Nigeria Quits the USD !!!!
Le Metropole Members,
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
Here's a report from the heart of the developing world -- Nigeria -- that is encouraging and touching. Encouraging, because it shows that the government is just beginning to sense how the country is being ripped off by the imperial currency, the dollar; touching, because it shows the struggle of people who are trying to make their way in the world through sweat and muscle, by making and growing real things, rather than by financial manipulation and parasitism.
We Americans like to think of our country as a force for good in the world, and certainly our domestic political liberty is probably unsurpassed as an example. But does setting that example of political liberty entitle Americans to claim 80 percent of the world's savings for their own largely excess consumption?
The deputy chairman of the Central Bank of Russia, Oleg Mozhaiskov, raised this issue in his speech to the London Bullion Market Association in Moscow in June, and in its commentary Friday the Daily Reckoning noted that Americans on average earn 25 times as much as the people of China do and yet the United States is borrowing from China.
Gold is important not so much for itself as for being a part of great issues of fairness and justice.
CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
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Dollar Slide: Govs Consider Other Currencies, Invite Obasanjo Over Excess Crude Fund
By Josephine Lohor This Day, Lagos, Nigeria Friday, December 10, 2004
allafrica.com
ABUJA, Nigeria -- Following the depreciating value of the dollar, the National Economic Council (NEC), chaired by Vice President Atiku Abubakar with all the state governors as members, is considering the possibility of using other currencies as benchmark for Nigeria's earnings.
Rising from its meeting yesterday at the State House, the NEC also invited President Olusegun Obasanjo to its next meeting so that a "firm" decision could be taken on the funds that accrued from the sale of excess crude oil.
The governor of Akwa Ibom State, Obong Victor Attah, told State House correspondents shortly after the meeting that "we looked at the problem also of the depreciating value of the dollar, which is what we use in benchmarking, and eventually, we believe, we would have to get into a basket of currencies for keeping our money in future, rather than buying it only in one currency."
Attah said that there was urgent need for the Debt Management Office to make available the exact amounts of monies being owed by the states, who borrowed what and for what reasons, to reduce the barrage of accusations of financial recklessness heaped on state governors.
"On the issue of debt management, there is an argument between some states and the Debt Management Office about the exact amount owed by the various states. There is a need to know when this money was borrowed, who borrowed, and for what purposes."
Attah said this had become necessary "because it is becoming very popular for everybody to attack the office of the state governments that we borrow money recklessly and spend money recklessly. What we know is that a lot of this borrowing took place even before we came into office."
Attah noted that "we took a decision that we will invite Mr. President to the next meeting of the Economic Council so that firm decisions could be taken on how best to handle the issue of what is popularly called excess crude oil."
"But in the meantime, the National Economic Management team has been asked to come up with proposals about how to manage the issue of this excess crude and the interest that may accrue."
Accompanied by the governors of Kano, Kwara, and Oyo states, Alhaji Ibrahim Shekarau, Bukola Saraki, and Rasheed Ladoja, respectively, Attah stated that the Economic Council decided that "there is need to co-operate with the Federal Government and save some of this money (funds from sale of excess crude oil) for the day when prices may crash."
He said the meeting also agreed that states should, like the Federal Government, ensure the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals. According to him, state governments were also asked to restore Nigeria's past glory in agricultural development by ensuring the rapid growth of at least three major crops each in which they have advantage.
He added that "we (NEC) also agreed that there has to be some monitoring by the committee on the Millennium Development Goals. It is recommended that much as the Federal Government is doing something about it, the states should also indeed do something about its attainment.
"Earlier on, we had accepted that agriculture is the largest possible employer, particularly in the rural areas. We also agreed that there is the need to restore our past glory in agricultural development. So we should look very closely at what had been suggested and accepted that every state should come up with three major crops for which it has advantage to ensure the growth and development of these crops."
Governors who attended the meeting include those of Kogi, Kano, Kwara, Benue, Cross River, Ebonyi, Taraba, Imo, Osun, Delta, Edo, and the Deputy Governors of Nasarawa and Lagos States.
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