President Buhari’s legacy looks cloudy and he is not getting any vibe from any angle. I am not sure he has new ideas for the economy. Possibly, they will just play it out, as the nation looks like it is on autopilot, with no vision to connect the citizens into nation building. Perhaps, it could be that the National Orientation Agency is not doing its job.
Pardon me, I do not honestly understand at this point what his government wants to achieve. During Obasanjo, we could argue that he was trying to liberalize the economy through privatization. Jonathan lost election partly because he lost focus later in his presidency. Initially, there was that effervescence on improving systems and processes to drive Nigeria into a new economic era.
But for Mr. Buhari, he has multiple challenges: insecurity, a battered economy and now a reputation that Nigeria is the den of corruption. Yes, the Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index (CPI) 2020 has put Nigeria on 149th position out of 180 countries. The nation also scored 25 out of 100 points (the higher, the better).
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With this new ranking, Nigeria is just below Guinea-Bissau on the scoreboard of the most corrupt nation in West Africa. That is a second for Mr. President, but I am not sure he would be happy for that one.
Yet, Mr. Buhari is a victim of Nigeria, but as the president, we have to put everything on his feet. The impunity in the Nigerian Judiciary is the biggest issue in the land. Why should it take 15 years to try a former governor for corruption? Why should it take 10 years to try bank looters? I mean, you can go on.
Mr. President, your nation is not healthy – you need to lead.
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Comment #1: Prof. Ekekwe, your colleague, Prof Wole Soyinka said discussing the Buhari presidency is not good for his sanity. So, he now prefers to live as if the administration does not exist. Hence like millions of other Nigerians, I have tuned off on the regime.
However, the woeful performance of the regime is the best argument against rotational presidency that makes the grossly incompetent president. Alert was sounded on that grave risk in my “Distorted Federalism and Pervasive Insecurity” serialized by The Guardian in March 2013 ever before the present regime could dream of gaining power. Yet, those who prefer lootocracy to democracy banded together to install the Buhari government.
Rotational presidency is fit only in a confederacy where the incompetence of the central government does not negatively impact the federating units – the presidency is ceremonial. But here in our unitary government the progress of all is hamstrung by a rotational president. That informs the cry for restructuring that is now almost deafening.
My response: Nigeria is not working – everyone is a victim. Like I say, if Yobe has a literacy rate of less than 20% and Imo has 96%, Yobe kids have not been served even if the governor has been rotated in all villages there. Rotating inefficiency is not a solution. The key is building healthy competition and productivity in systems: I support a revamped and restructured economic federalism so that the principle of comparative advantages will work.
I was in Usman Danfodio University a few years ago and saw a GREAT renewal energy project. Those kids could power the north under market systems. But Nigeria slows them just as the ones in south are slowed in their passions. We need to be honest that NG is not working.
Another commenter follow-up: Prof. Ndubuisi Ekekwe, please you are even going too far by comparing Yobe State with Imo State because the two states are not mates. Imo state is 15 years older than Yobe State
Yobe State and Abia State are classmates as they were created on 27th August 1991. On GDP per Capita basis (as of 2007 data), Yobe State have $843 while Abia State have $3,003, in simple terms people in Abia State earn 3.6 times more than people in Yobe State – since this is calculated by dividing the area’s total income by its total population.
But the puzzle is this:
Yobe State have 17 LGA, Population = 2.757 million
Abia State have 17 LGA, Population = 4.112 millionBoth States presumably have been receiving the same amount of money from the FG Federal Allocation Money Sharing Scheme since August 1991, so if after 16 years (as of 2007) of receiving the SAME amount of money from FG based on the same number of LGA and even with a lesser population and Yobe State GDP per Capita is almost 4 times smaller than Abia State’s GDP per Capita, then Nigeria is in trouble!
I only picked just Yobe State and Abia State because you mentioned Yobe State. We can run the numbers for other states.
No System can continue to function in this type of mess!
My response: This man, that is a Master’s thesis you just summarized here. Great perspectives and it goes to Tekedia blog under this entry. To add to your point, take those LGAs to UBE (universal basic education) which moves funds via LGAs for basic education. If states were getting the same money (per capital) and one produced 96% literacy and another <20%, has somebody asked where the money sent via UBA to train the kids went into? Ideally, someone diverted the funds, resulting to the outcomes.
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“Yet, Mr. Buhari is a victim of Nigeria, but as the president, we have to put everything on his feet.” I think you need to jettison this line, it’s unacceptable! Is it my late grandma or my old man should then fix Nigeria? If the president is a victim, then we should all go home and rest, it is finished!
There’s no excuse here, and trying to make it politically correct would only increase the anger and disappointment.
Here is a man elected on three cardinal campaign promises: fighting corruption, fighting insecurity, and rebuilding the economy. Or did I miss anything during the 2014/2015 APC presidential campaign? What else does failure look like? Just do a mental analysis on those three promises and give your own score.
I think Buhari is a monumental failure as a president, his own failure is epic and legendary. Here was a man man we were told that even his body language alone would make corrupt creatures scrambling for cover, the outcome? Everything became convoluted, and if you think Nigeria is now less corrupt than prior 2015, then put your leg forward.
They came to power via propaganda, and I knew from day one that it wouldn’t go well, because whenever you obtain anything under false identity, it never lasts.