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Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo - Politics - Nairaland

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Sensible Path To Stronger Naira And Economic Prosperity -by Henry Boyo / Buhari Vs Jonathan: Beyond The Election By Charles Soludo / JB Reconstructing Lagos-ibadan Expressway (pictures) (2) (3) (4)

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Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by billante(m): 1:07pm On Sep 03, 2012
In my 2005 National Democracy Day Lecture, I strongly argued that “for sustainable democracy, fundamental changes are required in the constitution, the electoral system, the fiscal federalism, as well as a gamut of legal-institutional reforms that are developmental and capable of promoting private enterprise and competition”. 

Charles Soludo, Ex Nigerian Central Bank Governor
Seven years later, I feel more strongly about this point, and almost a sense of urgency to it. In the last two years, I have given several lectures on Nigeria’s dysfunctional political economy. I am glad that constitutional amendments are being debated. At least, let us start the talking. There is a systemic failure, and our institutions cannot take Nigeria on a sustainable path to prosperity.  In three articles, beginning with this one, I want to join the debate.

The word ‘restructure’ evokes all kinds of reactions. For some, it is a veiled campaign to dismember or weaken the Nigerian federation. I disagree. While I admit that Nigeria as a country or nation has been a colossal disappointment and a textbook example of “how not to do it”, I disagree that the solution is to dismember or weaken it.


I have three strong reasons to be a believer in one united and prosperous Nigeria. First, I am a pan-Africanist--- an Nkrumaist in terms of Pan-African unity.  As a scholar, about 60 per cent of my research and publications are on African economies. I am one of those dreaming of the second USA, the United States of Africa (with 54 states, encompassing the current 54 countries, with Nigeria as the Texas of Africa). Our destiny is tied together—the rest of the world simply sees one ‘Africa’ as if it is a ‘country’ but we think of ourselves as different. Combined, the 49 sub-Saharan African countries account for barely two per cent of global GDP (the size of Belgium with 10 million people). I see Africa’s future increasingly within the context of a more fully integrated continent. Enough of my dreams: now back to reality!
Second, I am proud to belong to the “big country”, and wish that it could become the “next China”. Nigeria is Africa’s most populous and its potentially biggest economy. In today and tomorrow’s world, size matters. Europe will inevitably move towards greater ‘federal Europe’ if the euro is to survive, and other efforts towards agglomeration are going on around the world. Nigeria accounts for far less than one per cent of global GDP (indeed if Nigeria were to submerge under a volcano tomorrow, the world would only notice it as a humanitarian disaster). I cannot imagine Nigeria breaking into smaller groupings. I do not see any of the groupings that will ‘happily’ stay together under one union without its own internal contradictions and tensions as in the larger Nigeria.
Third, I am aware that the hangover of history makes any reference to the word ‘restructure’ by an Igboman to be viewed with suspicion. I hate to think of public policy in those terms but if it helps this discourse, I make bold to say that as an Igboman, I will never support anything that will threaten the unity of Nigeria. Igbos have the greatest stake in Nigeria, and therefore stand to lose the most in the event of (God forbid) any disorderly unravelling of Nigeria. An enterprising, itinerant people with huge population in a tiny land mass, Igbos (like the Jews) are in need of a large domain or market for their commerce without molestation or discrimination. They are everywhere.  Of the estimated 17 million Nigerians in Diaspora, I can bet that at least 10 million of them are Igbos. They dominate most markets, especially for motor spare parts, in Africa. Onitsha traders now suffer because of Boko Haram as their supply chains to and from many parts of the North are grossly diminished.


