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Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Holyman3(m): 7:40am On May 18, 2019
Nigeria has a smaller national budget than Algeria, Angola, Egypt, Libya, Morocco and South Africa. All these countries have fewer citizens, yet significantly more money to spend on them. While Nigeria’s 2019 budget amounts to $29 billion, South Africa, with a population almost 4 times smaller, will spend $130 billion. Egypt has a $90 billion budget with 100 million people. Elsewhere, countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh and Vietnam have larger budgets than Nigeria. No one considers these nations “rich”. Yet, among Nigerians, there persists a stubborn myth that Nigeria is a wealthy country. Who planted this idea and why does it survive?

It started with Nigeria’s 1950s pro-independence leaders who needed to mobilize popular opinion against colonialism to push the British out. So, they regularly emphasized Nigeria possessed abundant economic resources being carted away by the British. “Help us drive them out and we will use these vast resources to transform your lives”, was their essential message.

Many Nigerians believed these often exaggerated claims of abundant wealth awaiting distribution and duly mobilized for independence. By 1960, then Governor-General Nnamdi Azikiwe was constructing national pride on the idea that thanks to her resources and population size, Nigeria was already an “African power.” And this was before crude-oil exports really took off in the mid-1960s. By the 1970s, General Yakubu Gowon was telling Nigerians their country’s problem was not money, but “how to spend it”.

Whatever Gowon’s intentions, his words were interpreted by many Nigerians to mean theirs was a rich country, period. Over 20 years later, during my secondary school days, we would often recall Gowon’s famous statement. Anytime someone brought it up, we would all laugh with some delight. It made us feel like part of an exclusive members-only club; the club of rich nations. Sorry, no poor countries allowed.

It also gave us a sense of hope and relief because it meant that all the problems we observed around us – no water, no light, new slums everyday – these were all easily solvable. Nigeria had the money to make all these disappear fast. The minute an honest government took over, it would be farewell problems, hello prosperity. There is great comfort in believing solutions to your problems are within arm’s reach. That all it takes is for X to happen. That’s why demagogues and charlatans will always have followers.

The first time someone challenged my belief I was from a rich country I became agitated. It was a girlfriend of mine who wasn’t Nigerian, one of those annoying types who know things they have no business knowing. I mentioned Nigeria was rich. “No, it isn’t. I checked. It has a smaller economy than some countries with just 5-10 million people like Sweden or Norway and a lower GDP per capita than the likes of Albania, Guatemala or Mongolia which are all considered poor countries,” she retorted. I struggled to contain my anger. What kind of rubbish was this girl telling me? That my entire national self-concept was wrong? Impossible!

I think many Nigerians are still psychologically reluctant to accept Nigeria’s true position in the global pecking order today. Our sense of national self is largely built around the notion that we are a country very rich in natural and human resources, just one good government away from greatness. Some optic illusions further render this belief hard to shake.

In every state, there are a few dozen people (usually involved in politics) who possess such visibly stupendous wealth, we can be forgiven for assuming there is a lot more where that came from. Thing is, there isn’t. If you shared Nigeria’s 8.83 trillion naira national budget equally among Nigerians, each citizen would receive a paltry 45,000 naira or so; hardly enough to keep you in Panadol for the year.

Of course, states have budgets too, but even Lagos, by far Nigeria’s richest city, has a modest 852 billion naira ($2.4 billion) to spend on 15 to 20 million residents this year. For comparison, Johannesburg has double that budget for fewer than 5 million people. And it still struggles to provide basic social services. What we have in Nigeria is a few hundred people looting and squandering such a disproportionate amount of Nigeria’s modest resources that an illusion of plenty is sustained among the populace.

Another factor fuelling this “there is money in Nigeria” belief is that many people pretend to have more of it than they actually do. My friend who runs a crèche in one of the most expensive neighbourhoods in Lagos says she has lost count of the number of parents who drive the most expensive Range Rovers yet struggle to pay their children’s nursery fees on time. Of course, aspirational Nigerians don’t live above their means just because, they do so in response to societal pressure for them to prove they are “somebodies”; worth talking business to, hanging out with and treating respectfully. Raise your hand if you have ever pretended to have more money than you really do so as to be treated respectfully somewhere in Nigeria (my hand is raised high).

