Racoon(m): 6:13pm On May 29 |
"The Seating president may have complicated the problem. Tinubu allowed too much politics to get in the way of a sound economic programme. He made promises that could not be fulfilled" – Sobowale
Perhaps the biggest issues around President Tinubu’s performance in office so far are centered on the economy and the general wellbeing of individuals and businesses in the country. Most Nigerians have had reasons to complain openly in public discussions and social media that they have never had it so bad in of economic well being.
At the Vanguard’s Conference Hall, Dr Dele Sobowale, Vanguard Newspapers’ columnist and an accomplished economist tried to put a context to this issue by noting that the current regime started on a very difficult economic platform. But he also indicated that President Tinubu has not addressed the problems he inherited, adding that so far the sitting president may have even complicated the problem.
Dissecting The Renewed Hope Agenda
Sobowale stated: ‘‘Usually, in the past 38 years, when I am assessing governments, I would generally like to start from what they promised us, and what they have delivered up to that point in time.
‘‘Indeed, President Bola Tinubu inherited a big mess. It must be stated that he inherited a big mess from somebody he installed in office. So, he was the architect of his own misfortune, in many respects. I was shocked when I collected my own copy of his Renewed Hope Agenda and I read it thoroughly, word for word. The person who called me and sent it (the manifesto) to me asked what I thought of it. I said, I can describe it in one word, hogwash!
‘It is so full of many promises that cannot possibly be redeemed. It was more or less a political document that somebody wanted to build an economic programme upon. No one can build a sound economic programme on what is essentially a political document.
‘‘I became alarmed when I got to the point where it said, ‘we are standing on the foundation emplaced by the current (past) istration’. He wanted to stand on a foundation laid by that istration (the Buhari istration).
‘‘The meaning of this is that I am standing on a foundation that has crumbled under us, and which could never work. More or less, in my own summary, he allowed too much politics to get in the way of a sound economic programme. He made promises that could not be fulfilled.
‘‘If you read it (the Renewed Hope agenda), it says in 2025, Nigeria is supposed to be producing and exporting 2.06 million barrels (Mbps) of crude oil per day. But at the end of April, we did only 1.4 mbpd. In fact, in his two years in office, there has not been any month we did up to 1.7 mbpd. The average has been more like 1.5 mbpd, and he promised us 2.06 today. He is even talking about 4 million barrels by 2027. We will never get there. It is not a curse; it is just a fact because the figure is unrealistic.
‘‘Also, he made another cardinal mistake. He packed too many of the Lagos boys who helped him as governor, into the Federal Government. Lagos is not Nigeria, Nigeria is not Lagos. A good commissioner in Lagos State might not be a good minister at the federal level. At the federal level, you need people who have some kind of experience for years. You do not take good commissioners in your state and make them federal ministers.”
On Security
Sobowale also lamented the security challenges that are frustrating the enabling environment for businesses. On this he narrated the historical antecedents saying, ‘‘I lived and worked in the North for 10 to 12 years. In addition to that, I was always in the North for almost 15 years after that. So, I know the area very well. Before Kebbi and Zamfara states were taken out of Sokoto State, I was into rice growing and milling in Sokoto. I had a rice mill in Sokoto.
‘‘Just in pursuit of rice smugglers, we were able to identify no less than 27 illegal border entries into Sokoto State. That was 1990. And when I was in Borno State, before Yobe was excised out of it, there were no less than 38 illegal entries into Nigeria from Borno State.
‘‘So, that gives you an idea of the kind of security problem we have. In fact, at the end of the day, by the time I became the National Sales Director for Boots, which was the most widely distributed group of OTC drugs in the 1970s, I knew of no less than 800 illegal border posts in Nigeria, through which people could enter. So, the security forces in Nigeria are already handicapped by the number of border entries we have in and out of this country.
‘‘Now, what started as the Boko Haram issue has morphed into many conflicts in Borno and Yobe states. There is ethnic violence; Kanuri versus Fulani, Kanuri versus Hausa and many others. In Taraba State, where General Theophilus Danjuma (rtd) comes from, among the most prominent ethnic groups are the Jukun, and the Jukun are highly protected within their territory.
‘‘When General Danjuma was talking about protecting yourself, the Jukun in Taraba State, the Wukari were already doing that. They were already arming themselves.
‘‘But the problem is that, in arming themselves, they started taking the law into their own hands.