There is hardly any village in Nigeria or town in Africa without an Igboman, speaking the local language and probably owning a house and feeling much at home. Without fear of contradiction, I can assert that at least 80 per cent of the Igbo elite live outside of Igboland (mostly in Lagos and Abuja), and more than 70 per cent of the investments by Igbos are outside of Igboland. I know that more than half of Anambra’s population lives outside of the state. There is hardly any former public office holder (governors, ministers, senators, Reps, etc) since 1999 who lives in Igboland. As Mallam Nasir el-Rufai was quoted as saying sometime, Igbos have turned Abuja into their ‘sixth state’, and some estimates opine that Igbos constitute 30-40 per cent of Lagos State. Even traditional marriages are now celebrated anywhere. The reasons for these are for another day.
The point of emphasis is that Igbos have the greatest need to keep Nigeria or even Africa as one united and prosperous market. An elderly Igbo friend of mine summed it nicely: “in the 1960s Igbos fought to leave Nigeria and the rest of Nigeria refused; we lost our properties and lives; now that we have re-built them everywhere, we are going to fight to make sure no one else will leave the union: we are all in this marriage for better or for worse”. Enough said!
Our thesis here is that a society can only prosper under conditions of ‘good leadership’ as well as a ‘good system’ that supports competition and wealth creation. So far, the dysfunctional system and its perverse incentives that make it almost impossible to make sustained progress in Nigeria have received little attention in public discourse. For three consecutive years, Nigeria has retained the 14th position in the world as ‘a failed state’ (with Somalia as number one) and many people think it is a joke. I posit that any serious discussion of public policy that ignores this issue misses the point. We believe there is a systemic failure that cannot be fixed by ad hoc ‘reforms’ irrespective of the type of leadership.


We therefore use the term ‘restructure’ to refer to the gamut of transformations in the nature and structure of the Nigerian State and society away from the current entanglements with the pursuit of rents to re-establish the link between the state and the people/business, and to re-engineer a society where competition and hard work drive success. Let us divide Nigeria’s post-independence history into the pre-civil war (under the 1963 Republican Constitution and its provisions for competitive federalism under the regions and a revenue allocation formula that forced hard work and competition) on the one hand, and the post-civil war with its centralised, unitary-federalism, with the centre repeatedly ‘creating’ the unviable federating units each entitled to the free money from the centre.
On literally all accounts, the average Nigerian was better off in the first than under the second: per capita income in 1966 was about $1,000 and about $1,400 in 1973 and is currently about $1,200. In REAL terms, the average Nigerian today (despite Nigeria earning over $600 billion from oil since 1973) has less than half of the income in 1966; is poorer; has a shorter life span; with poorer educational system and infrastructure. All the industries and palm and cocoa plantations and groundnut pyramids built by the regions have collapsed.


Our current unproductive system was designed to keep Nigeria ‘united’ by creating a strong ‘centre’. In the process, we have neither a federation nor a unitary system (at best a corrupted unitary system).
All incentives and institutions are designed around a command and control structure for sharing and consuming the lottery jackpot from God (oil rents). For fear of death, Nigeria has indeed decided to commit suicide! There is no incentive for productive governance. National politics of competition for the oil rents has assumed a life of its own. On a per capita income basis, Nigeria has the most expensive parliament in the world. Every village now wants to be a state to get its own ‘share’. Don’t talk about fiscal viability! Have you heard any state governor advertising the number of new businesses that were attracted to his state or number of private sector jobs created as ‘the’ key performance indicator? There is little incentive for such! Debate on leadership is about who will share and where he comes from. It is not about who has the best plans to create jobs and wealth. Because you don’t need any skills to share, just about anybody can be a ‘leader’. Our politics has become a road to nowhere.


We need good leaders but equally important, we need a competitive system that allows any potentially good leader to emerge and perform. To use the metaphor of football, you need good footballers in a good pitch to have great football. If you have 10 Lionel Messis in a team but you take them to play in a cassava farm as field, their talents and efforts may come to little. In fact, because the field is a cassava farm, the ‘best players’ that would emerge could be the street urchins. Our view is that the type of leaders thrown up under a democracy and the latitude they have for creative change depends upon the nature of the legal-institutional infrastructure and the incentive-sanction system. As an economist, I understand that to change behaviour, two keywords are critical: incentives and sanctions. Both summarise what are popularly termed ‘institutions’. An individual can make a difference but ultimately it is institutions that make all the difference.  You can assemble a thousand technocrats, each with his/her ‘reforms’ and at best their positive impact will be at the margin.
Nigeria is in a chicken and egg situation. How will the ‘good system’ emerge without ‘good leaders’ and vice versa? Leave this for our next articles!


To prepare for life without oil, we need a new road map, and the starting point is a new constitution for prosperity! We need to understand the institutional/constitutional design that makes United Arab Emirates (UAE) produce the world class city of Dubai with little oil while other oil-producing countries of the Middle East are not diversified. We need to understand the incentive system that enables the State of Nevada in the US to prosper despite not having any natural resource in a country with oil rich states. It won’t be easy to repair the havoc oil and the destructive politics around it have wreaked on the society, including destruction of the productive elite. But the time to start is now.


