Josepholome: 12:05pm On Feb 16 |
On Monday, February 9, 2025, Times, one of Nigeria’s well-known online publications, published a piece which left me wondering whether it was really from the same platform I have always respected.
Writing ostensibly in response to a piece on Cardoso’s first eleven https://www.thecable.ng/on-cardoso-and-his-first-eleven/ , Times published a piece that was to put it mildly, heavy on conjecture.
The “exclusive” focused on the appointment of consultants and advisers at the CBN, but while I read to see whether they were going to present evidence of incompetence or lack of qualification with regard to the profiles in the article they were responding to,the piece appeared to read like an attack on the female consultants and advisers.
Times went as far as calling them “Cardoso Women”. This was upsetting and I found it to be a blatant display of sexism because the fact remains that these women are not just names on a page – they are our daughters, sisters, wives, mothers, aunties, and nieces, quietly getting the work done. They are human beings, and this is not how to treat our own.
As a woman who has faced her own share of sexism, I found the publication’s approach to be a reflection of the patriarchy that still grips certain quarters of Nigerian society. Women cannot be intelligent, accomplished, and competent – without having to justify their existence.
The piece completely ignored the qualifications and experience of these women. It dispensed largely with balance, which is a key journalism tenet. There was no mention of their qualifications or experience; no source was named in the exclusive piece about three globally recognized, highly competent, well-qualified go-getters with over 80 years of cognate experience between them.
was worried because this isn’t the first time Nigerian women have been dragged simply for being excellent. We saw it with Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who faced relentless attacks when she served as Minister of Finance. Despite her impeccable credentials – Harvard, MIT, World Bank – critics ignored her work and resorted to personal attacks.
It happened to Dora Akunyili of blessed memory, who revolutionized NAFDAC, saved countless lives by taking on counterfeit drug barons, and was still vilified by vested interests. There is also the case of Arunma Oteh, who was put through the misogynistic
wringer.
That same script seems to be playing out again because whenever a woman steps up, instead of engaging with her ideas, detractors throw a low blow but history vindicated Okonjo-Iweala, Akunyili and Oteh – and it will do the same for these brilliant women at the CBN.
The piece in quoting an unnamed source at the CBN wrote that “there are 29 experienced directors, 170 deputy directors, and over 400 PhD holders in CBN. There is no need to domicile consultants in the bank.”
This provides a perfect segue into the profiles of these three amazons.
Nkiru Balonwu and Daphne Oterie Dafinone are both PhD holders so let’s make that 402 PhD holders at the CBN. The more, they say, the merrier. In a country where many call themselves doctors without the requisite scholarship or qualifications, the assumption was that the publication was going to call their qualifications or experience into question, but the focus was largely on how much they are paid but the curious thing was that while the piece focused on the three women, it was eerily silent on their male colleagues.
It is curious but not surprising that the piece chose to ignore the men. Why? Because in many minds, a man’s competence is assumed, but a woman’s must always be defended.
Is this not is sexism and patriarchy at work? It is also intriguing that the online platform published this piece at a time when the reforms at the CBN are bearing fruit. The naira is stabilizing, the FXCode has brought sanity and banished speculation in the FX market and foreign portfolio investors are falling over themselves to invest in Nigeria.
This seems to me like an unnecessary distraction.
Dr. Dafinone comes from a family which has been recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as producing the highest number of Chartered ants in the whole wide world. She is by no chance an upstart.
Daphne Dafinone has a PhD in Internal Audit & Corporate Governance from City University, London. Before her PhD, she had obtained an MSc Internal Audit & Management Finance from the same university after graduating with a BA (Hons) Economics degree from the University of Manchester in 1987.
Her first job, verifiable from publicly available records, was at KPMG Peat Marwic MClintock Chartered ants in the United Kingdom. It is a globally recognized fact that KPMG only hires the best.
Before coming to the CBN consultancy, Dr. Dafinone rose to the position of Chief Operating Officer of Crowe Dafinone which makes her a bonafide owner-manager.
The publication also alluded to the fact that she is a board member of NIRSAL but the piece forgot to mention that Dr. Dafinone was audit committee chair on the board of CitiBank Nigeria. As we say in Naija: na where NIRSAL take reach Citibank?
