President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday
faulted the World Bank report which placed Nigeria among the five
poorest countries in the world, saying “the nation is not poor’’.
Addressing workers at the May Day rally
held at the Eagle Square, Abuja, the President said: “The challenge of
the country is not poverty, but redistribution of wealth.’’
He said the realities on ground did not
portray the country as a poor nation, but a nation whose abundant wealth
needed to be evenly redistributed.
The President added that his
administration was working assiduously and putting policies in place to
ensure that Nigerians had access to financial resources to create wealth
for themselves.
He said: “Nigeria is not a poor country.
Nigerians are the most travelled people. There is no country you go
that you will not see Nigerians. The GDP of Nigeria is over half a
trillion dollars and the economy is growing at close to 7 per cent.
“Aliko Dangote was recently classified among the 25 richest people in the World.
“I visited Kenya recently on a state visit and there was a programme for Nigerian and Kenyan business men to interact and the number of private jets that landed in Nairobi that day was a subject of discussion in Kenyan media for over a week.
“If you talk about ownership of private
jets, Nigeria will be among the first 10 countries, yet they are saying
that Nigeria is among the five poorest countries.
“Some of you will experience that there
is an amount of money you will give to a Nigerian who needs help and
will not even regard it and thank you but if you travel to other
countries and give such an amount, the person will celebrate.
“But the World Bank statistics shows
that Nigeria is among the five poorest countries. Our problem is not
poverty, our problem is redistribution of wealth.’’
The President added that “probably
wealth is concentrated in very few hands and a number of people do not
have access to it and that is why my administration is committed in
terms of financial inclusiveness and we are working very hard to achieve
this.’’
Jonathan noted that in the agriculture
sector, government introduced the electronic wallet for farmers in rural
areas so they could access income through bank facilities.
He said government was also moving
agriculture from just a rural development programme to wealth creation
and major business programme, adding that government had taken
pro-active steps and policies to stabilise power “so that small and
medium-scale enterprises will thrive.
“The key commitment of government is to
make sure that so many Nigerians have access to finance so that they
will be able to create wealth for themselves.’’
The President also read certain
political undertones in the processes of ratings by international bodies
and global rating agencies.
He explained that “so many countries were downgraded economically in the few past months including some African countries.
“They looked at Nigeria and we gave
explanations and they could not see any convincing reason but to
downgrade our economy, they left us as BB minus.
“They said elections are coming,
politicians are shouting at themselves, it may affect their economy, we
will no longer give you stable outlook but give you negative outlook,
which is same BB minus.
“When so many countries have been downgraded, they said Nigeria is one of the five poorest countries.’’
Jonathan assured that with the support
of Nigerians and in particular, the organised labour, the nation would
overcome its challenges and take its pride of palce in the globe.
“We must collectively move this country
to where we want to go. Government is working with labour leaders and
workers of this country to create wealth. We will sure move this country
to where we want to go.’’
The President also reiterated that the
on-going National Conference was not personal but meant to evolve a
roadmap that would redefine Nigeria.
He said he had no personal agenda for initiating the Conference, but for the common good and progress of the country.
He added that “a number of people came
to me that any President that set up this kind of conference must have a
roadmap set for him. But I said to them that the roadmap is the roadmap
for Nigeria.
“Jonathan has no personal roadmap for
the conference. You can go and ask the over 500 people that are there
whether I have sent any emissary to anybody to define anything for my
own interest. I repeat, the issue is not Jonathan, I have spent three
quarters of my life on earth.”
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