To move forward, Nigeria must review the content and meaning of its current political map; rights over mineral resources and land; tax jurisdictions; citizenship rights; fiscal responsibility and fiscal federalism; powers of the central vis-a-vis regional governments; elimination of the suffocating hands of the Federal Government on the regions; etc. It is an oxymoron to repeat the same thing over and over, and expect a different outcome. For a new Nigeria to emerge, new thinking and new ways of doing business must be in place.


http://www.africaeagle.com/2012/09/reconstructing-nigeria-for-prosperity.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+Africaeagle+(AfricaEagle)&m=1

Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by ITbomb(m): 1:39pm On Sep 03, 2012
I will forever cherish this man , Soludo
I wish I heard this speech live with his unique deep barisexy voice.
I'm tired of hearing an Aboki telling us what we already know , that Naira has lost its value
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by billante(m): 3:56pm On Sep 03, 2012
I think he is oiling his poltical machine for the next election!!
Get it on prof! We are right behind you...come turn anambra to d dubai you are talking about, we now have oyel money grin
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by ektbear: 4:01pm On Sep 03, 2012
Soludo is the man
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by PROUDIGBO(m): 4:52pm On Sep 03, 2012
ITbomb: I will forever cherish this man , Soludo
I wish I heard this speech live with his unique deep barisexy voice.
I'm tired of hearing an Aboki telling us what we already know , that Naira has lost its value

^^^No need for the 'aboki' insult bruh.....it's getting tired.

Surely this speech should be somewhere on youtube?
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Geomac: 5:19pm On Sep 03, 2012
Prof. we need you again.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nobody: 5:20pm On Sep 03, 2012
Brilliant. The greatest mystery is why northern leaders would rather have a country that is not working.

When you accuse them of ruining Nigeria through the military, they will tell you they did not elect the military administrations. When you tell them let us reverse the damage the military did, they will tell you no, they are comfortable with everything.
Soludo said it the best; "For fear of death, Nigeria has indeed decided to commit suicide"

Something is wrong when Nigeria is compared with countries like Somalia in terms of stability and development.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by billante(m): 5:50pm On Sep 03, 2012
billante:
I cannot imagine Nigeria breaking into smaller groupings. I do not see any of the groupings that will ‘happily’ stay together under one union without its own internal contradictions and tensions as in the larger Nigeria.

Nice analysis prof on the above! Who says anambra and imo won't quarrel over who produce more revenue when there is biafra! Chino24 already said we are not d same people.... If we can't stay together as nigeria then we can't stay together as oduduwa or niger delta or arewa!!!
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by asha80(m): 8:11pm On Sep 03, 2012
billante: I think he is oiling his poltical machine for the next election!!
Get it on prof! We are right behind you...come turn anambra to d dubai you are talking about, we now have oyel money grin

i wonder what party he wants to contest on.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nobody: 8:19pm On Sep 03, 2012
the last remaining genius in nigeria
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nobody: 8:19pm On Sep 03, 2012
asha 80:

i wonder what party he wants to contest on.

if he runs as an independent candidate he will win
he should even run in an obscure party, he will still win
he will lose if he runs under pdp
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nobody: 8:22pm On Sep 03, 2012
re@lchange:
the last remaining genius in nigeria

A bere.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nobody: 8:25pm On Sep 03, 2012
^^

english pls
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by PointB: 8:27pm On Sep 03, 2012
Soludo is one the very brilliant mind we have in Nigeria, nay Africa. He is very much on point here. In saner clime people like him should be directing affairs at the highest level in the country. Alas, some people are even angling to thumbprint for the Sule Lamidos, and Atikus of this world, simply because we live in a mad-house, where the overriding motivation is benefit to ones ethnic group.