With a focus on development finance and governance at the CBN, Dr. Dafinone has brought over 35 years of experience in corporate governance, due diligence, corporate restructuring, mergers and acquisitions, and debt restructuring to her role.
Change always invites pushback!
Ms. Shola Phillips is not just a Special Adviser to the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria on Compliance & Risk. She is a globally renowned and well-respected
Compliance and Risk expert.
According to her profile, Ms. Phillips “is leading the design and implementation of a new department with the mandate to improve compliance within the Bank and across the Nigerian Banking industry by spearheading initiatives that foster good governance and ethical conduct via the introduction of ability measures.”
Let us ask a quick question: is Shola Phillips qualified to be an adviser to the CBN governor? Where do we start from? One: Let us consider her 25 years of experience as a senior compliance director across the wholesale and retail sectors of the financial service industry; Two: let us pay attention to her regulatory knowledge spanning multiple dynamic and complex jurisdictions – the UK, Europe, United Arab Emirates, HongKong, Singapore, Japan, United States of America, and multiple jurisdictions in Africa.
Three: let us ponder on her education at the University of Reading, where she graduated with a degree in Economics and the Cardiff Business School in Wales where she bagged
her MBA.
Shola is not a local champion, no sir! Starting her career at home as a Corporate Finance associate at Prudent Merchant Bank Limited she set out for world domination and has worked at Handelsbanken Private Bank, Mizuho Corporate Bank, Ruffer LLP, Rothschilds, and the Permal Group.
She was Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer for Citibank Nigeria Limited before going ahead to serve as Global Functions Regional Compliance Director for the Europe Middle East & Africa region at Citigroup and then the Global Head of Compliance for Risk Management at Citigroup, Inc. Talk about global domination.
Last time I checked, we have only two Nigerian born lawyers who are Senior Advocates of Nigeria and Queen Counsels now Kings Counsel. They are Professor Fidelis Oditah and Professor Oba Nsugbe what that means is that Oditah and Nsugbe are at the top in two jurisdictions; Nigeria and the United Kingdom.
What have they got to do with the CBN? Well, let us talk about Dr. Nkiru Balonwu. Like Dafinone, Balonwu comes from a family of renowned lawyers and her ambition, as she wrote in a recent, LinkedIn post was to rise all the way to the Supreme Court.
But she pivoted first to academia and then business and consulting. A consummate scholar, she took her first degree in Law from the University of Manchester, her Master’s from University College London and then a doctorate from the University of
California, Berkeley
She has been called to the bar in England, Nigeria, and New York – a feat any lawyer will tell you is incredibly difficult. ing just one bar exam is challenging; ing three, across different legal systems, is an achievement that demands extraordinary intellectual rigor.
When Dr. Balonwu returned to Nigeria she was hired at the University of Lagos where she was the inaugural, meaning FIRST EVER, lecturer in Gender & Law at Unilag. She was Senior Fellow at the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government, Harvard Kennedy School from 2022-2023. Her focus was on the role of the private sector in influencing and constructing gender policy in Africa.
While still in her 30s, Dr. Nkiru Balonwu was appointed CEO of Spinlet, then Africa’s largest music streaming platform—long before Spotify, Tidal, or Deezer entered the continent. She is the Founder & Creative Director of the Africa Soft Power Group, which includes African Women on Board, ASP Global, and RDF Strategies.
This influentialthink tank and advisory group has collaborated with global powerhouses like Facebook,
MTN Nigeria, MTN Benin, Ford Foundation, Africa Finance Corporation (AFC), Africa Investment Forum (AIF), Afreximbank, the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), and Mastercard Foundation, among many others.
Beyond consulting, Balonwu is a respected board member of leading institutions such as BusinessDay (Nigeria’s premier business and financial newspaper), the International Federation of Periodical Publishers (FIPP), Africa Prosperity Network, and Asaase Broadcasting Company Limited in Ghana. She also serves as Chairperson of the Sickle Cell Aid Foundation (SCAF).