But the end result is that when you combine the authentic and visible wealth of a few hundred Nigerians living off the state with the lifestyles of all those trying hard to appear rich, the rest of society can be forgiven for believing there must be a lot of money in Nigeria.

This is bad because it encourages many intelligent people to focus not on thinking of how to create wealth, but on how to corner their own “share” of this fabulous national cake. Either by getting into government or by winning a government contract and then behaving as though the pockets of the state are bottomless.

Another consequence of this illusion is that it diminishes the sense of urgency required to tackle the existential threats Nigeria faces, ranging from mass poverty and unemployment to uncontrolled population growth and growing insecurity. At the back of many minds seems to be the implicit assumption one needn’t worry too much. Things will sort themselves out. There is money in Nigeria.

But Nigeria is not rich. And with its rapidly-expanding population leading to ever scarcer resources, only a furious national focus on wealth-creation can save the country. The Nigerian state, currently viewed by many as a fat cash-cow, is actually a very skinny cow in desperate need of some serious grass in order to stay alive. Else, one day, it will simply stop breathing.

16 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by helinues: 7:41am On May 18, 2019
So what is the moral lesson from this epistles?
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Holyman3(m): 7:42am On May 18, 2019
helinues:
So what is the moral lesson from this epistles?

Return to school if you can't see that yourself

Lazy youth

20 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Wiseandtrue(f): 8:19am On May 18, 2019
Holyman3:


But Nigeria is not rich. And with its rapidly-expanding population leading to ever scarcer resources, only a furious national focus on wealth-creation can save the country. The Nigerian state, currently viewed by many as a fat cash-cow, is actually a very skinny cow in desperate need of some serious grass in order to stay alive. Else, one day, it will simply stop breathing.
Keep making excuses and justifying incompetency!!! The joke is on you!!!

The little we have, what are they using it for

How useful is our annual budget

I think Buhari is in Makkah with our Nigerian not too rich money

He travels as if he is going to his backyard without any tangible result and you say Nigeria is broke, who will believe you

With his devilish policies means to increase hunger in the land!

If man fail to uproot that failure forcing himself on Nigerians, God will deal with him!!! I know he hear cries and he will make name for Himself!!!

3 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by tuniski: 8:55am On May 18, 2019
Wiseandtrue:

Keep making excuses and justifying incompetency!!! The joke is on you!!!

The little we have, what are they using it for

How useful is our annual budget

I think Buhari is in Makkah with our Nigerian not too rich money

He travels as if he is going to his backyard without any tangible result and you say Nigeria is broke, who will believe you

With his devilish policies means to increase hunger in the land!

If man fail to uproot that failure forcing himself on Nigerians, God will deal with him!!! I know he hear cries and he will make name for Himself!!!


I feel You but, Nigeria is really a poor nation living recklessly on make believe!

7 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Nobody: 9:14am On May 18, 2019
Holyman3:


Return to school if you can't see that yourself

Lazy youth

You shouldn't have deigned that slowpoke a response.

The opinion piece is spot on. And I've realized Nigeria's true status a long time ago.

Make belief and show off are so ingrained in our culture that it has been elevated to a national sport.

With the rapidly growing population, and with the clueless government of Buhari hastening things, it is no wonder that Nigeria is taking its rightful position as the poverty capital of the world.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Nobody: 9:26am On May 18, 2019
Nigeria is really a very poor country.

5 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Ekpeitut: 9:43am On May 18, 2019
But our politicians are stealing the little we have with reckless abandon.

3 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Blankstare(m): 11:02am On May 18, 2019
About 40 percent of budget we have to fund with external borrowing

No national development plan

Over importation

Geometric rise in population

We are indeed potentially rich but poor country physically

6 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Nobody: 11:31am On May 18, 2019
Blankstare:
About 40 percent of budget we have to fund with external borrowing
No national development plan
Over importation
Geometric rise in population
Not to mention massive infrastructure deficit. It's a bleak outlook.