Bottomline, Nigeria must become a nation or die trying! We cannot continue to 'commit suicide for fear of death' as articulated by the erudite professor. We must indeed evolve, or die! We cannot simple continue is same trajectory! We must change course. Restructure now!
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nobody: 8:28pm On Sep 03, 2012
re@lchange:
^^

english pls

It means you don your chest beating again.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by PointB: 8:43pm On Sep 03, 2012
Sadly the 'fear' of what the Igboman will do has almost completely destroyed the country. 'For fear of death, Nigeria in on the verge of suicide!' She will either have to pull back or hasten the plunge! Change must happen!
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by asha80(m): 8:52pm On Sep 03, 2012
Onitsha traders now suffer because of Boko Haram as their supply chains to and from many parts of the North are grossly diminished.

the above quote from soludo reminds me of what i came across below.the boko haram effect might be more than we think

Boko Haram Hits Nnewi
Posted By Nze Chibuike · August 8, 2012 · No comments
South East ·
nnewi2

As Motor Cycle Dealers Loose Patronage From The North.

Odinaka ANUDU

The activities of the dreaded Islamic sect Boko Haram in Northern Nigeria have continued to impact negatively on business activities even beyond Northern Nigeria. Currently, Nnewi a large industrial city in the south eastern part of Nigeria which has remained the major market for automobile, spare parts and other high tech materials in the West African sub-region and beyond has been affected adversely as a result of lack of patronage from dealers from the North of Nigeria.

Nnewi ,the second largest city in Anambra State often referred to as Japan of Africa due to what may be called an Industrial Revolution that has been witnessed in the city from mid 1990s hosts banks,industries, manufacturing companies and major business outfits such as Cutix Cables Plc, Ibeto Group, Innoson Group ;the only indigenous outfit that manufactures cars, buses and other vehicles among others.

It is also home to many great sons of Igbo land and Nigeria such as Dr A.A Nwafor Orizu, first senate president in Nigeria; Sir Louis Odumegwu Ojukwu, first Nigerian millionaire; Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, Biafran warlord; MCK Ajuluchukwu, nationalist and anti-colonial fighter; Mr F.C Nwokedi, first Nigerian permanent secretary; Dr Dozie Ikedife, former president-general of Ohaneze Ndigbo; Chief Cletus Ibeto, industrialist and philanthropist; Engr Ajulu Uzodike, industrialist, philanthropist and former governorship aspirant; Chief Augustine Ejikeme Ilodibe, owner of Ekene DiIichukwu Motors; Mr Innocent Chukwuma, industrialist and philanthropist, and others too numerous to mention.

But in spite of this rich history, Nnewi is today at the mercy of these merchants of death who have continued to destabilize the economy of the whole Northern Nigeria and even beyond. Nigerian Orient News gathered that in the not-too-distant past, traders and business men came from all parts of Nigeria particularly, the North to patronize automobile, spare parts and other manufacturers.

However, the situation has suddenly changed. Nigerian Orient News gathered that one of the reasons why there is poor patronage in this sector is the influence of Boko Haram carnage in the northern part of the country. One of the traders, Obinna Ughammadu, who spoke to our correspondent said that traders from the north are the first-rate customers of the auto industry but that since the carnage started, many northern patrons have abandoned their homes and businesses and ran to other parts of the country.

According to Barr. Mrs Ebere Igwilo, whose family also deals in motorcycle spare parts, ‘’most sales used to come from the north because it is a major means of transportation within the north, but since Boko Haram struck, customers from the region no longer come to the eastern part of Nigeria’’. In the face of continued insecurity,’’ most of the traders who incidentally are of Eastern origin have had to close shops and are at the moment looking for shops in the south or not doing any business at all’’ she said.

Some of the traders who have dared to stay back in the troubled areas have sometimes paid dearly with their lives and in some cases lost properties worth millions of naira.

However this ugly trend according to Mrs Ebere Igwilo has turned some dubious customers into millionaires as they have capitalized on the opportunity provided by the insecurity to default on their credit.

This has affected some of the dealers and manufacturers who used to grant credit facilities to their long standing customers. Some trustworthy customers have not paid because they have not sold while the dubious ones have used the opportunity to abscond with their creditors’ money

http://www.nigerianorientnews.com/?p=1666
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Onlytruth(m): 8:57pm On Sep 03, 2012
I respect Soludo a lot. He hit some points here but I think he missed a few others. Unless Ndigbo are prepared or ready to convert to Islam en masse (which some have actually argued for), Nigeria should be viewed for what it is. There is a very good chance that Nigeria can disintegrate, business or no business; money or no money, trade or no trade.

