorem is the nature and cause of the poverty of the
non-convertible currency nations of the South, Nigeria inclusive, so is the
purchasing power parity theorem the nature and cause of the wealth of every
commercial convertible currency nation of the globe.
Therefore, it is the import parity pricing theorem, which has ruled
Nigeria since October 1, 1960, that forces the non-convertible currency
Nigeria to keep and manage her international reserves in the banks of the
West and to thereby use her savings to fund the phenomenal growth of local
content in the West and also forces Nigeria to trade and pay abroad with the
currencies of the West and to thereby expatriate all forms of economic
middlemanship: commercial, financial, industrial and technological, from
Nigeria to the West. And, for as long as Nigeria continues to manage her
international reserves in the banks of the West and to use the financial
convertible currencies of the West to trade and pay abroad, for so long will
Nigeria be oppressed by Western moneylenders and be cheated by Western
creditors as Prophet Isaiah tells us as in the above reference from the Good
News Bible.
So, it is crass failure of imagination for many a Nigerian economist to
devote valuable time today to discuss the Paris Club debt relief and debt
management mechanisms which will only keep Nigeria under the oppressive and
cheating thumbscrew of the import parity pricing theorem and the West.
Rather, what should task the imagination of proactive Nigerian economists is
what Nigeria must do here and now to make debt and poverty history for any
Blackman anywhere on the globe.
And, in this regard, it is very idle of any Nigerian economist to expect
the West to commit economic suicide by helping Nigeria to grow exponentially
in local content. For where will the West find the captive markets for their
home made goods and services when Nigeria begins to use her own resources to
satisfy what she needs of goods and services? In reality, therefore, any
Nigerian debt relief or debt management strategy, seen from the perspective
of the import parity pricing theorem, is a colossal disservice to the
economic well-being of the Blackman anywhere on the globe because Nigeria
cannot grow in social and material plenty on this basis. What Nigeria needs
now and forever is a debt consolidation and debt liquidation strategy which
goes naturally with the liberation territory of the purchasing power parity
theorem. For it is this that will unleash the brimming entrepreneurial
spirit of the Blackman upon the whole world.
In fact, no one should ever think that there is any ambiguity about what
should be done to get Nigeria out of the economic woods of joblessness,
disease, starvation, violence and hopelessness. What it will take to get
Nigeria coasting along, in style and comfort, is that the various localities
and regions of Nigeria are encouraged to show their mettle and to go the
extra-mile in using local resources to satisfy local needs. And in order
that this may come to pass, the economic managers of Nigeria must realise
that unless a virile, countrywide and entrepreneur-friendly structure of
capital markets is set up in Nigeria, the country will never begin to grow
in jobs, good and services. It is a countrywide structure of markets for
medium-to-long naira, equity naira in short, that will galvanize local and
rural Nigerians to excel in making use of their local and rural savings to
self-finance themselves into food and job security.
And just think about what this will do to Nigeria's human geography and
physical landscape! The debilitating rural-urban drift of young Nigerian
labour and the urban Okada menace will be stemmed; the embarrassing deluge
of Nigerians at the consular offices of the West in Abuja and Lagos, who
want to find the jobs that their exported savings create in the West, will
disappear as the torrent of the brain-drain from Nigeria to the West will be
reversed.
One can best illustrate how the markets for medium to long term naira
will arise to extricate the gung-ho and enterprising Nigerian populace from
the current debt and poverty trap of the import parity pricing theorem by
way of the flow-of-funds or central banking model of national economic
management. From this perspective, the Nigerian economy is made up of two
halves of moneyflows. The one half is the Nigerian markets for savings
mobilization and distribution where the naira is created and managed in the
hope that it will be used to make economic life more abundant for every
Nigerian. The other half is the Nigerian markets for goods and services
where Nigerian goods and services are waiting to be bought and sold and
where Nigerian labour is waiting to be hired in the process.
