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Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Twakor: 5:16pm On Mar 03, 2019
https://www.ccn.com/the-socialist-politics-of-envy-what-the-world-can-learn-from-nigerias-unfolding-disaster



Africa’s most populated country and the world’s 26th largest economy is heading for a meltdown as a direct result of envy politics.

It was an election between a multimillionaire pro-business candidate seen as part of the establishment and a self-proclaimed hero of the masses who railed against corrupt elites and promised to fight for the little guy. While this may seem to be the story of pretty much every election nowadays since the shock victory of Donald Trump in 2016, the results of Nigeria’s recent elections contain a very important message from an imperiled country about the dangers of using socialist rhetoric and envy politics as a tool of governance.

It is a story that shows how the populist tactics deployed by Trump and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have infected the global political discourse, becoming powerful tools for emerging dictatorships and incompetent governments to entrench themselves in power. Whether dressed up in right-wing clothes as in Trump’s case or presented as new age “socialism” as with AOC, the basic method is the same – the weaponization of envy and use of scapegoats to achieve political goals at the expense of good economics and common sense.

If the collapse of Venezuela got the world’s attention, the impending collapse of Nigeria, with six times the population of Venezuela, will be positively seismic. This is what happened, and here is how the world can learn from it.

‘POVERTY IS GOOD’
Typically decided along ethnic and religious lines, these elections took on a decidedly economic posture, with the generally prosperous South voting as one for the first time in favour of Atiku Abubakar. This was an economically liberal challenger and successful businessman who promised to introduce comprehensive cryptocurrency regulation in his campaign manifesto after Nigerians were forced to become prolific crypto traders due to the woes of the naira, which fell over 85 percent in 2016 alone. The largely impoverished North, however, voted almost unanimously for the famously statist incumbent Muhammadu Buhari.

Following four years of woeful economic performance, including Nigeria’s first recession in a quarter of a century, Buhari’s campaign message was no longer that fighting corruption would grow the economy – which it clearly failed to do in his first term. The message was something altogether different – that Nigerians should learn to accept poverty as the price for “fighting corruption.”


Fatima Askira
@Fatiskira
· Feb 26, 2019
See how shallow people are making it look like their sympathy for #Borno is a favor to the people. Hello! You are only being human when you sympathize with the situation, we are resilient and we will sure defeat Boko Haram with @MBuhari our hero.


Leo Septembrist
@Leo_Septembrist
They do not see how much corruption has almost destroyed this country. The people that hate PMB now have hated him since 2015. They cloak their hatred with Boko Haram, herdsmen etc. No more easy money. Live within your means. No more overnight billionaires in Nigeria.

13
3:33 AM - Feb 26, 2019
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While this message elicited stunned reactions from many voters, it turned out to be right on the money in terms of hitting the emotional lever of an even greater number of people.

Despite being far behind where it should be on a per capita basis, Nigeria’s $411 billion economy has a significant population of US Dollar billionaires and millionaires, in addition to a large population of middle class professionals in cities like Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Enugu and Ibadan – predominantly in the country’s South. This fact is often overshadowed by the preponderance of extreme poverty, particularly in the North.


There is a very sharp economic divide between Nigeria’s prosperous South and impoverished North. | Source: Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative

The glaring economic divide between North and South has been used alongside with ethnic and religious politics in the past, but this election was the first time that no attempt was made to promise economic growth to those in need of it. Instead, the message was that poverty in Nigeria is a sign of virtue because only the “corrupt” are able to live well. Like a certain social media sensation-cum-Congresswoman across the Atlantic, Buhari was the “man of the people,” campaigning with a message that their honest poverty is not their fault and is nothing to be ashamed of.


Like Buhari, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has achieved great success by branding herself as “the candidate of the people.”

Like in the U.S., this approach worked brilliantly, with voters responding positively to a message that absolved them of responsibility and found a comfortable and suitably visible scapegoat. On the surface, AOC’s message is “billionaires and corporate money are distorting democracy,” but what voters are actually expected to hear and respond to is a class warfare dog whistle saying “rich people think they are better than you.” Similarly, the message Nigerian voters really got from the “live within your means” mantra was “those smug city people feel superior to you because they have some money which they probably stole.”