We Ndigbo should not seem desperate to save a system that is discriminating against us.
Nuff said.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Mrchippychappy(m): 9:03pm On Sep 03, 2012
billante: In my 2005 National Democracy Day Lecture, I strongly argued that “for sustainable democracy, fundamental changes are required in the constitution, the electoral system, the fiscal federalism, as well as a gamut of legal-institutional reforms that are developmental and capable of promoting private enterprise and competition”. 

Charles Soludo, Ex Nigerian Central Bank Governor
Seven years later, I feel more strongly about this point, and almost a sense of urgency to it. In the last two years, I have given several lectures on Nigeria’s dysfunctional political economy. I am glad that constitutional amendments are being debated. At least, let us start the talking. There is a systemic failure, and our institutions cannot take Nigeria on a sustainable path to prosperity.  In three articles, beginning with this one, I want to join the debate.

The word ‘restructure’ evokes all kinds of reactions. For some, it is a veiled campaign to dismember or weaken the Nigerian federation. I disagree. While I admit that Nigeria as a country or nation has been a colossal disappointment and a textbook example of “how not to do it”, I disagree that the solution is to dismember or weaken it.


I have three strong reasons to be a believer in one united and prosperous Nigeria. First, I am a pan-Africanist--- an Nkrumaist in terms of Pan-African unity.  As a scholar, about 60 per cent of my research and publications are on African economies. I am one of those dreaming of the second USA, the United States of Africa (with 54 states, encompassing the current 54 countries, with Nigeria as the Texas of Africa). Our destiny is tied together—the rest of the world simply sees one ‘Africa’ as if it is a ‘country’ but we think of ourselves as different. Combined, the 49 sub-Saharan African countries account for barely two per cent of global GDP (the size of Belgium with 10 million people). I see Africa’s future increasingly within the context of a more fully integrated continent. Enough of my dreams: now back to reality!
Second, I am proud to belong to the “big country”, and wish that it could become the “next China”. Nigeria is Africa’s most populous and its potentially biggest economy. In today and tomorrow’s world, size matters. Europe will inevitably move towards greater ‘federal Europe’ if the euro is to survive, and other efforts towards agglomeration are going on around the world. Nigeria accounts for far less than one per cent of global GDP (indeed if Nigeria were to submerge under a volcano tomorrow, the world would only notice it as a humanitarian disaster). I cannot imagine Nigeria breaking into smaller groupings. I do not see any of the groupings that will ‘happily’ stay together under one union without its own internal contradictions and tensions as in the larger Nigeria.
Third, I am aware that the hangover of history makes any reference to the word ‘restructure’ by an Igboman to be viewed with suspicion. I hate to think of public policy in those terms but if it helps this discourse, I make bold to say that as an Igboman, I will never support anything that will threaten the unity of Nigeria. Igbos have the greatest stake in Nigeria, and therefore stand to lose the most in the event of (God forbid) any disorderly unravelling of Nigeria. An enterprising, itinerant people with huge population in a tiny land mass, Igbos (like the Jews) are in need of a large domain or market for their commerce without molestation or discrimination. They are everywhere.  Of the estimated 17 million Nigerians in Diaspora, I can bet that at least 10 million of them are Igbos. They dominate most markets, especially for motor spare parts, in Africa. Onitsha traders now suffer because of Boko Haram as their supply chains to and from many parts of the North are grossly diminished.


There is hardly any village in Nigeria or town in Africa without an Igboman, speaking the local language and probably owning a house and feeling much at home. Without fear of contradiction, I can assert that at least 80 per cent of the Igbo elite live outside of Igboland (mostly in Lagos and Abuja), and more than 70 per cent of the investments by Igbos are outside of Igboland. I know that more than half of Anambra’s population lives outside of the state. There is hardly any former public office holder (governors, ministers, senators, Reps, etc) since 1999 who lives in Igboland. As Mallam Nasir el-Rufai was quoted as saying sometime, Igbos have turned Abuja into their ‘sixth state’, and some estimates opine that Igbos constitute 30-40 per cent of Lagos State. Even traditional marriages are now celebrated anywhere. The reasons for these are for another day.
The point of emphasis is that Igbos have the greatest need to keep Nigeria or even Africa as one united and prosperous market. An elderly Igbo friend of mine summed it nicely: “in the 1960s Igbos fought to leave Nigeria and the rest of Nigeria refused; we lost our properties and lives; now that we have re-built them everywhere, we are going to fight to make sure no one else will leave the union: we are all in this marriage for better or for worse”. Enough said!
Our thesis here is that a society can only prosper under conditions of ‘good leadership’ as well as a ‘good system’ that supports competition and wealth creation. So far, the dysfunctional system and its perverse incentives that make it almost impossible to make sustained progress in Nigeria have received little attention in public discourse. For three consecutive years, Nigeria has retained the 14th position in the world as ‘a failed state’ (with Somalia as number one) and many people think it is a joke. I posit that any serious discussion of public policy that ignores this issue misses the point. We believe there is a systemic failure that cannot be fixed by ad hoc ‘reforms’ irrespective of the type of leadership.


