Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,161,186 members, 7,845,892 topics. Date: Friday, 31 May 2024 at 07:10 AM

Nigerian Millionaires: 45 Years Ago: - Business - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Business / Nigerian Millionaires: 45 Years Ago: (956 Views)

7 Young Self-made Nigerian Millionaires To Inspire You / Nigerian Millionaires On The Rise / The Nigerian Millionaires Back In The 60's (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Nigerian Millionaires: 45 Years Ago: by chika4real: 9:40am On Nov 04, 2010
Subject: NIGERIAN MILLIONAIRES, 45 YEARS AGO,

This was forwarded by a friend who came across the Time magazine article from 1965. (45 years ago).
Those were the good ol' days when the wealthy in Nigeria actually contributed to the growth and overall prosperity of the society.
Society looked up to these people then because the source of their wealth was clear to all and sundry.
Forty-five years later, looting of the public treasury at the expense of us all, is the primary source of wealth for the "New Rich"
How sad,


Friday, Sep. 17, 1965

Africa: The Nigerian Millionaires


Along with pride in status and problems of self-government, independence for the 31 nations of black Africa means the emergence of black businessmen. A few flourish on cottage industries, that early stage of every economy; some are the opportunistic agents of the colonial companies that formerly ruled them. Now, however, more of Africa's new businessmen are not only university-trained and experienced but surprisingly sophisticated in trade and finance. In Equatorial Africa, it is no longer unusual to see a $200,000 letter of credit emerging from the folds of a native robe. Nowhere is the new African businessman doing better than in Nigeria, black Africa's most populous and most prosperous nation. With a population of 55 million and an economy that grows 4% each year, the number of Nigerian millionaires is growing almost as fast as the country itself.

Peanuts & Petroleum. Even before Britain withdrew five years ago, Nigeria had a flourishing trade, exporting peanuts, cotton, palm kernels and cocoa and importing in exchange manufactured goods, foods and tobacco The first native millionaires made their money by competing with the white man for his trade. Among Nigeria's richest businessmen is Alhaji Sanusi Dantata 46, who buys and ships much of the rich Kano region's peanut crop. Dantata's agents last year bought 84,000 tons from small farmers, paid with traditional handfuls of coin counted out in dusty village squares. Sir Odumegwu Ojukwu 66, knighted shortly before independence, started off by importing dried fish for resale to the nonfishing Nigerians then decided to ship the fish inland himself instead of leaving the job to others. He also amassed the country's largest fleet of "mammy wagons," the trucks that carry Nigerians (including market women, which gives the trucks their name) from place to place.

In today's new Nigeria, businessmen are more likely to succeed by producing new goods or services. Sir Mobolaji Bank-Anthony, 59, known as "The Black Englishman" for his impeccable manners and imperturbable air, began by importing cuckoo clocks and marble statues. He now controls or owns part of ten companies, including a tanker fleet and a charter airline. Emmanuel Akwiwu, 43, earned law degrees at Cambridge; returning home just as Nigeria's oil boom began he organized a company that now has 70 vehicles, hauls oil rigs and supplies for British Petroleum Ltd. Chief Shafi Lawal Edu, 54, who is president of Lagos' chamber of commerce, has built a fleet of eight oil tankers. He owns a silver-blue Rolls-Royce, but usually drives around in a Mercedes—thinks it is less ostentatious.

No Need to Clash.
Many Nigerian businessmen have taken advantage of the novel opportunities that inevitably accompany broadening prosperity. Chief Timothy Adeola Odutola, 63, a onetime farmer, developed a business to produce bicycle tires for the growing army of bikes, has done so well that he is adding a $1,700,000 plant, plans eventually to harvest his own rubber from his 5,000-acre plantation. A former office worker, Ade Tuyo, 63, cast around for a business that would have 'first priority in people's spending" opened a bakery that today has four shops and makes 115 products. The firm's unusual name—De Facto Works Ltd.—was shrewdly chosen by Tuyo to impress Nigerian bankers with the fact that he was seriously in business
Bayo Braithwaite, 36, one of Nigeria's younger businessmen, left a British insurance company to found a firm that would write life insurance on Nigerians which the British underwriters avoided. So successful has Braithwaite been that his African Alliance Insurance Co Ltd occupies a six-story Lagos home office and has 300 bush-beating agents. Braithwaite lives in an elegant house in suburban Ikoyi, where glass and concrete are deliberately intermixed with African folk art to prove that "the two need never clash."

So, it is, too, with Nigerian business. The Nigerians feel that they and their onetime white masters need never clash. "The time is coming," says Timothy Udutola, "when we will produce more than we can consume and we will have to look outside Nigeria for markets" Against that time, Nigeria is seeking joint ventures in Europe and the U.S., has also concluded negotiations for eventual associate membership in the European Common Market. Already it exports more to the Market than to its old master, Britain.
Re: Nigerian Millionaires: 45 Years Ago: by chika4real: 9:43am On Nov 04, 2010
When the going was good.
Someone should help me put IBB and his brothers in jail, abegggggggggggggggooooooooooo
Re: Nigerian Millionaires: 45 Years Ago: by netotse(m): 9:56am On Nov 04, 2010
chika4real:

When the going was good.
Someone should help me put IBB and his brothers in jail, abegggggggggggggggooooooooooo
i couldn't agree more with you.

anyone reading that article cannot but get caught up in the optimism that the writer expresses, and then you realise that this was some 45 years ago and we're nowhere near where we should be and it begs the question. . .where did we go wrong?
Re: Nigerian Millionaires: 45 Years Ago: by chika4real: 10:06am On Nov 04, 2010
@natotse
I tell you,thats just the question
Where did we go wrong.
If we had this 45 years ago and with such speed.We should be competing with US and China and the likes.
These men were honourable.All they had was enough for them.
Now what do we have greed and his family members.
Re: Nigerian Millionaires: 45 Years Ago: by hbrednic: 5:42pm On Nov 04, 2010
chika4real:

Subject: NIGERIAN MILLIONAIRES, 45 YEARS AGO,

This was forwarded by a friend who came across the Time magazine article from 1965. (45 years ago).
Those were the good ol' days when the wealthy in Nigeria actually contributed to the growth and overall prosperity of the society.
Society looked up to these people then because the source of their wealth was clear to all and sundry.
Forty-five years later, looting of the public treasury at the expense of

"[b]The time is coming," says Timothy Udutola, "when we will produce more than we can consume and we will have to look outside Nigeria for markets
Against that time, Nigeria is seeking joint ventures in Europe and the U.S., has also concluded negotiations for eventual associate membership in the European Common Market. Already it exports more to the Market than to its old master, Britain.

what an irony now we are importing food from Brasil and Thailand.
who did this to Nigeria?

(1) (Reply)

Can Google Cheque Be Cashed With Gtbank Current Account? / Customs Licenced Clearing And Forwarding Agents: / N25k, Minimum Deposit 4 Account Holders

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 20
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.