The full interview below is his interaction with us at the Premium Times. Read on….
PT:
 Thank you sir for granting me this audience. You promised not to keep 
quiet again and to ask more questions about the running of the economy 
after elections but you seem to have been very quiet since the 
elections. Can you now raise the questions?
Soludo: Great to see 
you too! And I hope this will be a short interview please. Two quick 
points: The elections have come and gone but that was the easier part. 
The hard part now begins. Like most Nigerians, I am happy that Nigeria 
made history with the election. On your question, No; there was no need 
to raise further questions for the outgone administration. President 
Jonathan raised the bar and set a new tone in his statesmanly acceptance
 of defeat. That was noble. Last month, the government admitted that 
they were borrowing since January to pay salaries. What more do you want
 me to say? The two articles I wrote in January and February (which 
Vanguard newspaper still posts on its website as ‘The Soludo Debate’) 
remain living documents and raised some of the salient questions, some 
of which may be bold markers for the new government. Our focus should be
 on the future and the new government.
PT: How is your relationship with Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala now?
Soludo:
 Why do you ask? Of course, she is and will always be my dear elder 
sister and Madam; someone I deeply respect. We may not always agree, 
especially on public policy. The public spat was unfortunate. She felt 
she had an obligation to defend her government but she did so in a 
manner that I also felt an obligation to respond in equal measure. But 
all that is now history. There is nothing personal. Now without the 
encumbrances of government and its pressures, I look forward to our 
returning to the good old days in our personal relationship.
PT: 
The economy is really bad; falling oil price, dwindling revenue, debt, 
inflation, unemployment, collapsed Naira, etc. Where does President 
Buhari start from?
Soludo: I don’t envy President Buhari and his 
team. His government will preside over the transition to a post-oil 
economy, and it won’t be a tea party. If Buhari works 8 hours a day, he 
last less than 7,500 hours left to bring about change in his first term 
in office or less than 9,700 if he works 12 hours a day, with three 
substantive annual budgets to go before the next elections. The clock is
 ticking already. But the Rescue, Stabilize, and Transform (RST) Plan 
requires a 24 by 7 operation. There must be something in the President’s
 natal chart that keeps bringing him to govern us just when things are 
in shambles. But I see hope; I see opportunities. The president and his 
team have a historic opportunity to create a new Nigeria without oil; a 
Nigeria powered by competition and compassion. Fortuitously Nigeria’s 
centenary was last year, 2014. This year marks the beginning of the next
 100 years. President Buhari and the new crop of elected officers at all
 levels must lay the foundation for the next Nigeria; a re-engineered 
Nigeria with the structures and incentives to move from cake-sharing or 
consumption to cake-baking or production. Old thinking and ways of doing
 things won’t work. But an attempt to drive change from Abuja will fail.
 It will be akin to trying to clap with one hand. A coordinated national
 (not federal) response is required.
On your specific question as
 to where President Buhari should begin, let me say that I don’t want to
 join the new industry in town which is ‘agenda setting’. Everyone is 
grabbing the microphone to ‘set agenda’. That’s ok. I am aware that the 
transition committee is working hard on an agenda, and I believe that 
the committee is made up of eminent Nigerians. For me, let us wait for 
them to unveil their action plan and we would have something to comment 
upon or contribute to. I am aware that the African Heritage Institution 
(Afriheritage) is planning a session focused on the agenda after it is 
announced. So, I won’t join this fashion parade of the day. Not yet.
PT:
 Let me be more specific. With the terrible condition of the economy, 
and the high expectations of Nigerians on the new government, what 
practical steps should Buhari take to create jobs speedily?
Soludo:
 I told you I do not want to discuss specifics now. For sure, job 
creation should be the focus of the new post-oil economy. Nigeria 
certainly needs a Job Manifesto, with a target of 8 – 12 million jobs 
over the next four years. This is easier said than done. We are 
diversifying the economy by-passing the manufacturing/industrial sector 
to the tertiary sector (services). Creating value-adding jobs in such an
 economy with one of the highest rates of urbanization in the world will
 task our creativity to the limit. The agenda will require a kind of 
coordination between the federal and state governments in a manner never
 seen before. Luckily the APC states are in majority and I hope their 
party will rein them in. I have read some newspaper reports that solid 
minerals sector and agriculture will be the new kids on the block to 
mint the jobs. That won’t happen! At least not in the manner it is being
 romanticised about. They would have very limited impacts on job 
creation over the next four years, and over the long-run agricultural 
transformation will actually reduce jobs. The prospects of the solid 
mineral sector will depend on the policy framework and even legislation,
 the dynamics of commodity prices especially given the apparent end of 
the commodity super cycle, and the nature of forward and backward 
integration with the rest of the industrial structure. Anyway, let us 
wait for government’s agenda before we can comment, please.
