Buharism


Buharism refers to the socio-political and economic ideology of Nigerian President and former military head of state, Muhammadu Buhari. Following the 1983 Nigerian coup d'etat which truncated the Second Nigeria Republic, General Muhammadu Buhari became military head of state. He immediately launched an unprecedented military-led social engineering campaign, War Against Indiscipline with the aim of forcibly promoting civic virtues.
Buharism came to represent a national third force at the height of the Cold War era, favouring neither communism or capitalism. His economic ideology was solely predicated on the practicalities needed for a Third World nation to develop: mainly economic self-sufficiency, disciplined citizenry, and national development. As the supreme leader and commander of the regime, Buhari significantly derived charismatic authority.
The revisionist 1985 Nigerian coup d'etat was the antithesis of Buharism, his Chief of Army Staff and successor General Ibrahim Babangida opposed the heavy handedness of Buhari's social campaign and the economic dirigisme policies. Babangida later went on to became the longest serving post-Civil War military head of state, his regime saw a drastic re-alignment towards the rapidly emerging new international order with the introduction of the IMF-sanctioned programmes: privatisation, deregulation and devaluation.
Imprisoned and subsequently out of power for 30 years, Muhammadu Buhari contested in the 2003, 2007, 2011 and later 2015 presidential election which he won defeating the incumbent Goodluck Jonathan. Buharism gradually emerged into a cult of personality and used to enjoy broad support throughout the country especially in Northern Nigeria until the 2019 Nigeria presidential election which caused a significant decline in Buhari's popularity.

Overview

Buharism is anchored on the economic direction of the centre left progressive ideology. Its economic reforms was characterised as moving the political economy away from the control of a "parasitic" elites and into the control of a "productive "class. To its students, Buharism represented a two way struggle: with external globalism and with its internal agents and advocates"
Its agenda for social order shows a demonstrable character of State Consequentialism. Consequentialists believe that the morality of an action is contingent on the action's outcome, therefore an action is right if it delivers a greater good for a greater number of people. An action is therefore right, if it leads to state order, welfare of the people and their material prosperity.

Economic ideology

Buharism rejected the dominant approach of the Washington Consensus, rather holding that for a crisis-wracked country to successfully improve its balance of payments through devaluation, there must first exist the condition that the price of every country's export is denominated in its own currency. In the case of Nigeria, it largely exported Crude Oil which was sold on dollar terms, and exported no finished goods which will be priced cheaper by devaluation and result in supposed economic recovery under the Washington Consensus Model. As such a condition did not exist, Buharism asserted that, for any country where Washington Consensus conditions do not exist clearly enough, there are alternate approaches to solving the problem of its economic crisis. Therefore, instead of applying devaluation to get the then crisis-wracked economy of Nigeria back on track, Buharism instead employed a policy of curbing imports of goods deemed unnecessary, curtailing oil theft, and improving exports through a counter trade policy of bartering seized bunkered crude oil for goods like machinery, enabling it to export above its OPEC quota.

Neo-Buharism

In 2015, with Muhammadu Buhari's return to power as a civilian president, and faced with an economic crisis that included massive downturn in global oil prices, record level of unemployment, un-diversified economy and security challenges that cut production without savings due to institutional decay and corruption in successive administrations, Buharism meant an inward focused strategy that rejected austerity measures targeting the poorest while enhancing investments in infrastructure and leveraging state powers to cut imports.
Buharism as an economic policy emphasizes providing incremental domestic production and thus job opportunities by restricting imports and encouraging import substitution. It also emphasizes state investments in infrastructure while curtailing corruption to increase productivity while recovering the economic resources captured by established power blocs to provide social safety nets for the poorest during the transition period to economic self sufficiency.

Criticism

Critics have often referred to Buharir's political outlook as dictatorial and authoritarian. The election-centric outlook of Buharism has often been described as an illiberal democracy.
Buharism they argue, and its emphasis on state consequentialism evidently gives rise to an anti-aristocratic police state as opposed to a legal state. This political anomaly further extends towards a dichotomic relationship between the apparatus of the state on the one hand and legalism on the other supported by the ruling elite.