Nigerian elections are just ten days away, and things are getting tense,
The
country has a couple of things going on that make its political
situation tenuous, even without an election. This year they’re all
coming together to create a particularly explosive election cycle.
The
country is populated largely but Muslims in the north and Christians in
the south, so there’s occasionally religious conflict. The election,
pretty tightly contested between the Christian incumbent, Goodluck
Jonathan, of the People’s Democratic Party, and the former dictator of
the country Muhammadu Buhari. Buhari, who ruled the country back in the
1980s, is Muslim and represents the All Progressives Congress.
The
election in 2011, which Goodluck Jonathan won by a pretty hefty margin,
led to violence in the Muslim north. This race is much closer.
RBC Capital Markets sent out a note outlining the stakes of the election on Wednesday. This is a key detail:
“Holding
the presidency is particularly important because it often entails the
redistribution of government patronage and contracts to the incumbent’s
home region. Given that the North lacks natural resources and suffers
from some of the highest rates of poverty, the economic costs of being
locked out of power are substantial.”
The terrorist
organization Boko Haram is wreaking havoc in the north of the country,
laying siege to the largely rural and sparsely populated region. Nigeria
just doesn’t have, or won’t commit, the resources to fight Boko Haram
properly.
From Emad Mostaque’s op-ed in the Wall Street
Journal in late January: Boko Haram’s initial strategy was to try to
undermine and gain control of the Kanuri ethnic regions of northeast
Nigeria while looking to polarize society by attacking states along the
Christian-Muslim divide known as the Middle Belt region. The Nigerian
government response to this push has been slow, with only 25,000 poorly
equipped troops deployed against Boko Haram in the country’s northeast.
Nigeria’s whole defence budget for 2014 was only a third of the $5.8
billion security budget, small for a country with a GDP of more than
$500 billion and facing an insurgency.
The worry is
that Boko Haram, which now more or less rules a part of the north, will
keep people from going to the polls. If enough people are kept away,
that could swing the election in favour of Jonathan.
Meanwhile,
the ceasefire with the southern rebel group, Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), ends this year. There’s a fear
from MEND “ that if Jonathan is defeated, the large annual cash payments
that accompanied the 2009 amnesty agreement will cease,” according to
RBC.
So if Buhari wins, there could be bloodshed in the
south that the military, with its focus on Boko Haram, is ill-equip to
defend against.
If these two things weren’t bad enough,
the collapsing price of oil puts the country in a tough situation
economically. The pinch has caused the Nigerian currency, the naira, to
crash. Thanks to a devaluation in December and central bank intervention
since then, the naira stayed sort of stable throughout the month of
January, but it’s still seeing a lot of volatility.
But even with a stable currency, Nigeria is a big oil exporter, and it relies heavily on high prices to balance its budget.
Worse, Nigerian leaders often steal oil. This includes candidates trying to bolster their campaign coffers.
RBC
writes, “not only does crude theft spike around elections, but
additionally, more production is shut-in because of the infrastructure
damage that accompanies both the theft itself and the increase in
generalized election-related violence around production facilities.”
RBC thinks that because the price of oil is so low, crude theft could be much worse than in previous election cycles.
On
top of that, an audit of the country’s oil revenues is expected this
week, and it probably won’t look good for Jonathan, the incumbent.
According
to the FT, “ PwC, the international accountancy firm, was commissioned
to carry out the audit last March after Lamido Sanusi, then governor of
the Central Bank, publicly questioned discrepancies of more than $1bn
per month between oil sales and income.”
The budget
shortfalls in the 18 months between January 2012 and July 2013 alone
were about $20 billion, according to Sanusi (who was promptly fired
after making those allegations).






0 comments:
Post a Comment