PT: 
In your previous answer you alluded to changing the structures of 
Nigeria. What should President Buhari do with the report of the recent 
national conference?
Soludo: It is up to him to decide what to do
 with the report. A fundamental point however is that you can’t create 
the new Nigeria, a post-oil competitive economy without fundamentally 
altering the existing constitution. The current constitution and the 
political-governance structures created by it are designed to share and 
consume the oil rent. A system designed for consumption cannot become 
efficient for production. Ours is a dysfunctional unitary-federalism, 
with a queer fiscal federalism and it won’t go too far. The federating 
units were created by the central government; it also created the local 
governments. Every month, both the governors and their local government 
chairmen are supposed to beseech Abuja to collect their allocations, 
each supposedly with powers to do whatever they like with the 
allocations. As oil stumbles, the fiscal viability of these creations is
 coming into question. Suddenly, states and LGAs designed to collect and
 spend oil money will be required to produce and create wealth to 
survive. We will see how the old order will give rise to the new without
 some creative destruction. The problem with the structure is that those
 who benefit most from it are required to dismantle it— the incentives 
are incompatible. We need to study the UAE (United Arab Emirates) model 
of competitive federalism—that created the incentives for Dubai and 
other prosperous non-oil regions to emerge. I have written a lot on this
 subject, and we can talk about this the whole day. The point is that 
APC cannot deliver sustainable change to Nigeria if it does not go to 
the roots, and effect systemic change. Tinkering at the margins will 
amount to papering over a cracked wall.
PT: That reminds me of 
the ongoing debate about local government autonomy and joint account 
with the states. Shouldn’t the local governments be autonomous?
Soludo:
 Autonomy from who? I know that it makes for our emotional satisfaction 
to “deal with the state governors” and let the LGAs have ‘autonomy’— but
 only in the sense of getting their “allocation” directly and unhindered
 by state governments but with no incentive-sanctions regime that ties 
such grants to certain productivity and fiscal viability criteria. The 
mistaken belief is that such autonomy will ensure that resources get to 
the ‘grassroots’. It is a funny argument which proceeds from the old 
model of ‘sharing the cake’. We must decide whether we want a federal or
 a unitary system; not both at the same time. Are the states the 
federating units or both states and local governments? Funny enough the 
same constitution gives the state assemblies the power to create local 
governments and maintain oversight over them. At the same time, the 
constitution lists the LGAs created by the military as the ones to 
collect “allocations” from the Federation Account. I want to see 
examples of federal systems in the world where the local governments 
directly receive statutory allocations from the federal government and 
with statutory powers to spend as they wish without performance-based 
criteria attached to such receipts. The mind-set is rooted in the past, 
but the problems are unfolding in the future. When it comes to 
incentives and sanctions regime for creating prosperity and 
accountability, our current constitution is a funny document. It is even
 worse for effective macroeconomic management.
PT: The contest is
 on for zoning and sharing of political offices, and there are fears of 
marginalization by people from the south east and south south because of
 their poor support for President Buhari and APC during the elections. 
How should Buhari assuage the fears of these zones?
Soludo: You 
have raised many issues at the same time. First, given the peculiar 
manner the election was done in the two zones, it is difficult to know 
exactly how the people voted. There is no question that a majority of 
people in the two zones preferred Jonathan but we know what happened 
during the Presidential-national assembly election. Prof. Jega and INEC 
did a great job but we still have a very long way to go. Second, the 
Constitution of Nigeria creates an absurdity in the name of federal 
character whereby a minister must come from every state. So, states in 
the south east and south south must have ministers in the federal 
cabinet. Third, and more substantively, I believe that the clamour for 
offices is simply a power game by the elite, which has only a symbolic 
or emotional significance to the masses. Yes, for some reasons, people 
like to see someone that shares their interests or attributes in 
government—it has a feel good factor. But if occupation of such office 
has any personal benefits, it is largely to the occupant of the office 
and his friends and family.
