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Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by OduaVanguard: 10:56pm On Jun 24, 2015

Osun’s Price for Bold Development, By John Ogunlela

Premium Times June 24, 2015 Osun’s Price for Bold Development, By John Ogunlela



The present Osun State’s financial crises evoke pity if one takes the time to understand its structural roots. It is hard for those of us who are familiar with the turf to watch the governor, a man otherwise adored and praised by his people, being picked on by an understandably aggrieved public over the turn of events. It will be a grave political mistake to treat this as a simple public finance management issue and turn a blind eye on the larger picture of the fiscal dealings of the federal government with states in the country.

Everyone is familiar with the narrative of a crash in allocation from the centre. Well, it is real. If the receivables on your budget have to take a 60 percent crash without precedence or warning, you are certainly going to be caught struggling in a net awhile, especially if your payables remain unforgivingly deductible at source – the principal, interests and all!

But there is more. The creation of Osun State in 1991 by the Babangida administration left certain important elements out which was key to the survival and prosperity of a federating entity, and some of such omissions can be observed in a few young states as well. You can expect those states to reach their critical cusp any moment too and manifest fiscal troubles akin to what we have seen in Osun this far, unless the present federal administration alters the fundamentals to protect the other states.

First, a new state must have a down payment for certain basic infrastructures. For Osun, the capital was billed to be linked to the Ibadan-Ilesha expressway by a 32 kilometre road at Gbongan on the bill of the Federal government. This was not done. Oshogbo remained a capital with a little “This way to” signboard pointing in its direction from localities around it. How was that type of environment expected to grow and become self-sustaining? Who wants to put her business in a location with no roads in a modern sense? The city was to be skirted by a 30 kilometre axial road to broaden its rim and make movement faster. About 12 kilometres of that was built by the Federal government way back under the military administration, with the rest abandoned. But for the Bisi Akande government of 1999 to 2004, Osun could, up till now, be without a state secretariat. The whole environment has remained a pastoral and idyllic one, hardly the type that attracts or stimulates forward socioeconomic movement at all.

The Aregbesola administration in its zeal to accelerate economic development in the state had eagerly taken the bull of those projects by the horn and had gone to source long term loans to build the said roads, as well as another federal road linking the state to Kwara. That bridge one sees on the expressway linking Oshogbo at Gbongan on the way to Abuja is being built by the state, and not the federal government. Pubic schools were pathetic empty sheds and something just had to be done. Those projects were important if the state was to be stimulated economically, and it has not been fair for the federal authorities to have shown a cavalier attitude in its duty to the state 25 years on. I believe if the federal government should repay Osun for those projects today, the state will be out of its financial woods for a good part of its present N36billion salary debt, to begin with.And, how does a state like Osun cope with a huge personnel cost that swallows over 70 percent of its total revenue?

Second, Osun has proven gold reserves which have been mined artisanally since the Portuguese colonisation in the 16th century. Till date, there is no structured exploration of the mineral due to a lack of funding. Gold exploration is not as simple and as cheap as oil exploration. In prospecting for oil, the earth is bombarded with sound signals and the echoes analysed to reveal subterranean liquid bodies. For gold, you need extended periods of digging with actual augers to several metres of depth. Workmen descend as deep as five kilometres in some South African gold shafts while following gold veins.

The federal government should have funded the exploration of this mineral for the benefit of the state right from inception. Such legacy projects would have given the state a solid local economic foundation on which viability and development can be built. The standard practice in gold exploration is to engage what is called a junior mining concern. This will map out the gold and gather geological data that the actual mining company will rely on for a mining contract and actual exploitation. The means for engaging a junior mining company is beyond the state. One would have thought that a special federal development fund should have been created for doing this. There must be some basic economic skeleton to give form and structural integrity as foundation for a political entity like a state, upon which further development can be built. If this is not done, the states are but mere geographical expressions and the governors are mere transmitters of handouts from Abuja.

Third is the water resources, which among other things, is cardinal to local economic development. The Osun river is a branch of the Niger running through the state all year round. It seems that river played a crucial role in the survival of early settlers in the area that grew to become Oshogbo, the state capital. Throughout its length, there is nowhere it is controlled with dykes for conservation for off-season farming. Why is this so? This idea was central to the creation of the River Basin Development Authorities, a federal agency, but what have they done with the Osun river so far? In fact the Aregbesola government has been spending billions dredging that river, so that it will stop overflowing its banks and killing people. Since Aregbesola came in, death by flooding has stopped in the state. And for a fact, this is another area where the federal government is indebted to the state in the form of Ecological Funds. The state has borne the brunt while Abuja plays politics with refunds. I am certain Abuja owes Osun State much more than its N29 billion salary debts in statutory Ecological Funds alone.