6 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Fash20: 12:44pm On May 18, 2019
Why this is country poor

Like someone mentioned earlier, over importation is one of the reasons the country is poor. How much do we make as a country and how much do we spend. Pause for a moment and look around you. Almost everything you use is imported. For you to be rich, your income must be greater than expenditure.

Population spike is another problem and I blame this on the belief of the citizens. Nigerians are religious and the religions we practice encourage its adherents to multiply. If things remain like this (I hope not) and we do not make any effort to bring our population under control, we will be facing bigger challenges in future.

The orientation of the citizens is also a major problem. Nigerians and their leaders are corrupt.

Nigeria is not rich but she has potentials to be. I think all we need to do is to come together and put a plan in place to make this country great.
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Ovamboland(m): 1:07pm On May 18, 2019
Yet our GDP is bigger than all the listed African countries with bigger budgets.

That means some Nigerians are making away with money that should come into government offers by not paying duties (smuggling), not paying appropriate taxes (Eg Atiku paying 10 million in 3 years, money the middle-level oil worker pays in a year), government officials coluding or road-blocking to constrict government revenue for bribe etc.

Thats why Ghana with 30 million people will budget 5 trillion naira equivalent a year while almighty Nigerians are expecting to get an arm and a leg plus eyes (world class hospital, schools, bullet rail etc)) from 9 trillion naira budget in a whole year for 190 million people.

We are really becoming dregs of the world while few Nigerians are having excess, buying houses all over the world and putting one wife or girlfriend in each house, while large section of Nigerians are poor.

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by franklyfrank: 2:29pm On May 18, 2019
This is the best writeup I've read in a long time. The most annoying thing is that some supposedly educated people will argue vehemently on this issue without presenting any figures like you did. What Nigeria has is potentials which many people confuse with being rich.

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Sirjamo: 2:52pm On May 18, 2019
This is the main reason why Buhari shut the gate on importation of 41 items, he's literally telling us to look inward, harness our potentials and become really rich, we can't continue to grow other countries and leave ours in abject poverty.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Firgemachar: 3:10pm On May 18, 2019
True.

I have always said it. Nigeria is a very poor country.
Let us always look at things on a per capita basis i.e. based on our population to get the real picture.

Add all the looted funds together. It won't suffice.
We need at least USD40Bn to achieve uninterrupted power supply. Where are we going to get that from

Libya with a population of less than 10million earns more from oil than Nigeria.

And some dullarrdds say we are rich

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Blue3k(m): 3:13pm On May 18, 2019
Lol the budget is small because they dont collect taxes from anyone besides the oil companies.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by GreyLaw(m): 4:45pm On May 18, 2019
Firgemachar:
True.

I have always said it. Nigeria is a very poor country.
Let us always look at things on a per capita basis i.e. based on our population to get the real picture.

Add all the looted funds together. It won't suffice.
We need at least USD40Bn to achieve uninterrupted power supply. Where are we going to get that from

Libya with a population of less than 10million earns more from oil than Nigeria.

And some dullarrdds say we are rich

With the set of criminals we have had, and still have, and would most likely continue ton have as leaders, even $80bn will not suffice for uninterrupted power supply; they'll loot it and use one-third for the project.

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Firgemachar: 4:48pm On May 18, 2019
GreyLaw:


With the set of criminals we have had, and still have, and would most likely continue ton have as leaders, even $80bn will not suffice for uninterrupted power supply; they'd loot it and use one-third for the project.

Even if it is not looted, where do we get the money from

That's how much South Africa spent to revamp its power infrastructure some years ago.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by kikuyu1(m): 4:08pm On Oct 22, 2019
Holyman3:
Nigeria has a smaller national budget than Algeria, Angola, Egypt, Libya, Morocco and South Africa. All these countries have fewer citizens, yet significantly more money to spend on them. While Nigeria’s 2019 budget amounts to $29 billion, South Africa, with a population almost 4 times smaller, will spend $130 billion. Egypt has a $90 billion budget with 100 million people. Elsewhere, countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh and Vietnam have larger budgets than Nigeria. No one considers these nations “rich”. Yet, among Nigerians, there persists a stubborn myth that Nigeria is a wealthy country. Who planted this idea and why does it survive?

