Funds
stashed in foreign accounts rose to $170bn annually in 2003
A report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)
has put the estimated amount of looted funds from the Nigerian treasury at $600
billion between independence and 1999.
Making this known yesterday in Abuja at a two-day international
conference on “Emerging Democracies in Africa: Challenges and Opportunities”,
organised by the Nigerian Institute for Legislative Studies, Professor Festus
Iyayi of the University of Benin said findings had shown that the estimated sum
of money stolen
by the Nigerian elite between 1960 and 1999 from the treasury varied between
$400 billion and $600 billion.
He recalled
a UNODC report, which showed that as far back as 1999, the total amount stolen
by members of the ruling class had been put at $400 billion.
He also
cited the Director of Office of UNODC, Mr. Tim Daniel, who had reported that
$110 billion was being looted annually from the treasury, while stolen monies
stashed in foreign accounts increased from $50 billion in 1999 to $170 billion
in 2003.
The
professor, who disagreed with the Coordinating Minister for the Economy and
Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, on unemployment statistics in
Nigeria, said research had shown that the current level of unemployment in
Nigeria was above 40 per cent and would rise to 50 per cent at the end of this
year.
However,
Okonjo-Iweala, who spoke on “Youth Unemployment and Violence” at the
conference, had put the current unemployment rate in the country at 37 per
cent.
While
noting that the looted sums would have created millions of jobs, Iyayi quoted
UNODC in 1999 as stating: “That is a staggering - almost ‘astronomical’ amount
of money because if you were to put $400 billion bills end-to-end, you could
make 75 round trips to the moon!
“Concretely, those $400 billion could have translated into
millions of vaccinations for children; thousands of kilometres of roads; hundreds
of schools, hospitals and water treatment facilities that never came to be.”
In her presentation, Okonjo-Iweala put the present unemployment rate in Africa at 60 per cent, adding that by 2035, Nigeria’s workforce would exceed that of any other country, including China.
In her presentation, Okonjo-Iweala put the present unemployment rate in Africa at 60 per cent, adding that by 2035, Nigeria’s workforce would exceed that of any other country, including China.
She, however, observed that to achieve this, the country would
need to invest massively in education.
She suggested that entrepreneurial studies should be included in secondary school curriculum with a view to helping the youths create jobs for themselves upon leaving school.
She suggested that entrepreneurial studies should be included in secondary school curriculum with a view to helping the youths create jobs for themselves upon leaving school.
While
insisting that the federal government had put several measures in place to
address youth unemployment, Okonjo-Iweala said the government had concluded the
first phase of youth scheme employment through which she said 1,000
youths shortlisted from 24,000 initially invited for examinations, had
obtained between N1 million to N10 million grants to set up various businesses.
According to her, the output has been cheering with 15,000 jobs
created so far from the initiative, adding that the second round of the scheme,
which was essentially for women, had been launched.
While pledging that the third phase of the scheme would commence soon, Okonjo-Iweala said the employment initiatives were parts of the government’s interventions in youth unemployment with the intention of creating jobs and averting violence among the youth.
While pledging that the third phase of the scheme would commence soon, Okonjo-Iweala said the employment initiatives were parts of the government’s interventions in youth unemployment with the intention of creating jobs and averting violence among the youth.
She also
said so far, 3.5 million jobs had been created in the agricultural sector of
the society.
However, Iyayi recalled that an independent survey conducted
by Rise Network showed that unemployment in the country was growing annually at
the rate of 16 per cent, recalling also that a report of the National Bureau of
Statistics (NBS) in 2011 had put the unemployment rate in both urban and rural
areas at 42.7 per cent, with urban unemployment put at 17.1 per cent while
rural unemployment was put at 25.6 per cent.
Iyayi
described this high rate of unemployment in Nigeria as a time bomb waiting to
explode, as he recalled that it was frustration resulting from unemployment
that forced a youth in Tunisia to set himself ablaze leading to the Arab Spring
in Northern Africa and beyond.
“The
Nigerian youth unemployment rate is about three times the sub-Saharan African
unemployment rate of 12.6 per cent. These statistics do not include youth
unemployment. When these are added, the youth unemployment problem becomes
really potentially explosive.
“This
situation is not only alarming: it is a time bomb, especially in the light of
the fact that while some 4.5 million of the population enter into the labour
market annually (most of whom are job seekers) only 1 per cent can be absorbed.
In effect, employment growth seriously lags behind labour market growth,” he
added.
Iyayi also noted that the situation would only be worse with the
recent prediction that Nigeria’s population would exceed that of the United
States in 2050 and also grow further to 914 million at the end of the century.
He warned: “If the current labour trends continue and the labour market growth continues to consistently outstrip employment growth, the implication is obvious: the bomb will detonate!”
interim leadership arrangement.
He warned: “If the current labour trends continue and the labour market growth continues to consistently outstrip employment growth, the implication is obvious: the bomb will detonate!”
interim leadership arrangement.
Source: Thisday
No comments:
Post a Comment