In terms of irrigation, why wasn’t a major dam for water conservation not one of the endowments for the state at creation, to give it a modern agricultural launching pad? This would have made a lot of difference for the state’s large farming communities and reduced dependence on monthly federal handouts. It would also have impacted positively on Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), for you can only increase IGR to a point by tightening collection strategies alone. Real increase in IGR is a function of local productivity. The trouble that Governor Aregbesola got himself into stemmed from the fact that he keenly saw the need for some of these infrastructure and rammed himself into the job of providing them with borrowed funds, hoping for some clement political turn that will help address the federal attention deficit the state has suffered, especially as an opposition state. It was something that was bound to happen someday when a governor who is passionate about development gets in the saddle in Oshogbo. It may have been for the fear of the present quagmire that past governors left the works undone, yet, what real good can come from a leader who walks on eggshells? Aregbesola is probably the type of governor who wouldn’t want his main achievement in power to be the mere prompt payment of salaries, and so had to stretch his resources thin, living as it were, in hope. Had the federal government not cut allocations to that state much earlier than the period of declining oil revenue, one could be certain that the governor’s projections would have worked and the seams of social welfare would not have burst on him.

Someone has to be brave and adventurous at a point in a community’s leadership history to provide that initial lifting force that seeds growth. Yes, it comes with a price which I think Ogbeni and the people of the state are paying right now. However, it will serve us well as a people not to throw the baby out with the bath water by failing to dig deeper. The reasoning that the Osun governor is wanton with the state’s affair or is flagrantly uncaring is simplistic as it is unfair. To just dismiss the man with a simple wave of the hand in a politically convenient way that our system affords will do much more harm to the state and will not lead to a solution. A question is pertinent: why was allocation to this state cut from around April 2014, a few months to the state’s tense governorship election which the erstwhile ruling party sent 73,000 troops to police and was clearly desperate to win? Was there a deliberate plot to scuttle the state financially? Where does this take us in redefining the fiscal relationship between the federal government and states? Answers to those questions will equip us with the right tools to address the Osun State financial situation more rationally.

Governor Aregbesola must have his own imperfections, of course. Perhaps, he is too zealous for development, maybe he could have been slower. Or he could have first right-sized the state’s bloated civil service. It is possible he could have somehow mitigated this whole cascade of events. But then, real-life leadership comes with risk taking, it’s prices and it’s gains. Maybe that was the reason that the state hardly ever came near the headlines in terms of physical development until Aregbesola came along.

I believe if the Federal government honours 70 percent of its statutory obligations to the state right now, its present troubles will be history. If it goes further to endow the state by helping it in the area of gold exploration and water conservation/irrigation, that state will become another goose that lays the golden eggin a most literal way.

http://blogs.premiumtimesng.com/?p=167946

Re: Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by dhardline(m): 10:57pm On Jun 24, 2015
O really undecided
Re: Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by Steph7u: 11:00pm On Jun 24, 2015
U can write this story again if u have family members as Civil servants in Osun!
Re: Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by alakara(m): 11:01pm On Jun 24, 2015
op are u in osun or lagos
Re: Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by Steph7u: 11:01pm On Jun 24, 2015
U can write this story again if u have family members as Civil servants in Osun! ok?
Re: Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by Ezenwammadu(m): 11:11pm On Jun 24, 2015
l wonder what the unpaid workers will say after reading this sponsored trash

Waithing fir mallam abudul el rochas dan cockroacha sponsored trash to justify oweing 11 months salary
Re: Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by maxtamazin: 11:12pm On Jun 24, 2015
Ok. ..we heard you Mr Writer. ..simple solution. .tell your paymaster to resign for people who can do the job. Stop the cry baby song. Chikena.
Re: Osun’s Price For Bold Development, By John Ogunlela by OduaVanguard: 11:52pm On Jun 24, 2015
Lol. You people are wicked sha. The author of the article was merely giving a different perspective from what we're being inundated with. Whether he's right or not he's entitled to his own narrative which he presented in the article. Make Una sofly bash the man o. cheesy

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