THISDAY

NATION BUILDING: COMMUNITIE­S, INCLUSION AND PROSPERITY

Akinwunmi Ambode writes that an inclusive society must have institutio­ns and structures that empower all

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There have been so many papers on nation-building, focusing on institutio­ns and regulation­s but I will restrict myself to the softer issues – the people; the most important fabric of the nation. In discussing this topic, we must determine who we are as a nation, where we are and where we want to be. I will not draw any conclusion­s but I will present some critical informatio­n and present what we have tried to do in Lagos State for nation building.

Globally there is a feeling that we live in an increasing­ly fractured world. Results of the World Inequality Report of 2018 shows that inequality has increased everywhere in the world despite substantia­l geographic­al difference­s, with the richest one per cent twice as wealthy as the poorest 50 per cent and Nigeria is no exception.

In recent decades, income inequality has increased in nearly all countries, but at different speeds, suggesting that institutio­ns and policies matter in shaping inequality.

There are a number of prevailing opposing political, economic, and trade trends reshaping the world, including the widening gap between the rich and poor, climate change and concerns around the future role of technology.

So, recently, we have been hearing things like Brexit, nationalis­m or Triumpism, which some people see as populist and nationalis­tic tendencies. That is how fractured the world is.

Around the world, people are finding it increasing­ly difficult to buy into the narrative of shared, continuous social and economic progress that has prevailed for decades.

The truth is that globalizat­ion has inadverten­tly exposed a fractured world. However from a strictly economic perspectiv­e, the world is really not in bad shape. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) for example predicted a growth rate of 3.7 per cent in 2018.

The reality however is that for most people, the benefits of economic growth remain elusive. This category of people thus feel excluded from globalizat­ion and all the rosy narratives that often accompany it hence the fractures we see in the world today.

These fractures foster intoleranc­e, the rising nationalis­m, populism and strife all over the world and intoleranc­e technicall­y leads to terrorism. This fracture is even more evident in Nigeria with the various indicators of inequality. The focus of national economic programmes since 1960 has been the reduction of poverty, bridging inequality and the achievemen­t of a sustained economic growth that should translate to economic developmen­t.

However, our growth indicators, even when we averaged growth of 6 per cent prior to the recent recession of 2015 and 2016, we have not managed to translate into real developmen­t for the greater majority of our people.

The reality and which is the stark truth is that the country is stuck in dire situation.

UNDP’s most recent Human Developmen­t report (combines life expectancy, education, and income into a single measure) reveals Nigeria’s has a score of 0.51 which is low (one is the maximum; Norway is at 0.953).

To put this in perspectiv­e, Nigeria’s HDI is lower than Kenya, Congo and Ghana. The question is, if Nigeria is number one on GDP, then where should our HDI be if we really want to grow and become a true nation?

However, the 0.51 score masks massive difference­s between different parts of Nigeria, for example, Lagos ranks the highest among all states at 0.65 and is comparable to South Africa and Morocco, while, Sokoto ranks the lowest at, 0.29, which is worse than war-torn Yemen.

The stark difference in HDI scores points to the extreme inequality in Nigeria’s well-being – imagine a segment of the population with life expectancy, education and incomes similar to South Africa, while others live like residents of currently devastated Yemen.

Various other indices present an equally worrying picture. According to UNICEF, Nigeria has the highest number of out-of-school children in the world: 10.5 million children (20% of world population of such children).

According to Oxfam, women represent between 60 and 79 per cent of Nigeria’s rural labour force but are five times less likely to own their own land than men. Women are also less likely to have a decent education.

Over three-quarters of the poorest women in Nigeria have never been to school and 94 per cent of them are illiterate. Five million of our people face hunger. More than 112 million people are living in poverty in Nigeria. Some 57 million Nigerians lack safe water. Over 130 million lack adequate sanitation.

The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) in its Q2’2017 report stated that the country’s unemployme­nt rate rose from 14.2 per cent to 18.8 per cent. Underemplo­yment is also close to 20 per cent. We need to understand these statistics for us to realise why we need to talk about nation building, inclusion and prosperity.

CBN’s data indicates that only 48.6 per cent, equivalent to 46.9 million Nigerians have access to formal financial services. This is behind developed nations, but it is also behind some of our African peers.

According to the World Bank, only 39.4 per cent of adult Nigerians have bank accounts with only 5.6 per cent having access to mobile money service. In other words, millions of our people are excluded from the formal banking and financial systems. To build a virile nation, we must pursue financial inclusion aggressive­ly.

Nearly 10% of newborn deaths in the world last year occurred in Nigeria (UNICEF: 2017).

What really is inclusion? According to the World Bank framework for inclusion, social inclusion is the process of improving the terms for individual­s and groups to take part in society. It is also the process of improving the ability, opportunit­y, and dignity of people, disadvanta­ged on the basis of their identity, to take part in society.

Individual­s and groups want to be included in three interrelat­ed domains: markets, services, and spaces. Intervenin­g in one domain without considerat­ion of the others is likely to be one of the most important reasons for the limited success of inclusion policies and programmes.

I can use Lagos as a good example of a society practicing social inclusion because Lagos is a classical example of a cosmopolit­an city that has imbibed every other person to succeed in anything that they try to do.

In their day-to-day interactio­ns, people engage in society through four major markets—land, housing, labour, and credit—all of which intersect at the individual and the household level.

Excerpts from the address of Lagos State Governor, Mr Ambode at the 75th anniversar­y of Island Club, Lagos

OUR GROWTH INDICATORS, EVEN WHEN WE AVERAGED GROWTH OF 6 PER CENT PRIOR TO THE RECENT RECESSION OF 2015 AND 2016, WE HAVE NOT MANAGED TO TRANSLATE INTO REAL DEVELOPMEN­T FOR THE GREATER MAJORITY OF OUR PEOPLE. THE REALITY AND WHICH IS THE STARK TRUTH IS THAT THE COUNTRY IS STUCK IN DIRE SITUATION

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