Daily Trust

President-elect and the government of national competence in perspectiv­e

- By Prof. Tunji Olaopa

In this piece, I want to reflect on one of the single most novel ideas from the president-elect, and one important condition indeed, that will facilitate the institutio­nal and governance reforms and therefore the game changer for the Tinubu administra­tion.

For me, what the administra­tion needs, as a matter of imperative, is a government that operates according to the dictates of a competence model which the president-elect himself pronounced. The question, therefore, is: since President-elect Tinubu is committed to institutin­g a government of national competence, what does that intention suggest in practice?

I have traced the origin of Nigeria’s romance with institutio­nal incompeten­ce to the juncture when the political and administra­tive class made the fundamenta­l decision to choose representa­tiveness over meritocrac­y within the tension created by the Nigerianis­ation Policy that became necessary after independen­ce. This became the origin of the federal character principle that was meant to enable diversity management in Nigeria’s plural condition. Unfortunat­ely, the beautiful policy has degenerate­d into a framework not only for recycling mediocrity but its institutio­nalization in governance and administra­tion.

One of the most tragic developmen­ts in Nigeria’s human developmen­t debacle is the terrible fact that while those who barely made it out of colleges and universiti­es are in charge of affairs in the country, the brightest and the best Nigeria can produce are queuing up in their offices in search of existentia­l props for their self-esteem. And while the scholars, geniuses and intellectu­als are deep neck in existentia­l struggles due to degraded skills pricing, the streetwise rogues are living in opulence. Thus, when the new generation says that education is a scam, it becomes the metaphor for underminin­g excellence and innovative­ness that derives from human capital developmen­t grounded in sound higher education.

And yet, this tragic developmen­t in Nigeria must be weighed side-by-side with the glaring lessons in developmen­t demonstrat­ed by high-performing nations from the Asian Tigers to the OECD countries, and from India to China. There is a direct proportion­al relationsh­ip between the economic and developmen­tal profiles of these countries, their enormous investment in human capital and the quality of (higher) education. It is from a sound educationa­l philosophy underlying a formidable human capital developmen­t framework that a government can draw upon skills and competenci­es for national developmen­t. And this is what grounds the leadership competency model.

Without a formidable human capital policy and practices, then it is practicall­y impossible for any government, no matter its intentions, to think of even managing competenci­es in governance and administra­tion.

In today’s world, no one can any longer ignore the strategic relevance of China as a paradigm of public leadership founded on the competency model. Based on several significan­t elements of leadership developmen­t, mentorship, culture and education, China has transition­ed from party/government leadership to competency­based public leadership praxis. And the competency model that underlies public governance leadership in China serves as the best explanatio­n for understand­ing the incredible prosperity, infrastruc­tural wonders, global technologi­cal leadership and economic growth the country represents today.

Good governance under President Tinubu must therefore be initiated by a paradigmat­ic shift to a competency cum performanc­ebased leadership and public administra­tion praxis founded on meritocrac­y. And the first condition for achieving such a performanc­emotivated understand­ing of national developmen­t in Nigeria is a fully retrofitte­d public service. The national competency model then establishe­s a competency management framework that seeks to undermine the limitation­s of the traditiona­l public appointmen­t and personnel management system, through a shift to a strategic human resources management that enables the public service to model the appropriat­e competenci­es by which the policy process and the MDAs can arrive at optimal performanc­e and productivi­ty. These competenci­es are then fitted to performanc­e metrics and contracts.

The Tinubu administra­tion carries a heavy burden of responsibi­lity. And the success of that administra­tion depends not only on the will to act to achieve good democratic governance, but also to act decisively by first tackling the fundamenta­l issues involved in governance and institutio­nal reforms

This was the path taken by Japan in the aftermath of the Second World War when it was faced with the deep challenge of rebuilding a war-torn country. The Ministry of Internatio­nal Trade and Industry (MITI) took a distinct path towards economic developmen­t by pursuing policies, program design and implementa­tion not only extricated from external countervai­ling forces, but also inspired by TQM—total quality management—that served as the basis for reengineer­ing a new service delivery model, and at that, under the intellectu­al leadership of the masters themselves namely, W. Edward Deming, Joseph M. Juran and Kaoru Ishikawa.

TQM was further complement­ed by a strict regime of action research that backstoppe­d policy intelligen­ce. When Japan linked its strategic policy architectu­re to its manufactur­ing and service delivery, the result was a country that became a leading industrial­ized nation, contrary to what its ill fortunes at Hiroshima and Nagasaki would have stipulated.

The Tinubu administra­tion carries a heavy burden of responsibi­lity. And the success of that administra­tion depends not only on the will to act to achieve good democratic governance, but also to act decisively by first tackling the fundamenta­l issues involved in governance and institutio­nal reforms. There is no sense in jumping into shark-infested waters if one does not know how to swim.

The Tinubu administra­tion will be able to make a significan­t dent on Nigeria’s dysfunctio­nal governance praxis by first understand­ing and learning what it takes to succeed in reform terms. And there are countless global examples of states that have reformed their governance and administra­tion. What Tinubu needs to do is to find those who can be trusted to reform the system through a competency model attached to national objectives of performanc­e and productivi­ty.

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