POPULISM IS GOOD POLITICS
For Buhari’s campaign team, it meant avoiding discussions about real issues like Nigeria’s bloated, inefficient, and excessively powerful central government and the unsustainable nature of its welfarist federal budget.


Almost 70% of Nigeria’s 2018 budget is reserved for recurrent expenditure | Source: Daily Trust

To have such a discussion would mean explaining why amidst the naira’s 85 percent fall against the dollar in 2016, Buhari’s government chose to maintain an unrealistic official exchange rate which was used to subsidise religious pilgrims heading to Mecca for the Hajj.

Such conversations would include discussing the opposition’s stated plan to privatise NNPC, Nigeria’s state-owned oil firm that essentially functions as an independent country on its own, with no practical oversight by or accountability to government. Also included would be the federal government’s opaque and inefficient public contracting, procurement and funds disbursement process.

Rather than discuss a lack of investment in education and healthcare, extremely poor power generation and transport infrastructure, or the lack of proper separation of powers making the executive a law unto itself, the campaign was instead spent attacking the convenient fig leaves of “corrupt people”, “treasury looters,” and “arrogant elites”.

In the absence of reasoned debate or actual policies and achievements, a large vote-buying effort was also deployed, in what some have referred to as the “weaponization of poverty.”


M O R E N I K E J I M I
@mzgbeborun
· Feb 28, 2019
Sanwoolu asked to meet Civil servants in Lagos State at Adeyemo Bero Auditorium, Alausa... But we are here struggling to collect Rice. Yes! CIVIL SERVANTS!!!!

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M O R E N I K E J I M I
@mzgbeborun
These are not thugs my dear, these are civil SERVANTS OF LAGOS STATE!!!! pic.twitter.com/6LOa9Qqpnx

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AOC, TRUMP AND FARAGE IN ONE
Weaving together the anti-elitist appeal of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the bloviating news-magnetism of Donald Trump and the skilful sophistry of Nigel Farage, Buhari’s campaign painted a picture of a country held hostage by “corrupt” elites, “treasury looters” and their middle-class subalterns who wanted to vote in a pro-business candidate to preserve the corruption status quo.

In 2015, Buhari defeated an incumbent candidate with a Ph.D. who was perceived to be incompetent due to being an airy-fairy ivory tower resident. This time around, his challenger’s wealth was portrayed as a moral failure in a manner reminiscent of how Ocasio-Cortez has portrayed the existence of billionaires amidst poverty as morally unjust.

While the world of shouty Fox News anchors and social media-savvy Congressional freshmen may seem relatively tame in comparison to the literal life and death politics of Africa’s largest country, it is important to note that Nigeria itself was not always this way. The unfortunate sequence of military coups and poor economic decisions that saw the country lose an entire generation of talent to the developed world could not have taken place without popular support from the very people most affected.

It may be difficult to picture Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or Donald Trump leading the U.S. into a dystopian future where middle-class professionals are disparaged as the “enemy”, and widespread poverty is held up as a virtue, but such situations can take decades to incubate. The incubation takes place in three stages that often overlap – an anger and dissatisfaction phase, a demonization phase, and then the catastrophe.

DEMONIZATION AND SCAPEGOATING
The first phase is already well underway across most of the developed and developing world. From Bangalore to Baltimore, everyone is united in anger about something. Regardless of the wide disparity of living experiences around the world, the general mood is that things are worse than they have ever been, and something or someone must be held to account for it. Politicians eagerly feed the narrative that something has gone terribly wrong, and they will fix it.

The second phase is also underway across much of the world. During this phase, scapegoats must be identified and separated from the assumed ‘virtuous masses’. In Nigeria, the scapegoats are “elites”, which translates practically to “anyone who is not poor.” Anyone with a university-level education and a stable source of income is an “elite” who is collaborating with “corrupt treasury looters.” Across the developed world, the scapegoats may vary from immigrants to Blacks, to Muslims, to “the 1 percent.”

To the impoverished and angry Nigerian voter, their predicament is down to “people who are stealing Nigeria’s money,” regardless of how easily that argument falls down when challenged by the most cursory analysis. Their world is a zero-sum game, where if someone eats three times a day, lives in a comfortable modern residence and drives a car, they must have those things because they “stole” them, or they work for someone who stole them.