‘‘Last weekend, when I got my copy of Weekend Trust, it showed instances of people actually slaughtered like cows. Now, where the harassment started, the violence first, other people are now reacting and taking laws into their own hands. In many areas of Plateau and Benue states, they are not waiting for the Police or the Army to defend them. They are going after the herdsmen. The people in Gboko are not waiting for the Police; they are going after the herdsmen. The Idoma are not waiting for the Police to protect them, they are going after the herdsmen.
‘‘All of a sudden, we have a situation where it is not a simple matter of just Boko Haram, Lakurawa, Islamic State’s West Africa Province, ISWAP.
‘‘We also have the issue of ethnic violence. Depending on which state you are in the North, the security situation that the Police and the army are forced to quell, are now more than just herdsmen and Boko Haram. It is inter-ethnic conflict.
‘‘Some of my old friends who are still alive and who call me from time to time paint a totally different picture than the simple picture that we paint in the public media of what the security forces have to overcome. If you are in Pankshin, your views of security situations are more than that of a man in Argungu.
‘‘The truth of the matter is that our security forces are overwhelmed. They really do not know who to really defend against. We read in today’s papers that Boko Haram and ISWAP are actually going and attacking army barracks. That has an implication. They really want to strip us of our defense. When they demoralise the Army, the Police and the Air force, then the entire country becomes defenseless. That is my biggest concern.
‘‘I was listening to what the former Inspector General of Police, IGP, submitted in this Conference. He has to be, by nature of his position, very careful about what he is saying. But he is actually telling us the truth that some people might not like to hear. The truth is that equipping the security forces alone might not solve our problem.
‘‘For instance, a situation where the Governor of Borno State unilaterally pardoned thousands of Boko Haram operatives because he thought they were repentant. They (repentant terrorists) have killed a lot of people. They have rendered a lot of people homeless. They have created widows. They have created orphans. They have devastated communities.
Yet Governor Zulum unilaterally takes thousands of them and says they have repented and you are forgiving them. How do you monitor their movements? At that time, I predicted that, ‘Mr. Governor, everybody is going to regret what you have done.’ Look at what is happening in Borno State now.
‘‘My own view, what Governor Zulum has done is to have released more harmful people into the community than ever before and create more problems for the security forces of Nigeria.
‘‘Look, if I happen to be in the Air Force, in the Police and I have never been to Bono State, I will be praying that they do not ask me to go there. Why? It is because I do not need to go and die there. In this kind of operating environment how many businesses can thrive? How much growth can the economy record?
Direction Of The Economy
My first analysis of government budgets, federal government budgets, what I did in Vanguard was in 1988. A few days ago I was going through my archives, and I brought up that 1988 analysis.
‘‘I took my analysis of the 2025 budget by President Bola Tinubu and it is remarkable how all the complaints, the things I was saying in 1988, still apply to Tinubu’s budget. You see, governments in Nigeria do not take budgets seriously.
‘‘Look, from 1974 to 1998, when I was the sales director, marketing director, or marketing manager, or the chief revenue officer of a company, I learned very quickly that what you put in your revenue budget is a promise to the company, to the shareholders.
‘‘If you look at the income statement, the first line is turnover, the revenue that is expected. So each time we look at this year’s budget, and he said N54 trillion, he will know what I’m saying.
‘‘If the managing director of a company presents to the shareholders what you are expecting this year, turnover of N54 trillion, if at the end of the year, he is able to achieve only N40 trillion, he will probably be out of office at the next board meeting.
‘‘If the shareholders are still lenient enough to give him another chance, another year, and assuming he promises N54 trillion, and by half year, they are still on N22 trillion, they will kick him out before the end of the second year. ‘‘That 54 trillion is a promise, and before you make that promise, you must be sure that you can redeem it, because so many things are going to depend on your saying, ‘I can achieve N54 trillion revenue’.
The minute you fail to achieve that revenue target, so many things are going to go out of kelter in that company. ‘‘Since 2013, when Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala first put in a budget with 2 mbpd of crude oil, every government has been using 2 mbpd, and not a single day in the 12 years to date have we achieved that target. Why do we continue to use it?
‘‘Look, if you are on the board of directors of the company and the sales director says turnover will be 2-3 million, first year he fails, second year he fails, why will you allow him to repeat the same thing for another 12 years? Why do we stick to it? Why not sit down seriously and ask themselves what is the realistic volume of oil per day that can be achieved? And then base the budget on that.
