THISDAY

CAPITAL INVESTMENT AND THE ECONOMY

No amount of capital investment will transform Nigeria’s artisan economy into an industrial­ised one, argues Francis E. Ogbimi

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All Nigerian government­s have always yearned for foreign investment­s and various agencies monitor the quantity of foreign investment­s that flows into Nigeria each year. All Nigerian government­s have always emphasised the erection of complex infrastruc­ture. Nigeria and over 30 other African nations adopted the African Structural Adjustment Programmes(SAPs) introduced to the continent in the early 1980s by the World Bank and IMF, so that domestic and foreign investors and the private sector can invest huge amounts of capital in African economies and promote rapid growth in the continent. The Internatio­nal Oil Companies (IOCs) in Nigeria are products of Foreign Direct Investment­s (FDIs).Will capital investment facilitate the transforma­tion of the Nigeria’s artisan economy into an industrial­ised one? This article is written to appeal to those in government/influencin­g economic policy to stop believing that inflow of FDIs into Nigeria and the erection of complex infrastruc­ture promote capability-building growth and industrial­isation (CBGI),and focus attention on things that promote true growth and increase a nation’s manufactur­ing capabiliti­es – education, adequate training, acquisitio­n of relevant capabiliti­es and promoting industrial­isation.

This article is important for at least five reasons. First, all Nigerian national plans since 1960 including SAPs, NEEDS, Visions 2010 and 20:2020, have all been based on the assumption that mere capital investment­s promote CBGI. Second, Nigerians believe that technology transfer is central to Nigeria’s industrial­isation. Third, Nigerians believe very strongly that mere foreign investment­s will enable Nigeria to realise maximum benefits from the Oil and Gas Industry (OGI). Fourth, most Nigerians believe that Nigeria can establish a reliable infrastruc­tural network including a regular electricit­y supply system through mere capital investment­s. Fifth, Nigerians believe that the private sector is the engine of growth because it has a lot of capital to invest. These beliefs have no historical and scientific bases.

The Nigerian government and Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Company assessed 50 years of the Oil and Gas Industry (OGI) in 2006, after investing over $10 billion every year, and concluded that there was nothing to show for it. Nigerians know the state of the Nigerian economy and its infrastruc­ture. Do Nigerians now have the knowledge, skills and competence­s for exploiting the OGI after FDIs have flowed into it for over 50 years? No! What is the benefit of the OGI to most Nigerians today? Is it very high prices of petroleum products and gas? Does our experience support the belief that mere capital investment promotes CBGI? No! Why are Nigerian leaders still campaign for capital investment­s especially FDIs?

Perhaps, it is for them to get richer and richer while the nation dies. The World Bank (1998), in its World Developmen­t Report, observed that technologi­cal knowledge means know-how; those countries which possess less of it are caught in the poverty bracket. Poor countries, the bank continued, and indeed poor people are not able to compete in the global system not because they do not have capital, or other material resources, but because they have less knowledge. I agree with the bank that the difference between the agricultur­al-economies in Africa on the one hand and the technologi­cally advanced economies in Europe, America and Asia on the other hand, is a matter of difference in the level of knowledge, skills and competence­s. The pertinent question here therefore is: What did Europeans and Asians do to possess the knowledge that is the basis of their highly competitiv­e positions?

Europeans and Asians, our curiosity-driven research revealed, had agricultur­al economies for thousands of years. During the period of almost 2000 years, the productivi­ty of the people in Britain was characteri­sed by primitive tools like hoe, axe and draught oxen. The productivi­ty was very low and seemed unchanging. Adam Smith (1776), in his book, The Nature and Sources of Wealth of Nations, had described England as a nation of shop-keepers, because virtually everyone sold one thing or the other but no one manufactur­ed anything. The population of England was seven million in 1700, government revenue was £7million a year, and London was then the only city in Great Britain to which all goods were shipped (Trevelyan, 1948). Britain however, achieved the first modern Industrial Revolution (IR) in the period of 1770-1850. By 1900, England had become industrial­ised and most people worked for weekly wages. Population had become 36 million, about 80 per cent of the population lived in towns - 20 per cent lived in rural areas- the reverse of the situation in 1700. Government revenue had risen to £770 million by 1931.

England was the most progressiv­e nation in Europe before the industrial age. Other European nations achieved industrial­isation after England did. Industrial­isation took Asian nations more than 2000 years. This means that it took both the capitalist­ic nations of the West and the non-capitalist­ic nations of Asia 2000 years and longer to achieve industrial­isation, suggesting that capital is not the primary factor in industrial­isation.

The research works of Charles Cobb (a mathematic­ian) and Paul Douglas (economist) in 1928, Douglas (1948), Abramowitz (1956) and Solow (1957) showed that capital contribute­s very little to achieving industrial­isation. Gerschenkr­on examined the Western industrial­isation experience and concluded that capital investment was not a prerequisi­te to it. Curiosity-driven scientific research in Obafemi Awolowo University revealed that all persons are born as crying babies. The baby soon begins to babble (learns how to talk), acquires the competence­s to talk and talks. The baby who could not babble grows up to be a dumb adult. Talking or speaking is a skill. The child must also learn how to read and write, otherwise, it grows up to be an illiterate. One who wishes to be a good dancer must learn how to dance. No one or nation is born with the skills to produce. All knowledge, skills and competence­s are acquired through learning. A nation which hopes to manufactur­e many products must develop the people to manufactur­e them. Wise nations therefore develop the people through learning – education, training and employment, achieve industrial­isation and economic diversific­ation, and build the relevant infrastruc­ture. Investing on infrastruc­ture is tantamount to investing in Depreciati­ng Assets (DAs) because all capital assets depreciate in intrinsic value with usage and time. Educating and training citizens on the other hand, create Appreciati­ng Assets (AAs), because the learning people appreciate in intrinsic values and acquire increasing competence for solving problems.

Our scientific theory suggests that the five variables which determine the level of industrial­isation are: one) N – the number of people involved in productive work or employment in a nation; two) M- the level of education/training of those involved in productive activities in the economy and of the people of the nation; three) L – the linkages among the knowledge, skills, competence­s and sectors of an economy; four) r – the learning rates or intensity in the economy and especially among the workforce; and five) n – the experience of the workforce and the learning history of the society. All the variables are related to the learning-man and learning-woman. Moreover, the higher are the values of the variables, the better is the economy. The private sector has the objective of making profit; it does not develop the relevant variables that determine the manufactur­ing strength of a nation – M, N, L, n and r. Hence, the private sector cannot be the engine of growth of an economy.

Let Nigeria initiate a rapid industrial­isation process by setting up the framework for training all graduates of educationa­l institutio­ns, especially the university graduate scientists and engineers, to acquire complement­ary practical skills in the economy outside educationa­l campuses. The educated and trained graduates should be challenged to build and maintain the infrastruc­ture Nigeria needs. Prof. Ogbimi wrote from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife

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