It started with Nigeria’s 1950s pro-independence leaders who needed to mobilize popular opinion against colonialism to push the British out. So, they regularly emphasized Nigeria possessed abundant economic resources being carted away by the British. “Help us drive them out and we will use these vast resources to transform your lives”, was their essential message.

Many Nigerians believed these often exaggerated claims of abundant wealth awaiting distribution and duly mobilized for independence. By 1960, then Governor-General Nnamdi Azikiwe was constructing national pride on the idea that thanks to her resources and population size, Nigeria was already an “African power.” And this was before crude-oil exports really took off in the mid-1960s. By the 1970s, General Yakubu Gowon was telling Nigerians their country’s problem was not money, but “how to spend it”.

Whatever Gowon’s intentions, his words were interpreted by many Nigerians to mean theirs was a rich country, period. Over 20 years later, during my secondary school days, we would often recall Gowon’s famous statement. Anytime someone brought it up, we would all laugh with some delight. It made us feel like part of an exclusive members-only club; the club of rich nations. Sorry, no poor countries allowed.

It also gave us a sense of hope and relief because it meant that all the problems we observed around us – no water, no light, new slums everyday – these were all easily solvable. Nigeria had the money to make all these disappear fast. The minute an honest government took over, it would be farewell problems, hello prosperity. There is great comfort in believing solutions to your problems are within arm’s reach. That all it takes is for X to happen. That’s why demagogues and charlatans will always have followers.

The first time someone challenged my belief I was from a rich country I became agitated. It was a girlfriend of mine who wasn’t Nigerian, one of those annoying types who know things they have no business knowing. I mentioned Nigeria was rich. “No, it isn’t. I checked. It has a smaller economy than some countries with just 5-10 million people like Sweden or Norway and a lower GDP per capita than the likes of Albania, Guatemala or Mongolia which are all considered poor countries,” she retorted. I struggled to contain my anger. What kind of rubbish was this girl telling me? That my entire national self-concept was wrong? Impossible!

I think many Nigerians are still psychologically reluctant to accept Nigeria’s true position in the global pecking order today. Our sense of national self is largely built around the notion that we are a country very rich in natural and human resources, just one good government away from greatness. Some optic illusions further render this belief hard to shake.

In every state, there are a few dozen people (usually involved in politics) who possess such visibly stupendous wealth, we can be forgiven for assuming there is a lot more where that came from. Thing is, there isn’t. If you shared Nigeria’s 8.83 trillion naira national budget equally among Nigerians, each citizen would receive a paltry 45,000 naira or so; hardly enough to keep you in Panadol for the year.

Of course, states have budgets too, but even Lagos, by far Nigeria’s richest city, has a modest 852 billion naira ($2.4 billion) to spend on 15 to 20 million residents this year. For comparison, Johannesburg has double that budget for fewer than 5 million people. And it still struggles to provide basic social services. What we have in Nigeria is a few hundred people looting and squandering such a disproportionate amount of Nigeria’s modest resources that an illusion of plenty is sustained among the populace.

Another factor fuelling this “there is money in Nigeria” belief is that many people pretend to have more of it than they actually do. My friend who runs a crèche in one of the most expensive neighbourhoods in Lagos says she has lost count of the number of parents who drive the most expensive Range Rovers yet struggle to pay their children’s nursery fees on time. Of course, aspirational Nigerians don’t live above their means just because, they do so in response to societal pressure for them to prove they are “somebodies”; worth talking business to, hanging out with and treating respectfully. Raise your hand if you have ever pretended to have more money than you really do so as to be treated respectfully somewhere in Nigeria (my hand is raised high).

But the end result is that when you combine the authentic and visible wealth of a few hundred Nigerians living off the state with the lifestyles of all those trying hard to appear rich, the rest of society can be forgiven for believing there must be a lot of money in Nigeria.