What the import parity pricing theorem has continued to do with the
flow-of-funds structure of the Nigerian economy is that it forces its two
halves of financial and industrial naira flows to keep away from each other
and to thereby lose local-content-growing contact with each other. This it
does by making the Nigerian public sector the main indirect-financing end
user of Nigeria's domestic savings. So, it is futile for anyone to expect
the Nigerian economy to grow in goods, services and jobs unless and until
the Nigerian public sector makes way for the Nigerian private sector to
become the exclusive direct-financing end-user of Nigeria's domestic
savings. In effect, for as long as the import parity pricing theorem
dedicates the bulk of Nigeria's domestic savings to the Nigerian public
sector use through short, medium and long term public sector debt
instruments, for so long will Nigeria continue to be oppressed by Western
money-lenders and cheated by Western creditors.
The chain of causation in this regard is quite clear. It is what goes on
within Nigeria that brings about changes in Nigeria's external economic
circumstances. For, as the Nigerian public sector is constrained by the
import parity pricing theorem to seep itself into the domestic debt trap, so
is the Nigerian public sector also constrained to seep Nigeria into the
external debt trap. It follows, therefore, that the key to freeing Nigeria
from external debt peonage lies with the consolidation and liquidation of
the public sector domestic debt pile and with the Nigerian public sector
becoming budget-balancing and self-financing thereafter. And the result of
this will be that the Nigerian private sector will have the unfettered
opportunity, through the countrywide structure of capital markets, to use
Nigeria's equitised domestic savings to grow Nigeria into social and
material plenty.
Naturally, as the Nigerian public sector ceases to crowd out the Nigerian
private sector from having access to the bulk of Nigeria's domestic savings,
so does a dramatic change occur in Nigeria's external economic relations.
Nigeria's economic managers will begin to realise that she has never needed
any foreign capital in order to grow in goods, jobs, and services, and that
what she has always needed is her own domestic capital which the import
parity pricing theorem has continued to export abroad. After all, the
development talk of the day is that the NEPAD Nigeria project is going to be
owned and led by Nigerians. But, Nigerians cannot own what they do not fund
and cannot lead what they do not own. So, if we must live by the financing
scheme that is implicit in the NEPAD Nigeria project, then Nigeria must
begin right away to grow and develop a country wide structure of markets for
equity or self-financing. These are markets for medium-long naira.
In effect, under the prodding of the purchasing power parity theorem,
Nigeria's economic managers will become alive to the necessity for a new
brand of the Nigerian market for currencies which will enable Nigeria to use
the naira to conserve Nigeria's domestic savings for Nigeria's domestic use.
This is the real substance of the much abused but little understood concept
of resource control:resource conservation for balanced domestic use. And,
inevitably, Nigeria will opt for her international reserves to be managed in
Nigerian banks at home and abroad and for the naira to become an
international medium of trade and payments so that all of Nigeria's economic
middlemanship is domesticated within Nigeria. Thus, under the influence of
the purchasing power parity theorem, the economic managers of Nigeria will
find that the gold or commercial convertibility of the naira is a
non-negotiable precondition for Nigeria to live without debt and so to grow
exponentially in local content.
Therefore, I say it, without any fear of contradiction whatever, that the
history of economic thought and practice does not support the idea that
Nigeria can recover into growth in local content on the basis of the import
parity pricing theorem which not only exports her savings to the West and
keeps her currency non-convertible but also conditions her to be oppressed
by Western money-lenders and cheated by Western creditors. Rather, the
history of economic thought and practice supports the idea that Nigeria will
recover into exponential growth in local content only when the purchasing
power parity theorem enables her to keep her savings at home for her own
balanced domestic use, to use her currency, the naira, for her external
trade and payments and so to live without debt and quite beyond the
oppressive and cheating reach of the money lenders and creditors of the
West.
Indeed, it is time the global economy, and, especially, the international
community, hearkened to the wise words of the late Pope Paul the Sixth on
global resource control as follows: Si vis pacem, cole justitiam: If you
want peace, cultivate justice
| Egom is an economist. |