‘‘If we are going to base the budget on that realistic benchmark that will lead to some consequences. It will lead to downsizing the size of the federal government and ultimately, government’s spending. Why do we need 48 ministers? No other country in the world has more than 25. Why does Nigeria need 48?’’
In the next two years
Looking at Tinubu’s economic performance at the end of his first term, Sobowale stated: ‘‘One thing about realistic budgeting is that it disciplines you. Whether it’s the private sector or the public sector, realistic good budgeting disciplines everybody.
‘‘To some extent, the government is the sum total of all the families in the economy. Can you imagine if you and I have realistically known that we are going to earn N2 million, but we tell our children we are going to earn N5 million.
‘‘Immediately, we create problems for ourselves by making that declaration, because now everybody in the family will expect more out of that N5 million. And then you are straining to meet that N5 million need. Then you are borrowing money, and then you are getting involved in corrupt practices.
‘‘I didn’t read about where we are supposed to be now. How many billions of dollars is the GDP planned to be? It would make us laugh. Because where we are is about one quarter of what this budget says we should be.
‘‘You cannot in the private sector promise the shareholders $600 billion and produce only $170 billion. They will throw you out’’.
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/05/tinubu-inherited-a-big-mess-from-somebody-he-installed-in-office-dr-sobowale/#google_vignette
12 Likes 
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Agbegbaorogboye: 6:28pm On May 29 |
They protested against subsidy removal
Today they are beating their chests that they removed subsidy
They said corruption will kill Nigeria if we don't kill it
Today they are celebrating corruption installed in the highest offices in the country
They swore with their lives that only a President who drinks a satchet of milo won't steal the country blind
Today they are celebrating a President who drinks only the best wines
What are they? Fela said it....
107 Likes 13 Shares |
Georgry(m): 6:52pm On May 29 |
This country is too hard now far, things are so expensive that when you sort out your bill for necessities there is barely anything left.
20 Likes 1 Share |
Racoon(m): 6:53pm On May 29 |
Meaning Buhari that Tinubu promised to continued his disastrous policies was indeed a failure. Everything about this unfortunate agbadorian govt is an irony that was over magnified. Now watch his lapdogs call this man names as usual.
29 Likes 2 Shares |
Racoon(m): 6:57pm On May 29 |
"-Indeed, President Bola Tinubu inherited a big mess. It must be stated that he inherited a big mess from somebody he installed in office. So, he was the architect of his own misfortune, in many respects.
-His Renewed Hope Agenda can be describe in one word, hogwash! It is so full of many promises that cannot possibly be redeemed. It was more or less a political document that somebody wanted to build an economic programme upon. No one can build a sound economic programme on what is essentially a political document.
-I became alarmed when I got to the point where it said, ‘we are standing on the foundation emplaced by the current (past) istration’. He wanted to stand on a foundation laid by the Buhari istration. More or less, in my own summary, He made promises that could not be fulfilled.
-Tinubu also made another cardinal mistake. He packed too many of the Lagos boys who helped him as governor, into the Federal Government. Lagos is not Nigeria, Nigeria is not Lagos...."
21 Likes |
Mabuggi88: 7:21pm On May 29 |
Craps..... they should both be locked up then, for planning Nigeria and Nigerians downfall
13 Likes 1 Share |
helinues: 7:22pm On May 29 |
Toh
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SeeWahala: 8:10pm On May 29 |
‘‘Indeed, President Bola Tinubu inherited a big mess from somebody he installed in office
E shock una abi?
12 Likes 
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Goldbw122(m): 8:10pm On May 29 |
This suggests that what we’re experiencing now may be one of the most challenging periods of leadership in our history. It shows that Nigeria is facing deeper issues than many of us expected.
5 Likes |
Anguldi(m): 8:10pm On May 29 |
Very insulting 🤷
5 Likes |
Anguldi(m): 8:11pm On May 29 |
Buhari must address this 👌💯
4 Likes 1 Share |
reiddecuti: 8:11pm On May 29 |
They never get tired of blame game. 2 years down and 2 years to go and the blame game continues...
Tinubu will handle the economy and Shettima will handle the security, see where we are now.
You can never ever see then take up their responsibilities.
AGBADORIANS.....
21 Likes |
Goldbw122(m): 8:11pm On May 29 |
Georgry:
This country is too hard now far, things are so expensive that when you sort out your bill for necessities there is barely anything left.
The rich are getting richer, the poor are getting poorer..
