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LIKE hundreds of thousands of Nigerians, I supported erstwhile Central Bank governor Chukwuma Soludo, an outstanding economist and practical man of ideas, in his quest to become the Anambra State governor in 2010 because of his grand vision to create an African version of Dubai and Taiwan. Soludo’s vision represented a remarkable deviation in Nigerian politics which has for decades been preoccupied with divisive issues, rather than development.
The world
will not take Africa seriously until we begin to develop. Mohammed Al Maktoum,
the modernizing ruler of Dubai, in his book entitled Flashes of Thought, notes: “our
region and its peoples are in dire need of a successful model in the (African)
world—one that gives hope and proves that focusing on growth is better than
focusing on wars; that launching projects is far more useful than launching
rockets”...
Unlike many Africans who follow the Kwame Nkrumah maxim “seek you first the political kingdom and every other thing will be added unto you”, a parody of a scriptural passage, Al Maktoum subscribes to the primacy of economic development. “We believe that a state with economic power also reaps the benefits of political power”, he writes.
Unlike many Africans who follow the Kwame Nkrumah maxim “seek you first the political kingdom and every other thing will be added unto you”, a parody of a scriptural passage, Al Maktoum subscribes to the primacy of economic development. “We believe that a state with economic power also reaps the benefits of political power”, he writes.
One public
officer whose decoration next Sunday in Lagos with the annual Zik Leadership
Prize will be well received across the country is Governor Willie Obiano of
Anambra State because he is a practitioner of what social scientists now call
developmentalism. Obiano has demonstrated that any serious government in
Nigeria can achieve a lot even with less resource, especially in these
economically perilous times when some 28 out of 36 states in the country have
become virtually bankrupt, unable to pay staff salaries and meet basic
contractual obligations. In Anambra which receives a fraction of what
oil-bearing states get monthly from the federation account, the government is
taking on new ambitious projects and programmes with far-reaching impacts.
On May 17,
2016, Obiano presented cheques for N367m to the Anglican and Catholic churches
in the state for the management of their schools, describing education as the
first line of charge of the state. Truly, students from the state have been
excelling in all external examinations in Nigeria, representing the country in
educational contests. Some $3.2 billion has been invested in agriculture in the
last two years, with the state expected in the next three years to become
Nigeria’s foremost rice producer. Anambra has since last December been
exporting bitter leaf and ugu vegetables to Europe which has stringent
standards for food imports. Franca Awhefeda, a Nigerian research student in
international management at Roehampton University in London, has just published
a racy article on how Anambra State is now used as an example by academics in
the United Kingdom that Africans can practise Just In Time (JIT), a management concept
developed in the 1970s by leading Japanese corporations like Toyota which
practically abolishes inventories because of the almost 100% efficiency in time
and resource utilisation.
Just last
week the government announced a new development initiative which will see each
of the 177 communities in the state have a new project worth N20m, with the
communities deciding the projects themselves. Anambra is still building roads
and bridges across the state, despite the economic downturn in the country, so
it is no surprise that states like neighbouring Kogi have been sending
delegations there to understudy its effective resource management. While it is
tempting to ascribe the performance to the governor’s background in accounting,
auditing and banking, it is more compelling to trace it to Obiano’s embrace of
developmentalism; after all, there are state governments headed by accomplished
accountants and bankers with a backlog of workers’ salaries. Developmentalism explains
Obiano’s choice of technocrats who used to work at the World Bank, IMF and
leading commercial banks to be on the cabinet but also in key institutions like
the state investment agency.
This governance
style may not have earned plaudits from professional politicians but it has
served the public well. Developmentalism, closely associated with the rapid
development of Southeast Asia, is generally defined as a policy committed to
the socioeconomic transformation of a society so that its members can have
radically improved living standards within a short period. There is little politicking
which is the bane of poor societies. Sacrilege is committed daily in the name
of politics in underdeveloped nations, as we have seen in the management of
$15b security funds under President Goodluck Jonathan which was unconscionably
shared to a handful of politicians. Professional politicians who have no
capacity for policy or public service keep the nation in a permanent campaign
mode, so that they will be relevant and make a fortune for themselves. I have
seen well meaning top public officers derail because professional politicians
convinced them to start campaigning for a second term while less than one year
in office.
Babatunde
Fashola was a huge success as Lagos State governor because he was not obsessed
with raw politics. How many times did anyone see him talk about “Yoruba this”
or “Muslim that”? He got involved in politicking only during the campaign
period.
It is a mark
of vacuity in our national politics that even ethnic and sectional
organisations like Afenifere, Ohaneze and Arewa People’s Congress which claim
that their raison d’etre is the well being of their peoples have no development
agendas which address the challenges of hunger, poverty and ignorance among their
peoples. None has a blueprint for job creation, security, agricultural
production, industrial growth, quality education or anything in their
respective regions.
One, therefore,
notes with gladness that more Nigerians are turning to developmentalism. At a
lecture last March 17 to mark the inauguration of the Centre for Financial
Journalism in Lagos, Akpan Hogan Ekpo, an economics professor and director
general of the West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management,
recommended, though rather tangentially, the developmental state ideology to
the President Buhari administration, citing the example of Ethiopia which is
fast becoming a model in development for African nations. An article on
Ethiopia’s development model by two foreign doctoral candidates at the
University of Cambridge which was posted on Nigerian online platforms last week
happily received enthusiastic reviews. Developmentalists in public office like
Obiano and Fashola have shown that for Nigeria it is still morning yet on
creation day.
Adinuba is head of Discovery Public
Affairs Consulting.

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