Our recent history has shown that it 
hardly matters where the occupant of a particular position comes from. I
 am not sure how the welfare of Ota/Ogun people changed because Obasanjo
 was president of Nigeria, or how the man in the street of Katsina or 
Otuoke/Bayelsa prospered more than others simply because their son 
became president. The south east voted massively for ‘one of their own’ 
in 2011 as president, and also had Secretary to Government, Deputy 
Senate president, Deputy Speaker, Minister of Finance and coordinating 
minister of economy and a coterie of other appointments. Yet, the zone 
had the least capital expenditure in the five year presidency, and there
 is hardly any motorable federal highway in the south east. For me, this
 bickering for sharing of positions is an elite game for their personal 
rather than national considerations. What the ordinary Nigerians want 
are institutionalized processes to guarantee their security and 
prosperity. They want services and don’t care who gives it to them. Our 
federal cabinet is nothing but a miniature United Nations whereby each 
minister represents his or her state but no one represents Nigeria. At 
this critical crisis moment, perhaps what Nigeria needs is something 
akin to selecting the best 11 for our national football team: no one 
cares which state or zone they come from; everyone wants Nigeria to come
 home with the cup.
PT: Talking about positions in the 
government, there are rumours in town, especially on social media and 
even in some newspapers that you are being tipped to serve in the 
cabinet of the current government. Are you likely to serve in the 
government or am I speaking with the prospective Finance Minister as 
speculated?
Soludo: Nigerians and their rumours! I am glad you 
said they are rumours and such rumours are normal. For sure, I wish the 
new government success and for the sake of Nigeria, everyone must 
contribute to assist President Buhari succeed. I will contribute in 
whatever way I can. However, everyone can’t sit in government in order 
to serve: some will be there on full time basis while others can 
contribute from outside. For me personally and at this point in time, I 
am not disposed or available for full time public service now; perhaps 
in the future it could happen, but not now. For now, my hands are full 
with several other experiments I am involved with (especially abroad) in
 the private sector, charity, think-tanks, and the international 
community. I am part of a major initiative in Africa’s mining and solid 
minerals sector, and this takes me through several African countries, 
etc. I am having great fun exploring totally new vistas of opportunity 
that are central to Africa’s great leap in the 21st century. I read that
 President Buhari will give priority to solid minerals. We can provide 
free advisory services and perhaps assist to mobilize investment in the 
sector or in any other areas if our advice is needed. In effect, there 
are several ways we can assist the government to succeed but not 
necessarily to take up full time appointment. No, not now!
PT: So, who and who would you recommend to be part of the best 11 in the cabinet?
Soludo:
 There are many eminent Nigerians who are not only bold, critical 
thinkers but also with high execution capacity that the president can 
choose from. I wish him and his team good luck.
PT: Do you agree 
with the suggestion of the current CBN governor, Godwin Emefiele, that 
Nigeria should sell off its oil stakes and retain say, 25% only?
Soludo:
 I won’t comment on it in detail until I read the study. From what is 
reported in the newspapers so far, I will surely have many questions and
 I have hinted the Governor on this.
PT: Some CBN staff are 
currently being tried for alleged fraud regarding circulation of old 
notes, and the EFCC says this has been on for years – apparently more 
people may have been involved. Were you able to deal with that kind of 
fraud when you were in charge?
Soludo: First and foremost, I 
can’t imagine how such a fraud could be executed successfully given the 
architecture of controls and security at the CBN. Such would require the
 collusion of tens of persons from different departments and agencies, 
including law enforcement agencies and commercial banks. It is very 
unlikely to happen without someone blowing the whistle or leakage of 
information. I am particularly happy therefore that it was the CBN that 
discovered the fraud and reported to the law enforcement agencies. This 
is the important point.
PT: Years after leaving the CBN, give us your assessment of the bank under your successors.
Soludo:
 I still reserve my comments for now. When I was in office, I made it a 
policy never to comment on my predecessors, and after I left office I 
also insisted on a self-imposed five year gag order not to comment on my
 successor. Several times I was under immense pressure to break it but I
 thank God that I kept to it. The five year ban is now over, but it is 
not yet time to comment.
PT: The National Bureau of Statistics 
recently came up with a revised methodology for calculating 
unemployment, with the claim that unemployment now stands at about 6%. 
Are you as concerned as many Nigerians who believe that claim is 
baseless?
Soludo: Integrity of our national statistics is a very 
serious issue. I don’t comment on statistics without serious scrutiny. 
Having not had a chance to thoroughly examine the reviewed methodology, I
 will not comment on its veracity or appropriateness. It is one thing to
 have a new methodology, it is yet another to have a comprehensive, 
credible labour market survey. I will need information on these two 
parts to make informed judgment. Already, the NBS/past government have 
created the baseline data for the performance evaluation of the Buhari 
administration in the areas of poverty and unemployment. According to 
them, unemployment is about 6% while poverty is about 32%. If true, then
 the Buhari government is challenged to beat these numbers. The 
government must support NBS to be independent and do its job without 
interference.

 
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