We therefore use the term ‘restructure’ to refer to the gamut of transformations in the nature and structure of the Nigerian State and society away from the current entanglements with the pursuit of rents to re-establish the link between the state and the people/business, and to re-engineer a society where competition and hard work drive success. Let us divide Nigeria’s post-independence history into the pre-civil war (under the 1963 Republican Constitution and its provisions for competitive federalism under the regions and a revenue allocation formula that forced hard work and competition) on the one hand, and the post-civil war with its centralised, unitary-federalism, with the centre repeatedly ‘creating’ the unviable federating units each entitled to the free money from the centre.
On literally all accounts, the average Nigerian was better off in the first than under the second: per capita income in 1966 was about $1,000 and about $1,400 in 1973 and is currently about $1,200. In REAL terms, the average Nigerian today (despite Nigeria earning over $600 billion from oil since 1973) has less than half of the income in 1966; is poorer; has a shorter life span; with poorer educational system and infrastructure. All the industries and palm and cocoa plantations and groundnut pyramids built by the regions have collapsed.


Our current unproductive system was designed to keep Nigeria ‘united’ by creating a strong ‘centre’. In the process, we have neither a federation nor a unitary system (at best a corrupted unitary system).
All incentives and institutions are designed around a command and control structure for sharing and consuming the lottery jackpot from God (oil rents). For fear of death, Nigeria has indeed decided to commit suicide! There is no incentive for productive governance. National politics of competition for the oil rents has assumed a life of its own. On a per capita income basis, Nigeria has the most expensive parliament in the world. Every village now wants to be a state to get its own ‘share’. Don’t talk about fiscal viability! Have you heard any state governor advertising the number of new businesses that were attracted to his state or number of private sector jobs created as ‘the’ key performance indicator? There is little incentive for such! Debate on leadership is about who will share and where he comes from. It is not about who has the best plans to create jobs and wealth. Because you don’t need any skills to share, just about anybody can be a ‘leader’. Our politics has become a road to nowhere.


We need good leaders but equally important, we need a competitive system that allows any potentially good leader to emerge and perform. To use the metaphor of football, you need good footballers in a good pitch to have great football. If you have 10 Lionel Messis in a team but you take them to play in a cassava farm as field, their talents and efforts may come to little. In fact, because the field is a cassava farm, the ‘best players’ that would emerge could be the street urchins. Our view is that the type of leaders thrown up under a democracy and the latitude they have for creative change depends upon the nature of the legal-institutional infrastructure and the incentive-sanction system. As an economist, I understand that to change behaviour, two keywords are critical: incentives and sanctions. Both summarise what are popularly termed ‘institutions’. An individual can make a difference but ultimately it is institutions that make all the difference.  You can assemble a thousand technocrats, each with his/her ‘reforms’ and at best their positive impact will be at the margin.
Nigeria is in a chicken and egg situation. How will the ‘good system’ emerge without ‘good leaders’ and vice versa? Leave this for our next articles!


To prepare for life without oil, we need a new road map, and the starting point is a new constitution for prosperity! We need to understand the institutional/constitutional design that makes United Arab Emirates (UAE) produce the world class city of Dubai with little oil while other oil-producing countries of the Middle East are not diversified. We need to understand the incentive system that enables the State of Nevada in the US to prosper despite not having any natural resource in a country with oil rich states. It won’t be easy to repair the havoc oil and the destructive politics around it have wreaked on the society, including destruction of the productive elite. But the time to start is now.