ThankGod Ukachukwu
@kcnaija
Buhari’s overarching mantra since he came to power is - “elite are the problem of the masses”. Of recent, he hammers on “living within means”. To Buhari, the rise of the middle class during GEJ equals inequitable distribution of wealth. What else is instigation of class war?

19
12:53 PM - Mar 1, 2019
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However intellectually redundant such a viewpoint is, it has a powerful emotional resonance that is often amplified by lack of education and existing ethnoreligious divisions between North and South.

To the angry voter across much of the developed world, their discontent is caused by immigrants coming over and being given all the jobs and housing, or it is down to the Muslims and refugees being allowed to come into the country and create their own laws and live outside the constitution unlike the long-suffering, salt-of-the-earth natives whom nobody ever listens to.

Perhaps it is the Blacks who are committing all the crimes and nobody can criticise them for fear of being called racist, or most recently, it is the 1 Percent (or even the 0.1 Percent) – the globalist plutocrat oligarchs who pay fewer taxes than everyone, and who have taken away all the jobs and healthcare and placed everyone in debt.

NIGERIA’S UNFOLDING CATASTROPHE
For most of the world, the catastrophe phase is not underway yet, so perhaps a look at Nigeria, where it is well and truly underway will be instructive. A poor economy dependent on a single export resource looks set to continue on its self-imposed implosion, driven by generous subsidy regimes, ridiculously unsustainable social intervention programs, rapidly ballooning foreign debt and a growing annual recurrent expenditure bill that it cannot hope to afford.

In a wrong-headed attempt to plug this funding shortfall, the government has embarked on a high-handed tax collection effort, repeatedly violating the law by unilaterally freezing bank accounts belonging to small businesses and private individuals in the absence of valid court orders or even demand notices. Understandably, this has spooked investors and accelerated the outward flow of investment, which is conveniently labeled as “corrupt money” leaving the country, as against a policy failure driven by envy and fuelled by incompetence.

Alongside this is the growing spectre of oil losing its value, as the world’s biggest oil buyers including China and Europe switch to renewable sources over the next couple of decades, which will effectively render Nigeria’s government penniless overnight. Amidst all this, due to a populist aversion to promoting family planning, Nigeria’s impoverished population over the next decade will add another 137 million to its numbers – the biggest growth of any country on earth excluding India.

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Paul Wallace

@PaulWallace123
Quite a chart. The UN reckons #Nigeria's population will grow by 137m through 2040, more than anywhere bar India. So, it'll add as many people as Japan has today if the UN is correct. Nigeria's current population is about 200m. H/T @JohnAshbourne

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3:09 PM - Dec 6, 2018
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Already, tens of thousands of middle-class Nigerians are upping sticks and moving to destinations like Canada, Germany, Australia and the U.S. in preparation for the impending crisis. An entire generation of highly skilled labour including doctors, teachers, lawyers, engineers, nurses, pilots, accountants, entrepreneurs, artists, programmers, artisans, academics and management personnel is being lost to the developed world, leaving behind an exploding population of people living in extreme poverty.

Nigeria
Nigeria has the largest population of people living in extreme poverty | Source: QZ Africa

The Sahara desert meanwhile, is also claiming an estimated 3,500 sq. km of arable land from Nigeria every year, which is a contributing factor to the presence of Boko Haram and the Fulani herdsmen – two of the world’s deadliest terror groups responsible for tens of thousands of deaths, maimings, and abductions over the past decade.

ENVY POLITICS IS DEADLY POLITICS
Through all of this, a class of anti-intellectual populists in Abuja continue to raise clenched fists before adoring crowds, admonishing them to “live within their means” while demonizing economic ambition and wealth. They have achieved great political success by weaponizing the economic envy of a large, impoverished population, publicly glorifying poverty as a virtue while collecting the world’s most generous compensation packages for political office holders.

Buhari Nigeria
Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari acknowledges cheers at his 2015 swearing-in | Source: CNN

Outside in the real world, however, following the news of Buhari’s re-election, the Nigerian Stock Exchange lost 196 billion nairas (about $542 million), as the investment outlook continues to dim on Africa’s largest economy. The net result of years of envy politics and demonizing wealth and intelligence is a country that has hit the metaphorical iceberg, and continues to cheer while the band plays as the ship sinks.