2 Likes |
cjudy(m): 8:12pm On May 29 |
That same person that the Zone B worshipped here and called him Messiah and the best thing after bread, now you’re telling us it’s bad. Shameeeeeee
13 Likes 1 Share |
bluefilm: 8:12pm On May 29 |
Nonsense excuse for a totally lackluster governance
14 Likes 1 Share |
happney65: 8:14pm On May 29 |
Tinubu didnt promise anybody anything.
All he said was it was his turn.
All he did was dancing at campaign grounds and saying it was his turn..
Himself and Buhari are two people that should not have gotten close to the Presidency at all
26 Likes 2 Shares |
TechBaron: 8:14pm On May 29 |
He needs a daily reminder on that.
3 Likes |
LordBillionz: 8:14pm On May 29 |
APC and blame game.
8 Likes 1 Share |
KillahPriest: 8:14pm On May 29 |
Didn't sensible Nigerians sound an alarm and warn of the impending crisis ? We did but praise singers said that "installed" president was the best thing after gbegiri and ewedu then went ahead again in 2023 to vote along tribal and religious lines knowing fully well that there was nothing to offer from their candidate so, here we are
7 Likes |
Wizardslayer: 8:14pm On May 29 |
Tinubu never inherited anything at all, rather he created all mess we are into now.
Tinubu just wanted that title called Mr president.
16 Likes 1 Share |
DeltaBachelor(m): 8:14pm On May 29 |
lol
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F117nighthawk: 8:14pm On May 29 |
The Big mess he inherited are from same party now,what of other juicy opportunities Tinubu is enjoying as president?we don't hear any complains about that,he bought a plane,yatch,new cars and so on,in same economic mess bedeviling the same system.its only when it comes to doing things for the people we hear complains
Same excuse BUHARI gave for his 8 yrs tenure,
12 Likes 2 Shares |
anonimi: 8:15pm On May 29 |
Racoon: https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/05/tinubu-inherited-a-big-mess-from-somebody-he-installed-in-office-dr-sobowale/#google_vignette
Why did ebilokan make things even worse than Buhari did?
anonimi:
May 1, 2025
May Day: Hunger, unemployment, insecurity real— Tinubu
According to him: “The theme demands our collective attention and serves as a stark reminder of the need to create an environment where every worker feels safe, valued, and empowered to contribute to the growth and prosperity of our nation. As your President, I assure you that this istration is committed to creating such an environment for the common good.”
On the economic hardship, he noted that while it is a global phenomenon, its effects on Nigerians are particularly severe.
Tinubu said: “I am aware of the peculiarities of the economic hardship Nigerians face—rising living costs, hunger, insecurity, unemployment, and the loss of livelihoods. These challenges are real and demand definitive solutions, which I am poised to address as your President.
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/05/may-day-hunger-unemployment-insecurity-real-tinubu/
103 Likes 3 Shares |
spiSeyi: 8:15pm On May 29 |
APC no longer blame GEJ but themselves and that's a typical sign of failure .  PMB is still better than Tinubu even though he's not that I good . PMB 3/10 while Tinubu is 0.2/10 Tinubu policies aren't working subsidy is gone but we keep on borrowing, tax was increased and widen but no tangible infrastructure, the promised refineries ended up as a scam, WAEC & JAMB are nothing to write home about, Naira devaluation yielded nothing except for massive inflation and hardship.
TBH Tinubu is the worst president in West Africa as we speak just imagined that the Naira is the lowest currency in West since 2023
9 Likes 1 Share |
DMerciful(m): 8:15pm On May 29 |
Did Buhari tell Tinubu to buy yatch worth millions of dollars? Did he tell tinubu to buy presidential jet? What about 160 million jeeps for lawmakers?
Tinubu’s failure is on him!
6 Likes |
Ofunaofu: 8:16pm On May 29 |
Tinubu did not inherit a mess; he created the mess we are now facing.
7 Likes 1 Share |
jaxxy(m): 8:19pm On May 29 |
tinubu made many mistakes. And u are only as good as ur choices and actions.
3 Likes |
fuckingAyaya(m): 8:20pm On May 29 |
Una dey fear to call Buhari name or what?
1 Like |
youngrhosy(m): 8:20pm On May 29 |
Yoruba people say, orisa bi o le gbemi, fimile bio SE bami.. this man just de keep making life harder for Nigerian na..
3 Likes 1 Share |
ariesbull: 8:20pm On May 29 |
After two years..we can still find somehow to blame someone
4 Likes |