Editorial
CBN: Leave Pension Fund Alone
The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi in his bid to attract cheaper lendable funds to the critical sectors of the nation’s economy, recently made a case for the unloading of the N2 trillion Pension fund for infrastructural development.
Such a move Sanusi said, would tremendously improve sectors like power, refineries, securities, transportation and by extension, employment and productive output, arguing that loans obtained from commercial banks at the 25 percent lending rate cannot successfully fund the growing of critical sectors including power and roads.
The CBN governor, who spoke against the backdrop of revelation by Mr. Munira Shonibare, managing director of 1.0 furniture, one of the beneficiaries of the intervention fund, that the injection of N500 million at 7 per cent interest rate, brought about a ten-fold growth in output, argued that if as little as N500 million could make such an impact in a relatively small firm, the unloading of N2 trillion would go a long way in revamping the economy.
However, we disagree. The pension fund is dedicated to the sustenance of the nation’s elder statesmen and women who served their fatherland with their energy in their various duty posts and retired.
The pension fund should not be exposed to the vagaries and buffeting of the nation’s harsh investment climate nor the whims and caprices of the average Nigerian businessman.
We object to the idea of making the N2 trillion pension fund available as cheap investment funds because past experiences have shown that most Nigerian businessmen are great borrowers from financial institutions and greater loans defaulters.
We are, therefore, convinced that exposing the pension fund to Nigerian businessmen and investors would endanger the fund and its targeted beneficiaries as well as compromise its objectives.
Furthermore, we note that the CBN governor’s call for the unloading of the pension fund was based on the fluke success of just one beneficiary of the N500 million intervention fund which we believe, may not capture the average performance of all beneficiaries of the loan.
While we appreciate the efforts of the CBN in developing the economy through various monetary policies including the recent intervention fund, we believe that it is imperative that performance of the policies should be monitored and assessed over a period of time to arrive at sound and credible conclusions.
The performance of one beneficiary of the intervention fund cannot therefore constitute the template upon which an infringement on a massive pension fund can be predicated.
What the pension fund requires is greater protection and security. We, therefore, demand that the N2 trillion be put in a fixed deposit account which would yield interest.
The concern of Sanusi for the resuscitation of the critical sectors to drive economic growth is understandable but it is also a well known fact that corruption, not lack of funds and sound policies is the bane of the nation’s development.
The power, road infrastructure, railways and refineries among other sectors had benefited from massive Federal Government financial allocations, which rather than turn them around, had further crippled them due to embezzlement, misappropriation and other forms of corruption and incompetent leadership.
While the role of cheap funds in driving the growth of the critical sectors may remain valid, the need for ethical re-orientation, exemplary leadership and untainted patriotism remain compelling in the efforts towards the socio-economic development of the nation.
We urge the Federal Government to protect the pension fund in the interest of our aging population and enjoin states and firms withholding pension deductions to release them forthwith to the pension fund.
The plight of retirees and pensioners across the states of the federation has remained, at best worrisome, in spite of the N2 trillion pension fund.
The Federal Government must, therefore, make the pension fund responsive to the plight of the nation’s pensioners and not divert it to any investment by whatsoever name called.
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