Buhari Nigeria kaduna
Buhari’s supporters in the Northern city of Kaduna take to the streets in celebration after his election win | Source: Daily Trust

The next time a politician – be it AOC or Donald Trump or Viktor Orban or Nigel Farage – tells you that your life is terrible because of this or that group of people, it would do you some good to think about whether this is what you want your future to look like, before giving in to your base instincts.

The unfolding lesson from this part of the world is very clear – the politics of populism and envy may be very good at winning elections, but they clearly are not good at running successful economies.


https://www.ccn.com/the-socialist-politics-of-envy-what-the-world-can-learn-from-nigerias-unfolding-disaster

2 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by ucheo: 5:24pm On Mar 03, 2019
This analyst really took time to explain how gullible Nigerians are..

8 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by mekaboy(m): 5:28pm On Mar 03, 2019
Not different from what I said about the North. But they won't take it from me because I am igbo and Nigerian. But will respect the views of CNN.

5 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by nofuckz(m): 5:30pm On Mar 03, 2019
No truer words have been said in history of humanity.
weaponizing poverty_ you are poor because the rich stole your future, every body should live within his means. ie u too must become poor only then u can b seen as not lacking in integrity. credit=(the holy/incorruptable thieves)
every one who ever was within the walls of a school compound who goes by this school of thought d time, resource n any other thing invested was a useless waste *spit*

4 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by EzeAnambra: 5:33pm On Mar 03, 2019
How i wish nothrrners are banned from voting in nigria..does guys are pain in the Asss.#they know nothing angry

3 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by mcbreeze: 5:37pm On Mar 03, 2019
Last statement said it all.

2 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Hedonisst: 5:37pm On Mar 03, 2019
We better get ready for the looming storm, with dangerously inept creatures like Buhari in power.

3 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Nobody: 5:41pm On Mar 03, 2019
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Herdsmen: 5:42pm On Mar 03, 2019
The elites kill the north..

The almajiris..buried it.

The west sing their praise...In deciet..

The great north is now a shadow of itself...and a mockery of other..

But still ..they proud in their status..for religion has blinded their eyes..as western education is Haram.except to their elites..

Who acquire the best of western education..

Buhari is not a choice ..to lift this..for he lack knowledge...of economic growth.. appointments doesn't translate to development..

Elrufia for 2023

1 Like

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Nobody: 5:43pm On Mar 03, 2019
It may be difficult to picture Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or Donald Trump leading the U.S. into a dystopian future where middle-class professionals are disparaged as the “enemy”, and widespread poverty is held up as a virtue, but such situations can take decades to incubate. The incubation takes place in three stages that often overlap – an anger and dissatisfaction phase, a demonization phase, and then the catastrophe.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by yang(m): 5:43pm On Mar 03, 2019
The zoo must fall

The zoo called Nigeria is destined to self-implode, just watch it unfold with time

3 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by zeromeridian: 5:46pm On Mar 03, 2019
Ok
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Dannyset(m): 5:47pm On Mar 03, 2019
This isn't CNN but CCN. The election has been won and lost. Stop masturbating on your defeat. Nobody is talking about the grand corruption that would have engulfed this country if Atiku and PDP won this election. All they are interested in is buying our NNPC.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Okoroawusa: 5:50pm On Mar 03, 2019
CNN really hate Trump o!


Is this report about Nigeria or Trump?
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by saaron(m): 5:51pm On Mar 03, 2019
It is very clear that the international community, judging from CNN's article already know that buhari is nothing but a COMPLETE DISASTER. Only a sadist and a total failure like buhari will say Poverty is the price of fighting corruption.
By the way, buhari who publicly endorsed a corrupt gov caught on video receiving kickbacks in cash is not fighting corruption. Buhari's APC govt is now a den of Thieves, Robbers and Murderers.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Nobody: 5:54pm On Mar 03, 2019
Understandably, this has spooked investors and accelerated the outward flow of investment, which is conveniently labeled as “corrupt money” leaving the country, as against a policy failure driven by envy and fuelled by incompetence.

2 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Hedonisst: 5:55pm On Mar 03, 2019
Dannyset:
This isn't CNN but CCN. The election has been won and lost. Stop masturbating on your defeat. Nobody is talking about the grand corruption that would have engulfed this country if Atiku and PDP won this election. All they are interested in is buying our NNPC.