To move forward, Nigeria must review the content and meaning of its current political map; rights over mineral resources and land; tax jurisdictions; citizenship rights; fiscal responsibility and fiscal federalism; powers of the central vis-a-vis regional governments; elimination of the suffocating hands of the Federal Government on the regions; etc. It is an oxymoron to repeat the same thing over and over, and expect a different outcome. For a new Nigeria to emerge, new thinking and new ways of doing business must be in place.


http://www.africaeagle.com/2012/09/reconstructing-nigeria-for-prosperity.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+Africaeagle+(AfricaEagle)&m=1

[size=15pt]I am in awe of this mans intelligence . WOW!!! Talk about infinite wisdom . [/size]
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by PointB: 9:06pm On Sep 03, 2012
Onlytruth: I respect Soludo a lot. He hit some points here but I think he missed a few others. Unless Ndigbo are prepared or ready to convert to Islam en masse (which some have actually argued for), Nigeria should be viewed for what it is. There is a very good chance that Nigeria can disintegrate, business or no business; money or no money, trade or no trade.

We Ndigbo should not seem desperate to save a system that is discriminating against us.
Nuff said.

Indeed, I understand your point. The death of Nigeria will not have a major effect on Igbos (or yoruba if I may add). Either it dies or stay, business is business. Money is universal, and highly mobile.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Onlytruth(m): 9:07pm On Sep 03, 2012
PointB: Sadly the 'fear' of what the Igboman will do has almost completely destroyed the country. 'For fear of death, Nigeria in on the verge of suicide!' She will either have to pull back or hasten the plunge! Change must happen!

Strong point. I don't know if that fear would ever end. It did not start today.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by PointB: 9:13pm On Sep 03, 2012
Onlytruth:

Strong point. I don't know if that fear would ever end. It did not start today.

Same fear that made Nigeria, through the instrument of PDP, choose Obj rather than the more obviously suitable Ekueme. It's a paronia!
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by billante(m): 9:26pm On Sep 03, 2012
PointB:

Same fear that made Nigeria, through the instrument of PDP, choose Obj rather than the more obviously suitable Ekueme. It's a paronia!


I don't tink ekwueme would have made any difference! He is not dat lion heart dat was needed to kill corruption and pull through d storm dat comes with it
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Onlytruth(m): 9:36pm On Sep 03, 2012
Okay let me just say this.

I love CC Soludo and I would even volunteer for his campaign anytime he chooses, and for whatever office he may contest in the immediate future. I trust his judgement on most issues, BUT he would need people who think like me to get all things about Nigeria correct.

In this article, he basically sounded like Zik. In his "Pan Africanist/US of Africa"ist" worldview, I don't think he actually added anything new to show that Nigeria has been through a very brutal civil war experience. That civil war did not come out of the blues, and when it came, people like Zik were caught flat-footed. Nigeria had been talking and exercising political association for years before that civil war, and Ndigbo had been in the North and other parts of Nigeria before that war. We have basically seen this dance before. It is called the Zikist dance!

Am I a Pan Africanist? Err NOPE, because Africa is OLD, VERY OLD, and it is made up of very old and DIFFERENT peoples, with no clearly dominant culture. To prove my point, take a look at Europe. Europe remains an ECONOMIC not political enclave. Even at that, the EU is struggling seriously to admit Turkey -a very progressive Muslim country.
There is a reason for that, and I often tell my friends that one of the things I love about "white people" is that they are the most THOROUGH human beings that I know. The Nigeria that was partitioned by the British is far more accurate than the one done by Nigerians, for example.

The best thing anyone can do for Africa is to allow the different peoples and nations within it to perform an experiment -exercise self determination for a given period, and then form unions based on experiences derived from such experiments. The Nigerian experiment has been good, but we need to weaken the center more in order to deepen our experience living apart a little. Only after such experiments can we ever realistically dream of a Nigerian union, and then a west African union and maybe some day an African union. This is what I call building the whole from compact and solid pieces, instead of trying to build wholes with deeply fragmented pieces.

Maybe some day I may become a Pan Africanist, but I say that such a day is at least 100 years away.

Finally, I do not believe that Eastern Nigeria, and Igboland have been given a REAL SHOT at development, and we have HUGE empty lands and small cities begging for development and population increase. We should focus on that rather than continue this lie that our part of Nigeria cannot contain us. It simply ain't true!
We need an international airport fully functional in SE. We can survive without most things, but we cannot survive without our own international gateway.

