For two weeks, Muhammadu Buhari, Nigeria’s septuagenarian
president, has been out of action, receiving medical treatment in London
for an undisclosed illness. His absence has sent the rumour mill of
Africa’s most populous nation spinning, with frequent erroneous reports
that the president is dead. The tragedy for Nigeria is that policymaking
has been so ponderous during the 20 months since Mr Buhari took office
that, dead or alive, it is not always easy to tell the difference.
Under Mr Buhari’s slow-blinking leadership, Africa’s largest
economy has drifted into crisis. Brought low by the weak oil price, on
which government revenues are woefully dependent, the system has been
starved of dollars. That has driven businesses into the ground, people
on to the margins and the economy into its worst recession in 25 years.
What had been a growing middle class is being daily eviscerated. High
inflation, especially for food, is damaging the poor in whose name Mr
Buhari ran for office.
There are signs that Nigerians — among the most resilient and
adaptive people on the continent — are losing patience. This week, there
were small, but rowdy, protests in Lagos and Abuja, at which
demonstrators complained about their “missing president”.
There is an irony that Mr Buhari, a retired major general, is
missing in action. He ran the country as a military ruler in the
mid-1980s after seizing power in a coup. In civilian guise, his
leadership style has verged on the invisible. After winning power in
2015 on the fourth attempt at the ballot box, he set out at a pace that
has marked his presidency: it took him six months to name a cabinet.
Hopes that he had surrounded himself with a lean team of capable
technocrats empowered to get policy cranking have come to naught.
Policymaking — such that it is — has been crafted instead by a tiny
cabal of loyal, less qualified, stalwarts. Mr Buhari has failed to
articulate anything approaching a vision.
During his campaign, Nigeria’s soldier-turned-politician promised
to train his sight on three main objectives: to improve security, crack
down on corruption and diversify the oil-dependent economy. Progress on
the first two has been patchy, and on the third dismal.
On security, Mr Buhari has managed to galvanise a dem0ralised army
and make gains against Boko Haram, a terrorist organisation that had
been metastasising beyond its northern base. Boko Haram has been pushed
back into a north-eastern redoubt and across the border into Cameroon
and Chad. But that displacement has been offset by security flare-ups
elsewhere, most seriously in the Niger Delta where militants have been
sabotaging oil production.
Mr Buhari’s anti-corruption drive can be boiled down to a few
symbolic gestures and a few high-profile cases against members of the
previous administration. Yet, systemically, little has changed. The
confused exchange rate policy — in which the central bank doles out
scarce dollars at an advantageous rate — is a recipe for opacity. The
dollar shortage is killing off industry rather than nurturing it.
Seventy per cent of Nigeria’s 170m people were not born when Mr
Buhari was last running the show, so they might not notice that his
policies are stuck in the same 1980s groove. Statist and
redistributionist by inclination, he finds himself in charge of a
dysfunctional state and an economy with few revenues to recirculate.
To be fair, Mr Buhari inherited a dire situation courtesy of his
hapless predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan. He did the country a service
simply by beating Mr Jonathan in an election and sparing the country of
further wilful misrule. Yet Dele Olojede, a Pulitzer prizewinning
journalist, says Mr Buhari’s government has been “spinning around in circles”.
As well as the president’s flawed policies, he blames a bloated
political system in which most of the 36 states (far too many) spend
their time grovelling for federal funds. The mosaic of Nigerian politics
is complicated by the need to balance power between north and south and
between the plethora of regions and linguistic groups represented in
the cabinet.
That makes for a parasitic state, not one that can solve problems. “This is a system designed to fail if you have capable people in charge,” says Mr Olojede, who does not put Mr Buhari in that category.
Nigeria has drifted before, though rarely at a time of such
pressing crisis. In 2010, President Umaru Yar’Adua died in office after
months in which his illness had been covered up. The man supposedly in
charge of the country had been literally sleeping on the job. Mr Buhari
may not be as ill as the rumours suggest. Politically, though, rigor
mortis set in quite some time ago.
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