This is bad because it encourages many intelligent people to focus not on thinking of how to create wealth, but on how to corner their own “share” of this fabulous national cake. Either by getting into government or by winning a government contract and then behaving as though the pockets of the state are bottomless.

Another consequence of this illusion is that it diminishes the sense of urgency required to tackle the existential threats Nigeria faces, ranging from mass poverty and unemployment to uncontrolled population growth and growing insecurity. At the back of many minds seems to be the implicit assumption one needn’t worry too much. Things will sort themselves out. There is money in Nigeria.

But Nigeria is not rich. And with its rapidly-expanding population leading to ever scarcer resources, only a furious national focus on wealth-creation can save the country. The Nigerian state, currently viewed by many as a fat cash-cow, is actually a very skinny cow in desperate need of some serious grass in order to stay alive. Else, one day, it will simply stop breathing.

TEN LIKES,SIR! Come here and talk to our Naijjans. https://www.nairaland.com/3327789/kenya-ahead-nigeria-all-aspect/5483
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Multiplier7(m): 4:59pm On Oct 22, 2019
Op Nice write up.

Any advice on how to make Nigeria rich?
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by topsquino(m): 5:24pm On Oct 22, 2019
Holyman3:
Nigeria has a smaller national budget than Algeria, Angola, Egypt, Libya, Morocco and South Africa. All these countries have fewer citizens, yet significantly more money to spend on them. While Nigeria’s 2019 budget amounts to $29 billion, South Africa, with a population almost 4 times smaller, will spend $130 billion. Egypt has a $90 billion budget with 100 million people. Elsewhere, countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh and Vietnam have larger budgets than Nigeria. No one considers these nations “rich”. Yet, among Nigerians, there persists a stubborn myth that Nigeria is a wealthy country. Who planted this idea and why does it survive?

It started with Nigeria’s 1950s pro-independence leaders who needed to mobilize popular opinion against colonialism to push the British out. So, they regularly emphasized Nigeria possessed abundant economic resources being carted away by the British. “Help us drive them out and we will use these vast resources to transform your lives”, was their essential message.

Many Nigerians believed these often exaggerated claims of abundant wealth awaiting distribution and duly mobilized for independence. By 1960, then Governor-General Nnamdi Azikiwe was constructing national pride on the idea that thanks to her resources and population size, Nigeria was already an “African power.” And this was before crude-oil exports really took off in the mid-1960s. By the 1970s, General Yakubu Gowon was telling Nigerians their country’s problem was not money, but “how to spend it”.

Whatever Gowon’s intentions, his words were interpreted by many Nigerians to mean theirs was a rich country, period. Over 20 years later, during my secondary school days, we would often recall Gowon’s famous statement. Anytime someone brought it up, we would all laugh with some delight. It made us feel like part of an exclusive members-only club; the club of rich nations. Sorry, no poor countries allowed.

It also gave us a sense of hope and relief because it meant that all the problems we observed around us – no water, no light, new slums everyday – these were all easily solvable. Nigeria had the money to make all these disappear fast. The minute an honest government took over, it would be farewell problems, hello prosperity. There is great comfort in believing solutions to your problems are within arm’s reach. That all it takes is for X to happen. That’s why demagogues and charlatans will always have followers.

The first time someone challenged my belief I was from a rich country I became agitated. It was a girlfriend of mine who wasn’t Nigerian, one of those annoying types who know things they have no business knowing. I mentioned Nigeria was rich. “No, it isn’t. I checked. It has a smaller economy than some countries with just 5-10 million people like Sweden or Norway and a lower GDP per capita than the likes of Albania, Guatemala or Mongolia which are all considered poor countries,” she retorted. I struggled to contain my anger. What kind of rubbish was this girl telling me? That my entire national self-concept was wrong? Impossible!

I think many Nigerians are still psychologically reluctant to accept Nigeria’s true position in the global pecking order today. Our sense of national self is largely built around the notion that we are a country very rich in natural and human resources, just one good government away from greatness. Some optic illusions further render this belief hard to shake.

