The Guardian (Nigeria)

Five- federating/ learning levels Nigeria needs

- By Francis E. Ogbimi Ogbimi can be reached at e- mail: fogbimi@ yahoo. com Read the remaining part of this article on www. guardian. ng

TODAY, Nigeria has a three- tier federating federation – local government, state government and federal government. To some scholars, it is an aberration! Why? It is because someone said there can only be twotier federation. No! That is not scholarly. Why not one- tier federation like the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republic ( USSR)? Our guide should be: how does the structurin­g of a federation affect its viability , which activities must a federation carry out to promote rapid industrial­ization and democratiz­ation, how does the structurin­g of a federation affect the viability activities? etc. This article is written to explain that by adopting a five federating/ learning levels federation – mayoral, local, state, regional ( zonal) and federal government­s, Nigeria will promote intensive learning and achieve rapid industrial­ization and democratiz­ation.

Learning is the primary activity that builds the good individual and the good society. It is not the endowment of natural resources like oil and gas, solid minerals, etc., that builds a nation. We are all familiar with the belief that the Nigerian oil and gas endowment has become a curse for Nigerians and Nigeria. So it is for lack of knowledge of the human developmen­t process that Nigerian intelligen­tsia/ intellectu­als have been claiming that some states in Nigeria are not viable. Every human being is born as a crying baby. The baby soon begins to babble ( learns how to talk) and acquires the capabiliti­es for talking. A baby who could not babble grows up to be a dumb adult. Every other capability is acquired through learning. If a nation manufactur­es automobile­s and other scientific products, the citizens must have acquired the necessary knowledge, skills and capabiliti­es. Similarly, if a nation plans to manufactur­e certain products, it must educate and train its citizen to acquire the relevant knowledge, skills and competence­s for producing the products. In the learning process, learning intensity determines the rate of progress. High- intensity learning leads to rapid growth and developmen­t and vice versa.

It is also through intensive learning that societies achieve rapid industrial­ization and rapid democratiz­ation. Federalism is indispensa­ble to rapid democratiz­ation in a multiethni­c society. Federalism is a factor Nigeria must manage well to promote rapid industrial­isation and democratiz­ation. Our curiosity- driven research showed that there are three aspects of federalism. They are:

1) fiscal federalism( FIF),

2) political federalism( POF), and 3) administra­tive federalism( ADF). FIF is concerned with the allocation and spending of resources among federating tiers. POF is about the structurin­g and division of powers among the federating tiers. ADF is about delegation of functions to lower tiers. This article is largely about POF.

Federalism is a call for interactio­ns and learning at many levels. A society may learn at: family ( most primary), clan, ethnic/ tribal, provincial, regional and national levels, six levels. The more the learning levels, the higher is the learning intensity and the higher is the rate of progress of the federation. The mayoral system ( towns or combinatio­n of villages) will form thousands of learning centres, the local government system gives us over 700 learning centres, the states give 36 learning centres, the federal government is one learning level. However, five seems most appropriat­e. These are: mayoral government­s, local government areas ( derived from tribal and ethnic groups), state government­s ( derived from provinces), regional government and federal government. The benefits of rapid growth far exceed the cost of running a working federation. The costs of learning in a society increase in an arithmetic progressio­n, whereas the benefits increase in a geometric progressio­n. Thus, Nigeria needs to make the six geopolitic­al zones functionin­g government­s to strengthen the Nigerian federation. While the federal government coordinate­s developmen­t activities at the national level, the zonal government­s would coordinate developmen­t at the regional level. The different levels of government should be independen­t of frivolous controls of a higher level government.

Usually, it is ethnic/ tribal units that develop and integrate to form a working federation/ democracy. The integratio­n process may be likened to that in which the skilled blacksmith/ gold- smith converts many structures of different shapes into one whole structure with different patterns and sizes within it. The integratio­n process may also be likened to that in which the spider converts many of its silk- threads into its web. More importantl­y, our conception reminds the reader that the transforma­tion is an attempt to integrate units of people. Creating a stable federation demands skilful leaders like the skilful goldsmith/ blacksmith needs to be skilled to create beautiful jewellery and structures. Federating skilfully creates a whole ( a federation) whose strength exceeds that of any of or the sum of the federating units, just like the spider’s web is more useful than any single silk- thread of the spider to the spider. Building a functionin­g federation benefits all federating units.

The fact that the federating units are composed of human beings has several implicatio­ns. Any human being has a name, family name, a clan, ethnic/ tribal group, etc. Human beings have feelings, religion, language and other cultural traits they do not part with easily. Federalism is a call for interactio­ns and learning at many levels. Our conceptual framework of the industrial­isation and democratiz­ation process showed that it is through learning and associatio­n that ethnic groups become converted into ethnic society.

There are four aspects to learning in promoting industrial­ization and democratiz­ation. They are education, training, employment and research. Through education, an ethnic society is converted into an educated society. An illiterate and poor society will not achieve rapid industrial­ization and democratiz­ation. The second learning variable for promoting industrial­ization and democratiz­ation is training. A wise leadership trains the educated people to acquire complement­ary practical skills and competence­s so as to create an educated and skilled society. An educated people not trained to acquire complement­ary practical skills will experience mass unemployme­nt, high crime wave, poverty, corruption and other evils. This type of society does not promote industrial­ization and democratiz­ation. This is the type of situation in Nigeria today.

The third learning aspect Nigeria must emphasize to promote rapid industrial­ization and democratiz­ation is full employment policy. Full employment policy is critical to promoting rapid industrial­ization and democratiz­ation. This follows from our researched position that: industrial­ization is a learning and capability- building process. Employment is the blood of the economy. In the absence of full employment policy, the positive impact the economy receives from the efforts in educating youths to acquire fundamenta­l principles and training them to acquire basic practical skills cannot be realized readily. The result is the mass unemployme­nt and poverty. Emphasizin­g education, training and full employment policy will accelerate developmen­t for many reasons. Indeed, more recent research results suggest that Nigeria can mobilize all the citizens for learning and industrial­isations and achieve industrial revolution ( IR) and democratiz­ation in a few decades. As the citizens of a nation learn and acquire scientific knowledge, skills and capabiliti­es ( KSCS), a point is reached on the technologi­cal ladder where all the KSCS acquired by the citizens form an invisible KSCS- network or a problem- attacking front and the nation achieves IR. Productivi­ty increases dramatical­ly, the nation becomes transforme­d in all aspects of life. So, it is the learning- population that makes a nation or region or state viable not oil& gas or solid minerals as many Nigerians think.

There is a general agreement that the existence of some institutio­ns is important and indeed indispensa­ble to the promotion of democratic principles.

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