Now, let us talk about money and compensation which was a main focus of the piece. A consultant from McKinsey, Bain, or Accenture bills hundreds of thousands of dollars for the same strategic work these women are doing. PwC, KPMG, and Deloitte charge top
dollar just to send analysts – yes, analysts – into an office.
Let’s be real – if these professional women were young “white boys” who know far less,
nobody would bat an eye.
I believe that articles like this that usually scare away qualified, competent Nigerian professionals from coming home to work and help the Nigerian government.
I wish this piece was not published by Times which I have a lot of respect for.
*Afusat Kassim, a media and Advertising practitioner writes from Lagos.
https://guardian.ng/opinion/letters/the-high-price-of-excellence-an-exclusive-on-the-cbn-by-afusat-kassim/
7 Likes 3 Shares 
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Umarnuhu1990: 12:18pm On Feb 16 |
When CBN be like mafia den under EmfieleWEREY, una no talk. Now wey dem dey try clean am up, una wan dey do investigative journalism. Mscheew!
4 Likes 2 Shares |
ogugwa1992: 12:20pm On Feb 16 |
The only reason this noise is happening is that Cardoso and his team refused to sign ‘chop-and-clean-mouth’ deals. If they were playing along with the old cabal, we wouldn’t hear a thing!
3 Likes |
ceogmd(m): 12:24pm On Feb 16 |
Anytime person wan clean house for Nigeria, na smear campaign go follow. Cardoso no gree for them, abeg! Nigerians wey sabi know say e dey try fix the mess wey dem leave behind
3 Likes 1 Share |
Josepholome: 12:24pm On Feb 16 |
ogugwa1992:
The only reason this noise is happening is that Cardoso and his team refused to sign ‘chop-and-clean-mouth’ deals. If they were playing along with the old cabal, we wouldn’t hear a thing!
I laughed when i read about Directors in the CBN complaining about Cardoso consultants. These Directors all have massive houses in Abuja. some of them have 5-7 official cars each. Lets not talk about all their allowances. If you know, you know!!
4 Likes |
Umarnuhu1990: 12:28pm On Feb 16 |
ceogmd:
Anytime person wan clean house for Nigeria, na smear campaign go follow. Cardoso no gree for them, abeg! Nigerians wey sabi know say e dey try fix the mess wey dem leave behind
Truthfully, If anyone wants to criticize the CBN, fine. But at least be professional. The TImes article just feels like an attack piece, not serious journalism. Sahara Reporters from Temu!
6 Likes 1 Share |
Titojonze: 12:30pm On Feb 16 |
I smell a rat oh! How come they are attacking Cardoso now that Dollar is dropping. E be like say the man don spoli deals for some people.
3 Likes 1 Share |
wonder233: 1:32pm On Feb 16 |
Paid article.
They sponsored a hack writer to do image laundering for the illegal appointees.
Bragging about them having PhDs and qualifications as if that automatically legitimizes the illegality.
The question is: what does the law, in this case, the CBN act and public sector regulations say about their appointment, tenure of stay and remuneration? If these do not conform with the extant laws, then, they are illegalities. Gender, academic qualifications and work experience cannot make them legal.
So Mr hack writer, take several seats. Your article is dust.
9 Likes |
bewla(m): 1:35pm On Feb 16 |
R
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free2ryhme: 1:36pm On Feb 16 |
1 Like |
jojothaiv(m): 1:37pm On Feb 16 |
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SmartyPants(m): 1:41pm On Feb 16 |
This is nonsense.
Never read a more infuriating pile of rubbish.
1. While she disingenuously accuses detractors of lacking balance, she herself completely lacks balance. Yes, these women may be qualified. But where were they appointed following best practices? Is that not the crux of the issue?
2. She says the women hold PhDs so in addition to the existing 400 PhD holders, another 3 more is wisdom. Can you imagine how selfish some people can be? The nation is broke, and you can justify hiring people who are clearly not needed just because they are probably your friends. This is even as, according to reports, these women outearn all the directors put together!
3 consultants earn more than 179 directors combined! How is that justifiable?
4. She says Foreign consulting firms command similar fees and would only send "white boys" to do the work. What a disgraceful attempt at sophistry. This is Nigeria where we don't have that kind of money and there are no "White boys" getting sent anywhere.