In every state, there are a few dozen people (usually involved in politics) who possess such visibly stupendous wealth, we can be forgiven for assuming there is a lot more where that came from. Thing is, there isn’t. If you shared Nigeria’s 8.83 trillion naira national budget equally among Nigerians, each citizen would receive a paltry 45,000 naira or so; hardly enough to keep you in Panadol for the year.

Of course, states have budgets too, but even Lagos, by far Nigeria’s richest city, has a modest 852 billion naira ($2.4 billion) to spend on 15 to 20 million residents this year. For comparison, Johannesburg has double that budget for fewer than 5 million people. And it still struggles to provide basic social services. What we have in Nigeria is a few hundred people looting and squandering such a disproportionate amount of Nigeria’s modest resources that an illusion of plenty is sustained among the populace.

Another factor fuelling this “there is money in Nigeria” belief is that many people pretend to have more of it than they actually do. My friend who runs a crèche in one of the most expensive neighbourhoods in Lagos says she has lost count of the number of parents who drive the most expensive Range Rovers yet struggle to pay their children’s nursery fees on time. Of course, aspirational Nigerians don’t live above their means just because, they do so in response to societal pressure for them to prove they are “somebodies”; worth talking business to, hanging out with and treating respectfully. Raise your hand if you have ever pretended to have more money than you really do so as to be treated respectfully somewhere in Nigeria (my hand is raised high).

But the end result is that when you combine the authentic and visible wealth of a few hundred Nigerians living off the state with the lifestyles of all those trying hard to appear rich, the rest of society can be forgiven for believing there must be a lot of money in Nigeria.

This is bad because it encourages many intelligent people to focus not on thinking of how to create wealth, but on how to corner their own “share” of this fabulous national cake. Either by getting into government or by winning a government contract and then behaving as though the pockets of the state are bottomless.

Another consequence of this illusion is that it diminishes the sense of urgency required to tackle the existential threats Nigeria faces, ranging from mass poverty and unemployment to uncontrolled population growth and growing insecurity. At the back of many minds seems to be the implicit assumption one needn’t worry too much. Things will sort themselves out. There is money in Nigeria.

But Nigeria is not rich. And with its rapidly-expanding population leading to ever scarcer resources, only a furious national focus on wealth-creation can save the country. The Nigerian state, currently viewed by many as a fat cash-cow, is actually a very skinny cow in desperate need of some serious grass in order to stay alive. Else, one day, it will simply stop breathing.

Nice write up. Everything you pointed out is not far from the truth. Our case is like a man who has 12 children but who earns 1 million naira monthly saying he is richer than another man who has 2 children but who earns 500k monthly

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by respect80(m): 5:33pm On Oct 22, 2019
Paradoxically, I would say Nigeria is rich and poor at the same time.

Rich in the sense that we have enough deposits of both natural and human resources to make Nigeria stand out in the pecking order of nations to be classified as rich, but poor in the sense that we, as a people, have failed to maximize our potentials like other great nations did and are doing.

I agree with op on the fact that Nigerians are known to showcase wealth even beyond what they are truly worth but that shouldn't prompt a denial of the fact that Nigeria is fully blessed and endowed with resources in which any rational minded set of people (not Nigerians) could have made Nigeria enviable before all other nations in the world.
In summary, Nigeria as a nation is not challenged, rather, it is Nigerians that are Nigeria's challenge and I would classify Nigeria as poor on that note. This is my creed.

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by JonDon12: 5:47pm On Oct 22, 2019
Great write up but this is not news. Its simple mathematics. Nigeria produces about 1.8m barrels of oil daily. At the generous price 0f $60 per barrel , Nigeria'soil revenue on the high side is $42 billion dollars.