Like a true zombie, you have just validated the author's argument. Without any attempt to make sense, all you can come up with is "grand corruption". No developmental agenda, no strategic plan on anything concrete, no plan. Just corruption this, and looters that. Its really sickening.

2 Likes

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Nobody: 5:56pm On Mar 03, 2019
Dannyset:
This isn't CNN but CCN. The election has been won and lost. Stop masturbating on your defeat. Nobody is talking about the grand corruption that would have engulfed this country if Atiku and PDP won this election. All they are interested in is buying our NNPC.
"if"
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by amidel(m): 6:00pm On Mar 03, 2019
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Nobody: 6:00pm On Mar 03, 2019
Fake news.

It is not CNN
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by amidel(m): 6:07pm On Mar 03, 2019
Perfect analysis. As Nigerians, we should really question ourselves if to die in poverty fighting a one-sided form of corruption or face the truth as regards our falling economy and impending collapse.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by Ziggylady(f): 6:14pm On Mar 03, 2019
Great article indeed.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by mekaboy(m): 6:16pm On Mar 03, 2019
life2017:
Fake news.

It is not CNN

CNN or not it is the truth.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by saaron(m): 6:23pm On Mar 03, 2019
nofuckz:
No truer words have been said in history of humanity.
weaponizing poverty_ you are poor because the rich stole your future, every body should live within his means. ie u too must become poor only then u can b seen as not lacking in integrity. credit=(the holy/incorruptable thieves)
every one who ever was within the walls of a school compound who goes by this school of thought d time, resource n any other thing invested was a useless waste *spit*
while sane societies around the world see poverty as a societal ill that must be eradicated, buhari's APC govt see it as a weapon to maintain themselves in power.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by saaron(m): 6:27pm On Mar 03, 2019
Hedonisst:
We better get ready for the looming storm, with dangerously inept creatures like Buhari in power.
Buhari will never step his bloody feet inside Aso Rock on a stolen Mandate.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by QuotaSystem: 6:29pm On Mar 03, 2019
Lol which one is CCN again?

All I see here is the usual PDP propaganda machine, in a somewhat more sophisticated format, that typically clearly and deliberately avoids analyzing the REASONS behind the poor economy Buhari inherited because it points directly at the writers sponsors.


NIGERIA’S UNFOLDING CATASTROPHE
For most of the world, the catastrophe phase is not underway yet, so perhaps a look at Nigeria, where it is well and truly underway will be instructive. A poor economy dependent on a single export resource looks set to continue on its self-imposed implosion, driven by generous subsidy regimes, ridiculously unsustainable social intervention programs, rapidly ballooning foreign debt and a growing annual recurrent expenditure bill that it cannot hope to afford.

Thankfully, the core of the article which is their usual doom prophecy of an imminent catastrophe is dead on arrival due to already recorded successes in economic diversification away from a mono economy with agricultures contribution to our national GDP has almost tripled in the last year. The subsidy will also naturally die with Dangotes local refining capacity coming online soon. All is not glowing for us yet, but that catastrophe they predicted is just NOT GONNA HAPPEN.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by helinues: 6:34pm On Mar 03, 2019
Make I waka pass
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by mychiveous(f): 6:35pm On Mar 03, 2019
The world sees Buhari and his northeners for who they truly are. Envious enemies of progress.
Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by RTSC: 6:40pm On Mar 03, 2019
The unfortunate thing is that everybody will suffer the consequences.

That is the saddest thing about it all.

Let them keep weaponizing poverty and disgracing foreign investors .

Aleast other African countries will learn from the pathetic story of Nigeria.

1 Like

Re: Politics Of Envy: What the World Can Learn From Nigeria’s Unfolding Disaster by nofuckz(m): 6:46pm On Mar 03, 2019
saaron:
while sane societies around the world see poverty as a societal ill that must be eradicated, buhari's APC govt see it as a weapon to maintain themselves in power.

Truth is dat u dont all blame the RULER and his cohorts. they knw they have little or nothing to give, the bulk of the blame is on those who claim to be metally sound selling and fiosting a very bad, worthless product on a whole nation these are the enemies of the growth and progress of our nation. those who say 2023 is our turn and so on so much sectarian bullshit in the 21st century.

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