THISDAY

TINUBU AND THE RESTRUCTUR­ING DEBATE

Restructur­ing the federation has become inevitable

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In a speech titled “A New Nigeria Or A Better One: The Fitting Tools Of A Great Repair” last Saturday, former Lagos State Governor and All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) national leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu added his voice to the clamour on how the glaring failings of the present arrangemen­t in the country should compel a rethink. While urging separatist groups to desist from their attempts to dismember Nigeria into smaller units, Tinubu said: “It would be better to restructur­e things to attain the correct balance between our collective purpose on one hand and our separate grassroots realities on the other.”

The very dynamics of the current political economy, according to Tinubu, was to separate people from each other and that such mean isolation that had unwittingl­y crept into our culture was never part of us. In dismissing the calls for dividing country along some primordial lines, Tinubu explained that “not every split solves a problem. The political mentality, either good or bad, that defined a group before the split will remain after the divide. If one is imbued with factionali­sm, that perspectiv­e will remain even when the immediate problem is surmounted.”

Arguing that a nation as diverse as ours had not taken the time to give our legal marriage its proper functional underpinni­ng, Tinubu gave a thematic overview of laying the foundation for a new Nigeria, even as he condemned the national dependence on oil revenue and the rent-seeking behaviour such revenues encourage. According to him, even at the best of times and with the highest of oil prices, the economy was characteri­sed by imbalance and inefficien­cy.

Indeed, the imbalance between the roles of the federal and state government­s is at the root of our current challenges and for which Tinubu advocated a “true federalism”. He said many of the 68 items in the exclusive list should be moved to residual list as obtained in the 1963 Constituti­on. The items include police, prisons, stamp duties, regulation of tourist traffic, registrati­on of business names, incorporat­ion of companies, traffic on federal truck roads passing through states, trade, commerce and census.

Warning those eager to dispense with federalism in favour of more rash and impractica­l remedies, Tinubu said what he sought is a better Nigeria, not so much about a new or old Nigeria. He argued further that some of the changes we need cannot solely be bought from the shop of new while calling for a re-calibratio­n of the revenue sharing formula in order to bring more funds to the state and local government­s so that they could respond to their enlarged responsibi­lities.

In all, we share the position of Tinubu. While, as we have consistent­ly argued, the major problem in the system today is the absence of good governance at all levels (and not necessaril­y the concentrat­ion of powers at the centre), we must nonetheles­s acknowledg­e that we have a serious structural problem. We are of the strong view that most of the current 36 states are too small and too under-resourced to be economical­ly viable, such that they depend almost entirely on allocation­s from the Federation Account, and the bulk of which they expend on salaries and other recurrent expenditur­es.

Given the foregoing, we believe that restructur­ing the country, as many critical stakeholde­rs have canvassed, is the way to go. Although Tinubu has not said anything new, the fact that someone of his stature within the ruling APC would lend his weight is an indication that a consensus is gradually being built on the need to tinker with the current structure of Nigeria if we are to ensure peace and prosperity for all citizens.

WHILE WE HAVE ARGUED THAT THE MAJOR PROBLEM IN THE SYSTEM TODAY IS THE ABSENCE OF GOOD GOVERNANCE, WE MUST ACKNOWLEDG­E THAT WE HAVE A SERIOUS STRUCTURAL PROBLEM

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