That is what the Soludos should argue and advocate for because if we don't get it, then their theory (that we cannot survive without leaving Igboland) would prove correct.

All Igbo sons/daughters should live, breath and agitate for that international gateway.

Here I stand! cool
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by nagoma(m): 9:40pm On Sep 03, 2012
I had forgotten about this criminal . So he is still around talking rubbish. He should join Cecilia.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by bashr8: 9:40pm On Sep 03, 2012
soludo your the best but errmm we dont want another zik abeg which kin pan african you be ? anyway we know your among the very few competenet people out there but ehh this your one nigeria / pan african theory get as e be
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by pazienza(m): 11:45pm On Sep 03, 2012
Another zik. I just lost my respect for him,it's good a thing he showed his true colours on time,may the gods never allow this man to ever lead any part of igboland,one zik and one ironsi is enough for igboland,any more, we could be exterminated from the surface of the earth .

Surely we have men with good ideas like this man, but who are pan igbo? I just hope so.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nchara: 12:44am On Sep 04, 2012
Soludo and his pan Africanism balderdash sef. This is exactly what Zik did that, in part, landed us where we are today. The question to all Nigerian pan Africanists of the 21st century is what other African countries care about pan Africanism? Virtually every other African country, including those we helped in the past - e.g., South Africa - pokes their hands in our face and we are still talking about pan Africanism. Deep in my mind, I root for one Nigeria because of the reasons stated by Soludo: my father has a building in Lagos and two of my siblings have now become Landlords in the same Lagos. However, it has not worked well after 50 years and will likely not work, in the foreseeable future. How Igbos continue to build and help in developing other regions at the expense of their own land beats me. But who am I to complain about Igbo love for pan (pan Africanism, pan Nigerianism)?

Okay! So I am not an economist, hence I will not argue much about the importance of a large country (population) in relation to the economy. But while I agree there is evidence that a large population directly translates to a large economy (China, India, USA), it has to be a productive population. Largeness without commensurate productivity as is the case with Nigeria is economically meaningless. Also, I will ask whether a large economy directly means a better economy? Many of the small European countries (Belgium, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Switzerland, Austria, etc) don't have large economies (in the context of Soludo's article) likely because they do not have large populations. But those same countries have stronger and better economies and certainly better human development indices than those of many of the large countries. Their citizens have better and improved live standards in many cases than even the USA, let alone China and India where poverty still reigns supreme despite the growth they are recording. Same goes for Singapore, a small Asian Tiger which is now the only developed country outside Europe and North America. So a Yoruba, Igbo or Ijaw-only country may not have a large economy, but will they also not have a better economy and much more improved living standards for the citizens? The large size of Nigeria has not provided the hoped-for goodies after 50 years.

The North of Nigeria, with its bloated population (inflated or real), has been a drag rather than a catalyst. A large population of beggars and destitutes amounts to nothing per strengthening the economy.

Soludo mentioned that about 17 million Nigerians live abroad, out of which number about 10 million is likely Igbo. I thought Soludo should be building on that to ask that diaspora voting be instituted in the constitution so that the more progressive Igbos and Yorubas and to a lesser extent Edos, abroad will have a say in who leads the country. I believe that if Nigerians abroad vote, Igbos and Yoruba will be more in a position to dictate or co-dictate how the politics play. By dictating the politics, you can then dictate the economy. As long as the North remains the majority in Nigeria because they travel less than other groups and dictate the politics, they will likely dictate the economy and we know what it means when Hausa-Fulani dictate the economy.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Nobody: 2:40am On Sep 04, 2012
It seems almost every Nigerian has a 'solution' to Nigeria's problem in theory, but none is bold enough, or astute to practicalise these theories. Great speech, but people are tired of these speeches - get busy, go hard or go home.
Re: Reconstructing Nigeria For Prosperity By Charles Soludo by Proxytalk: 8:53am On Sep 08, 2012
I just stumbled into this tread, Soludo rightly pointed out that the problem with Nigeria is not just leadership but unproductive structure as well that was instituted out of fear of losing Nigerias unity. But our experiment over the years has prove that continuing in that line will actually mean heading to the rocks. This generation need to do somthing to save our unborn children from this unsecured and unproductive business. And its becoming too late.
thumb up prof.

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