No one says Cardoso shouldn't hire consultants. But it has to be done reasonably.
1. Justify the need for them
2. Use transparent hiring practices
3. Offer fair remuneration that reflects Nigeria's status as a third-world country
That's not too much to ask!
7 Likes 2 Shares |
jaxxy(m): 1:46pm On Feb 16 |
cardoso. cbn has gone to the dogs.
So corruption is the price for excellence?
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aariwa(m): 1:48pm On Feb 16 |
Imagine Nigeria a country blessed by God in every human and material resources but these Bunch of failures ended destroying the country because they don’t know how to achieve economic success

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mukthar2000(m): 1:49pm On Feb 16 |
Once anyone finish reading should translate to me in summery pls.
Data is costly to be wasted on all this federal government and CBN policies long grammar.
1 Like |
greatiyk4u(m): 1:55pm On Feb 16 |
ogugwa1992:
The only reason this noise is happening is that Cardoso and his team refused to sign ‘chop-and-clean-mouth’ deals. If they were playing along with the old cabal, we wouldn’t hear a thing!
For your mind you made sense abi?
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SonofElElyonRet: 1:56pm On Feb 16 |
1 Like 1 Share |
greatiyk4u(m): 1:58pm On Feb 16 |
Josepholome:
I laughed when i read about Directors in the CBN complaining about Cardoso consultants. These Directors all have massive houses in Abuja. some of them have 5-7 official cars each. Lets not talk about all their allowances. If you know, you know!!
And both the consultants and Cardosso no get?
2 Likes 1 Share |
Wallade(m): 2:00pm On Feb 16 |
wonder233:
Paid article.
They sponsored a hack writer to do image laundering for the illegal appointees.
Bragging about them having PhDs and qualifications as if that automatically legitimizes the illegality.
The question is: what does the law, in this case, the CBN act and public sector regulations say about their appointment, tenure of stay and remuneration? If these do not conform with the extant laws, then, they are illegalities. Gender, academic qualifications and work experience cannot make them legal..
So Mr hack writer, take several seats. Your article is dust.
I am very impressed with your position on this article and subject.
Whenever you see people play the gender or marginalization or sentimental card, one needs to be critical and careful to analyze the case involved.
Why pay consultants massively and exorbitantly for jobs that directors can do?
If the directors are incompetent, then disqualify them as directors and elevate or engage directors that are competent.
3 Likes 1 Share |
Wallade(m): 2:08pm On Feb 16 |
SmartyPants:
This is nonsense.
Never read a more infuriating pile of rubbish.
1. While she disingenuously accuses detractors of lacking balance, she herself completely lacks balance. Yes, these women may be qualified. But where were they appointed following best practices? Is that not the crux of the issue?
2. She asks why there hasn't been a focus on the men (those mentioned in the article on Cardoso's first 11). But the answer is obvious - the men were appointed as directors, not consultants. This is normal practice and should not raise eyebrows.
3. She says the women hold PhDs so in addition to the existing 400 PhD holders, another 2 more is wisdom. Can you imagine how selfish some people can be? The nation is broke, and you can justify hiring people who are clearly not needed just because they are probably your friends. This is even as, according to reports, these women outearn all the directors put together!
3 consultants earn more than 179 directors combined! How is that justifiable?
4. She says Foreign consulting firms command similar fees and would only send "white boys" to do the work. What a disgraceful attempt at sophistry. This is Nigeria where we don't have that kind of money and there are no "White boys" getting sent anywhere.
No one says Cardoso shouldn't hire consultants. But it has to be done reasonably.
1. Justify the need for them
2. Use transparent hiring practices
3. Offer fair remuneration that reflects Nigeria's status as a third world country
That's not too much to ask!
Brother, let me emphasize that any organization is only allowed to engage consultant for jobs that employees and directors are not equipped or properly qualified to do.
No company management should employ consultants to do the jobs that staff are already being paid to do. That is duplication of effort, waste of resources and clear case of incompetence.
If the staff are incompetent, fire them or demote or transfer them and replace them with competent staff, directors and managers.