1800000 * 60 * 365 = 42 billion

So we dont make too much money from oil. And some of that revenue goes to Cost of Production which is why the budget is only $29 bllion
At least 10 us states have a higher budget than the whole of Nigeria. The state of Texas has 5 times the whole Budget of Nigeria. The state of California has close to 10 times the whole of Nigeria,

Now take that amount of $29 BILLION and divide that by 180 million (Population of Nigeria )and you get $161 per person annually or $0.44 cents daily. This is what the government spends on the average person. Compare the $161 yearly to other countries like that to Germany at $17,642 per year. Equitorial Guinea at around $9k, Saudi Arabia and Libya at $6k, Bazil at $2.5K, Jamaica at $1.5k. This means that the Government of Jamaica spends on its average citizen 10 times what the Nigerian Government does. It means that the Government of Germany spends 100 times on its citizen what Nigeria does. This shows the Failure that is Nigeria. This shows just how much nigerians are suffering.

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by JonDon12: 5:47pm On Oct 22, 2019
Multiplier7:
Op Nice write up.

Any advice on how to make Nigeria rich?

Split the country up?
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by 989900: 5:52pm On Oct 22, 2019
I've been saying this for years now.
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by BeLookingIDIOT(m): 6:14pm On Oct 22, 2019
With a gdp of about $400billion we should easily be getting $75billion and above for our budget.Why is the government so inept at revenue generation.Everything about this country is just spoil sad
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Rosskiki: 6:32pm On Oct 22, 2019
Excellent write-up, OP.

I wrote an article on this same thing a year ago.

''Nigeria's main problem is not corruption, but lack of money'':

https://www.nairaland.com/4811946/nigerias-main-problem-not-corruption

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by whatisthetruth: 7:08pm On Oct 22, 2019
and who made Nigeria poor?

Is it not the same corrupt and ineffective leaders you Nigerians love to elect?

Since we achieved democracy, what caliber of leaders have you been placing at the helm of affairs at all leadership positions?

You sell your votes, for a pittance, for tribal superiority and other dumb emotional reasons, yet expect to progress?

Even now, with the right leaders in place, I’m talking the best leaders in the 21st century, Nigeria can be a superpower in as little as 10 years.

What don’t we have? Is it food, is it minerals? We have Uranium, bitumen, oil, moderate climate, coal...

What more could we really ask for, Gold? Yes we have that too!

So what is the problem?

You claim you are poor but yet you pay your politicians wages that some CEOS of multinational companies would be envious of. If truly you are poor now, why not start paying your politicians 100k per month? Why not cancel presidential fleets and dining budgets? After all, you don’t go to a poor mans house, expecting to be served Don Perignon.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by whatisthetruth: 7:12pm On Oct 22, 2019
Rosskiki:
Excellent write-up, OP.

I wrote an article on this same thing a year ago.

''Nigeria's main problem is not corruption, but lack of money'':

https://www.nairaland.com/4811946/nigerias-main-problem-not-corruption

Why are you always giving excuses for bad leadership across Nigeria?

Lack of money is Nigeria’s problem now?

Before the problem was Nigeria had too much money and didn’t know how to spend it according to some ex military general, now the problem is lack of money?

Keep making excuses for pisspoor leadership in Nigeria.
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Banmeallday: 7:29pm On Oct 22, 2019
Nigeria is a shythole Nigger area, budget or no budget
Re: Nigeria Is Not Rich. A Must Read Nigeria Has A Smaller National Budget Than Alge by Proudlyngwa(m): 8:17pm On Oct 22, 2019
respect80:
Paradoxically, I would say Nigeria is rich and poor at the same time.

Rich in the sense that we have enough deposits of both natural and human resources to make Nigeria stand out in the pecking order of nations to be classified as rich, but poor in the sense that we, as a people, have failed to maximize our potentials like other great nations did and are doing.

I agree with op on the fact that Nigerians are known to showcase wealth even beyond what they are truly worth but that shouldn't prompt a denial of the fact that Nigeria is fully blessed and endowed with resources in which any rational minded set of people (not Nigerians) could have made Nigeria enviable before all other nations in the world.
In summary, Nigeria as a nation is not challenged, rather, it is Nigerians that are Nigeria's challenge and I would classify Nigeria as poor on that note. This is my creed.

Where did you get this idea that we have abundance of natural resources from

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