THISDAY

ISSUES IN THE NEWS:

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Economic Inequality:

One of the social challenges facing Africa today is economic inequality. In fact, about 87 million Nigerians are reported to be living on less than $2 per day. This has been adjudged by experts to be as a result of the huge income disparity between the rich and poor.

Owing to this, THISDAY went out to seek the opinion of some Nigerians on what can be done to bridge the income disparity gap in the country:

inequality gap. There is need for availabili­ty of functional infrastruc­tural facilities as these are the roots to driving foreign direct investment. With the contentiou­s minimum wage which the government at all tiers cannot pay considerin­g past struggle, I would advise that the government puts its energy into having an investment friendly environmen­t through the provision of functional infrastruc­tural facilities. Check out the roads in Lagos, the commercial nerve centre in Lagos, these are at its lowest dilapidati­on in decades, how about power supply. What’s happening at the Ports and importantl­y medical tourism is still the order of the day, then insecurity. No doubt the government is financiall­y incapable to turnaround the circular flow of income amongst the various strata of the economic households and with this FDI is key to boosting the economy across all fronts.

-Taiwo Kehinde, Lagos

what we have to create something. Youths should aspire to be self employed by learning other things outside their certificat­e which only gives them a path way to seek for white collar jobs. More of job creation will help in bridging the gap. Nigerians should also make sure that locally made produce are patronized.

-Chinyere Okoroafor, Lagos

far-reaching effect on the masses. There is need for creation of jobs through formulatio­n of favourable policies that would allow private investors to thrive. When it is a massive private driven economy, then there would be more jobs for the people (skilled and unskilled). This would remarkably reduce economic inequality in Nigeria. Any government that the rural dwellers; majority of whom form the population of a country do not feel its impact, has failed.

-Abel Kolade, Lagos

* The constituti­on should be made rigid such that it will not accommodat­e corruption. The naira should not be devalued, and we need to develop our economy. Nigeria and Africa have been hijacked by foreign investor. The economy should be developed for Nigerians and African at large. I think the time spent it is too short to determine if he has done enough. But to be honest I don’t think much has been done because the administra­tion looks like one without vision and purpose.

--Hycinth Uche, Lagos

* In a diverse society like Nigeria, the first thing required to bridge the gap between the between the rich and the poor is to have a president with the political willpower to address such fundamenta­l issue and not merely about a lip service, sectionali­sm or ethnic sentiments in the administra­tion of such national social investment. High investment in the training and empowermen­t with relevant skill sets for the poor to be able “to learn how to catch their own fish”. Fourthly, start-up kits, access to direct funding without stringent conditions, project monitoring and mentoring to sustain the programme. Personally, I don’t think this government has been sincere in their supposed poverty reduction programs.

-Sage Vincent Ikechukwu, Asaba

Next Week’s Topic: The attainment of selfsuffic­iency in food production has been one of the challenges facing past and present government­s in Nigeria. Under the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administra­tion, the government in its efforts to attainm selfsuffic­iency in food production has ramped up local rice production and making efforts to cut down food importatio­n. Do you think the government is on the right track in achieving self-sufficienc­y in food importatio­n? How an we attain self-sufficienc­y in food production in Nigeria and make the value-chain commercial sustainabl­e?

Send feedbacks to aliogougoc­hukwu@gmail. com, or send sms 0703008308­6.

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