I completely agree with the three suggestions going put to the management of CBN.
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SmartyPants(m): 2:10pm On Feb 16 |
Wallade:
Brother, let me emphasize that any organization is only allowed to engage consultant for jobs that employees and directors are not equipped or properly qualified to do.
No company management should employ consultants to do the jobs that staff are already being paid to do. That is duplication of effort, waste of resources and clear case of incompetence.
If the staff are incompetent, fire them or demote or transfer them and replace them with competent staff, directors and managers.
That's precisely what I said if you look at my point 1:
No one says Cardoso shouldn't hire consultants. But it has to be done reasonably.
1. Justify the need for them
2. Use transparent hiring practices
3. Offer fair remuneration that reflects Nigeria's status as a third world country
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Wallade(m): 2:11pm On Feb 16 |
SmartyPants:
That's precisely what I said if you look at my point 1:
No one says Cardoso shouldn't hire consultants. But it has to be done reasonably.
Yea, I agree with you and I was only trying to buttress your points.
1 Like |
Dogalmighty17: 2:17pm On Feb 16 |
CBN has to pay hacks now for PR jobs? CBN has to use a useless media and advertising practitioner to push the narrative that the useless consultants the CBN governor hired are qualified. Utter rubbish. What are they consulting? The economy is in doldrums. The naira is the worst performing currency for the second time in two years so what is the use of those useless consultants? What do they do to justify being paid 35m monthly per consultant?
2 Likes |
Whois(m): 2:18pm On Feb 16 |
This guys spend Nigerians tax payers money anyhow they wish cus they can always hire useful idiots that will them.
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Bluntemperor: 2:24pm On Feb 16 |
Josepholome:
I laughed when i read about Directors in the CBN complaining about Cardoso consultants. These Directors all have massive houses in Abuja. some of them have 5-7 official cars each. Lets not talk about all their allowances. If you know, you know!!
You might not be far from the TRUTH,for many of them during Emiefiele really rocks the boat, without knowing that tomorrow will come.
However,Cadoso, should do the Following immediately:
*President Tinubu and CBN - should Pay Attention To The Following Suggestions -
1.Reduce the Interest Rate to the Lowest and Should Stop Staying is Not Possible - or how is USA, Europe 🌍 and Other Countries - are maintaining low interest rates as low as 1%,2- 3% in their Economy?
-How is Bangladesh having a Low Interest Rates?
-How is EU having Zero Interest - for Agriculture and Major Industrial Development in their Countries and Continents of Europe and America!
2- we are part of the Nigerian Problems,if we pretend that we cannot reduce the Interest Rates - in a 3- World 🌎 Country like Nigeria.
3- Embarks on Aggressive Industrialisation- instead of being reactive all the time,e.g how can the People Borrow Loans with interest, from 10- 20% and some 20- 27% interest loans - which eventually turned to be BAD DEBTS,in Our Banks?
DO WHO IS DECEIVING WHO!
4.Aggressive- Agricultural Development- in All the States of •Nigeria and Special Agricultural FUNDS- mainly for Farmers.
Let All Farmers have Co-Operatives to help them Monitor,the Loans Collected and during Harvest!
-5.Aggresive Power- Lights for Nigeria!
This is 21st Century - where Elon Musk- is always in the Space- using the Power created on Earth 🌎!
But what do we have in Nigeria - Corruption- and Excuses -in almost All the Sectors,the MAD( Ministries, Agencies and Departments like NNPC, DISCOS, Humanitarian-Poverty Alieviation!
Nigeria Should Be Able To Feed The African 🌍 Continent!
Very Shameful Indeed- that We Are Far Behind from the Factors Stated above.
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Umarnuhu1990: 2:25pm On Feb 16 |
SmartyPants:
This is nonsense.
Never read a more infuriating pile of rubbish.
1. While she disingenuously accuses detractors of lacking balance, she herself completely lacks balance. Yes, these women may be qualified. But where were they appointed following best practices? Is that not the crux of the issue?
2. She says the women hold PhDs so in addition to the existing 400 PhD holders, another 3 more is wisdom. Can you imagine how selfish some people can be? The nation is broke, and you can justify hiring people who are clearly not needed just because they are probably your friends. This is even as, according to reports, these women outearn all the directors put together!
3 consultants earn more than 179 directors combined! How is that justifiable?
4. She says Foreign consulting firms command similar fees and would only send "white boys" to do the work. What a disgraceful attempt at sophistry. This is Nigeria where we don't have that kind of money and there are no "White boys" getting sent anywhere.
No one says Cardoso shouldn't hire consultants. But it has to be done reasonably.
1. Justify the need for them
2. Use transparent hiring practices
3. Offer fair remuneration that reflects Nigeria's status as a third-world country
That's not too much to ask!
I understand the concerns raised regarding the recent appointments at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Let’s address each point systematically:
1. Appointment Process and Best Practices: The necessity for transparent and merit-based hiring is paramount. The consultants in question bring specialized expertise that complements the existing team. While their appointments may not have followed traditional procedures, it’s essential to recognize that in times of significant reform, unconventional methods can be employed to address unique challenges effectively.
2. Qualifications and Necessity: The addition of these consultants, who hold advanced degrees and possess extensive international experience, aims to infuse fresh perspectives into the CBN. Their roles are not redundant but are designed to tackle specific issues that require their unique skill sets. Investing in such talent, even during economic constraints, can lead to long-term benefits that outweigh the initial costs.
3. Remuneration Concerns: The reported salaries of the consultants have raised eyebrows, especially in comparison to existing directors. However, it’s crucial to consider the global market rates for such expertise. Attracting top-tier talent often necessitates competitive compensation. Moreover, their contributions are expected to drive reforms that could significantly enhance the nation’s economic standing, potentially justifying their remuneration.
4. Comparison to Foreign Consultants: Engaging local experts with global experience, as opposed to foreign consultants, not only retains funds within the country but also ensures that the solutions are tailored to Nigeria’s unique context. While the costs are substantial, they are competitive when compared to international consultancy fees, and the cultural relevance they bring is invaluable.
In summary, while the concerns about process and remuneration are valid, it’s essential to balance them against the potential benefits these consultants bring. Their specialized skills and experiences are assets aimed at navigating the CBN through complex reforms. Transparency and clear communication about their roles and the expected outcomes can help in aligning our perceptions shaa
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ogugwa1992: 2:30pm On Feb 16 |
wonder233:
Paid article.
They sponsored a hack writer to do image laundering for the illegal appointees.
Bragging about them having PhDs and qualifications as if that automatically legitimizes the illegality.
The question is: what does the law, in this case, the CBN act and public sector regulations say about their appointment, tenure of stay and remuneration? If these do not conform with the extant laws, then, they are illegalities. Gender, academic qualifications and work experience cannot make them legal.
So Mr hack writer, take several seats. Your article is dust.
It’s interesting how some people are quick to scream “paid article” without questioning whether the initial hit piece itself was a well-orchestrated smear campaign. Let’s take a step back.
The Times article wasn’t an investigative report, it was an attack piece designed to discredit specific individuals while conveniently ignoring the broader context. It selectively targeted female consultants, completely sidestepping the appointment of male consultants in similar roles. That’s not journalism; that’s an agenda.
The real question we should be asking is: Who benefits from discrediting this istration’s reforms? Who stands to gain from derailing policies that are already restoring investor confidence and stabilizing the economy?
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lexy2014: 2:37pm On Feb 16 |
ceogmd:
Anytime person wan clean house for Nigeria, na smear campaign go follow. Cardoso no gree for them, abeg! Nigerians wey sabi know say e dey try fix the mess wey dem leave behind
what is the house he is cleaning and what has he cleaned so far?
can you negate the allegations against him?
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ogugwa1992: 2:48pm On Feb 16 |
Dogalmighty17:
CBN has to pay hacks now for PR jobs? CBN has to use a useless media and advertising practitioner to push the narrative that the useless consultants the CBN governor hired are qualified. Utter rubbish. What are they consulting? The economy is in doldrums. The naira is the worst performing currency for the second time in two years so what is the use of those useless consultants? What do they do to justify being paid 35m monthly per consultant?
It’s wild … very very wild how people confidently push outdated narratives even when the facts say otherwise. If the economy is truly “in the doldrums,” then why is the naira stabilizing… now below ₦1,600 to the dollar? Why are remittance inflows increasing?
Under this CBN team, all those speculative attacks on the naira have been curbed.
Now, about the consultants. What exactly is the outrage? That the CBN brought in experts, actual, highly qualified professionals, to help clean up a system that was riddled with fraud, bad policies, and inefficiency? Are we forgetting that just months ago, the FX market was a complete mess, with artificial scarcity and illegal round-tripping draining billions?
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Wallade(m): 2:53pm On Feb 16 |
Umarnuhu1990:
I understand the concerns raised regarding the recent appointments at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Let’s address each point systematically:
1. Appointment Process and Best Practices: The necessity for transparent and merit-based hiring is paramount. The consultants in question bring specialized expertise that complements the existing team. While their appointments may not have followed traditional procedures, it’s essential to recognize that in times of significant reform, unconventional methods can be employed to address unique challenges effectively.
2. Qualifications and Necessity: The addition of these consultants, who hold advanced degrees and possess extensive international experience, aims to infuse fresh perspectives into the CBN. Their roles are not redundant but are designed to tackle specific issues that require their unique skill sets. Investing in such talent, even during economic constraints, can lead to long-term benefits that outweigh the initial costs.
3. Remuneration Concerns: The reported salaries of the consultants have raised eyebrows, especially in comparison to existing directors. However, it’s crucial to consider the global market rates for such expertise. Attracting top-tier talent often necessitates competitive compensation. Moreover, their contributions are expected to drive reforms that could significantly enhance the nation’s economic standing, potentially justifying their remuneration.
4. Comparison to Foreign Consultants: Engaging local experts with global experience, as opposed to foreign consultants, not only retains funds within the country but also ensures that the solutions are tailored to Nigeria’s unique context. While the costs are substantial, they are competitive when compared to international consultancy fees, and the cultural relevance they bring is invaluable.
In summary, while the concerns about process and remuneration are valid, it’s essential to balance them against the potential benefits these consultants bring. Their specialized skills and experiences are assets aimed at navigating the CBN through complex reforms. Transparency and clear communication about their roles and the expected outcomes can help in aligning our perceptions shaa
Why didn't you start by addressing the legality of the employment of Consultants by CBN.
Are those appointments legal?
Are the remunerations payable to the consultants legal, justified and approved by the board.?
What are the consultants job description and are those jobs duplication of director's jobs?
Don't come telling us about international remuneration of consultants. Are those consultants not working in Nigeria? Is the salary scale in the USA or Britain the same with the scale in Nigeria across profession?
Don't tell about their degrees and certificates because I believe that the legality of their employment comes first.
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chigoziri2403(m): 2:55pm On Feb 16 |
Why are you hiring consultants to do the job that CBN STAFF can do already
The workforce in CBN is highly trained, those guys are gurus in their field, cbn encourages learning
There is no skill gap anywhere in CBN
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Wallade(m): 2:59pm On Feb 16 |
ogugwa1992:
It’s interesting how some people are quick to scream “paid article” without questioning whether the initial hit piece itself was a well-orchestrated smear campaign. Let’s take a step back.
The Times article wasn’t an investigative report, it was an attack piece designed to discredit specific individuals while conveniently ignoring the broader context. It selectively targeted female consultants, completely sidestepping the appointment of male consultants in similar roles. That’s not journalism; that’s an agenda.
The real question we should be asking is: Who benefits from discrediting this istration’s reforms? Who stands to gain from derailing policies that are already restoring investor confidence and stabilizing the economy?
That News or this article are sponsored or hatched jobs are not our usiness. That is not the crux of the matter.
We are not exactly bothered about who benefits from the articles or newspaper posts. We don't see it as discrediting any one, we are rather focusing on the possible need of employment of the consultants or otherwise
We don't care about the gender of the consultants or the motive of the person that hired them. 1. Why hire them?
2. Js their employment legal?
3. Why are they on such extraordinary remuneration package?
4. Why do you need consultants when there are directors that can do such jobs?
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