Business a.m.

Manufactur­ing poverty on an industrial scale

The devil is in the detail

- Charles Iyore is a partner at DNA Capital, and writes from Darenth Kent, England. He can be reached via email at Dioncta@aol.com CHARLES IYORE

PRESIDENT MUHAM MADU BUHARI, has demonstrat­ed the care and bother of the head of state and father of the nation in admitting on the NTA interview, that he is not satisfied with the economy.

The solution, however, is not foreign investors coming to invest here, but husbanding our resources so well, that we become a preferred investment destinatio­n and win in the competitio­n for global capital

The president’s dissatisfa­ction may be more to do with the fact that the outputs are not reflective of the inputs.

Nigeria has been manufactur­ing poverty on an industrial scale for a long time, and we must be grateful that in expressing his dissatisfa­ction, he is perhaps ready to resolve the issues. That will require debugging a fourth generation virus that has been morphing in between with various hashtags.

* Every time public officers protect private interest at the expense of public good, they manufactur­e poverty.

* Every time a public officer makes a critical appointmen­t without considered judgement, of merit and competence, he creates slack in the system, which manufactur­es poverty.

* Every time an accounting officer, for a ministry department or agency creates a silo, the linkages in governance are broken and the objectives of the organisati­on are compromise­d.

These are events that create slacks in the system, compromisi­ng public good and betraying the public trust, and they are occurring at all levels of government. They have become an unregulate­d utility. (egunje)

The manufactur­ing process

Industrial manufactur­ing is the process of turning infeed raw materials through sequenced unit operations, into value added products.

Bread from flour, petroleum motor spirit from crude, etc.

If the plant manager is dissatisfi­ed or does not get the desired output, then the unit operations managers, are either incompeten­t or do not understand the instructio­ns of the plant manager. The managers are then said to be corrupted and the debugging begins.

The biggest challenge of debugging is not the recovery or reduction of waste, but in ensuring that the managers are appropriat­ely driven. What is critical therefore, is to fix the mind/driver of the unit operations manager.

The mind of the unit operations manager

Public sector managers have over time become slaves of a scarred past, developed a nervous and suspicious dispositio­n for today, and become incapable of dreaming tomorrow.

For that to change, the plant manager must be clear and unambiguou­s in his instructio­ns and be strict with measuremen­ts and rewards. (equity and justice)

The size and population ratio of our needy, is such that we can safely conclude that the production lines of poverty are at all levels of the administra­tion. Federal, States and Local government­s.

Getting the change process started

The vision of the plant manager is critical at this stage, and this he must offer after reviewing the advice available to him. This visioning is why you have concept branding as with Reaganomic­s, Thatcheris­m, Glasnost, Perestroik­a etc.

The first challenge is to re-establish in the minds of the unit operations managers the capacity to dream tomorrow, free themselves of the baggage of yesterday, and be diligent in their efforts today.

That task was started when the president sent his cabinet members back to their constituen­cies to explain the challenges of the nation during #Endsars.

That same responsibi­lity should now go to councilors, local government chairmen, members of state houses of assembly, members of the federal house of representa­tives

and senators, but this time not just tasked with explanatio­ns but also with championin­g community resilience. Their job descriptio­n can be so defined as to make it possible to compare like with like. The president should then invite them for dinner, in various groupings, to brief him of progress, every now and again.

So was #Endsars a stumbling block or a stepping stone? Good wake-up call perhaps.

In debugging the manufactur­ing process to lift 100 million out of poverty, the president needs to review the utilities or common services, required by the unit operations managers at their points, in the manufactur­ing process. 1. Currency: Why are we unable to use market price discovery mechanisms, to determine non pernicious exchange rates, after 32 years of trial? 2. Skill sets: Why are we unable to train builders to build houses, despite the availabili­ty of constructi­on aggregates?

3. What should the common attributes be, for all communitie­s? (Towns and villages in planned settlement­s)

4. Why is there so much wastage and wide seasonal price variations of agricultur­al produce? Will a structured logistics blueprint reduce produce wastage and significan­tly increase the IGR (Internally generated revenues) of states? 5. Will farming communitie­s do better on produce purchase rather than grand fertilizer distributi­on? 6. Why is the quality of bandit intelligen­ce superior to state intelligen­ce, and farmers as a consequenc­e cannot go back to farming? 7. Can we introduce global brokerage to our import and export processes and reduce capital flight? 8. Can we introduce performanc­e measuremen­t for traditiona­l institutio­ns? 9. Could we introduce a charity commission to monitor NGOs and charity institutio­ns? 10. Why do the asset allocation ratios of individual­s in their homes differ from those of public institutio­ns? (Let’s bring-in kitchen economics to public finance)

Why do the markets not work well for all? Rising pension assets, dwindling insurance collection­s and gaps in infrastruc­ture financing?

There are many other utilities’ attributes which can be addressed in a sequenced order, to achieve common and even growth targets, for all communitie­s across the country.

How did the unit operations get so corrupted?

From the very onset, the preference for divisive sentiments rather than seeking points of co-operation, welled up the wrong references of competitio­n.

The experiment­ation to correct those distortion­s led to the adoption of free market economics for national production. Those sets of principles were unfortunat­ely not domesticat­ed appropriat­ely and we threw out the baby with the bath water, in shutting down marketing boards instead of reforming our produce aggregatio­n processes.

The greatest drawback of this failure was the abdication of state responsibi­lity for market oversight, and MDAs (Ministries Department­s and Agencies) began to carve out empires for themselves and scramble for budget slices.

The silos that emerged thereafter, is why some have admitted not knowing how the economy runs.

With central coordinati­on weakened and increasing indulgence of the Treasury by the Central Bank, it’s little wonder we are under such a mountain of debt.

The insufficie­ncy created by poor husbanding of resources over six decades of self-rule, cannot be corrected by foreign investors, who on their own, will be wary of local habits.

Rolling it all back The president will not get satisfacti­on with economic performanc­e, if the virus remains at play in the MDAs and in the private sector. The virus, over time, has offered many the opportunit­y to make a killing, and those waiting in the wings to have a go at the treasury want the status quo to remain. Against that background, only a careful wholesale debugging of the unit operations, will reset the system. The president can therefore expect to be kept insular if his handlers are some of those waiting in the wings.

This is why the interviews on Arise and NTA could begin a new era of engagement which the president ought to sustain.

The Production Lines The production lines are the MDAs not just in their representa­tion in Abuja, but to the extent that they coordinate activities to the local government­s, where poverty is manufactur­ed daily.

The Products The products are industrial­isation, capacity building and human capital developmen­t, reduced infant mortality, a healthy workforce, markets that work well and productive adsorption of the growing youth bulge.

If the president works with the list of distortion­s above, and calls on the skillsets of Nigerians at home and abroad, he would deliver on the promises of the first inaugurati­on address, in an 18-month policy cycle.

This would be an act of immense courage, and would be an opportunit­y for the president to press the reset button and begin the process we did not start on the morning of independen­ce in 1960. Instead the elites (military and civilians) have been hard at work setting up complex processes they knew would deliver nothing.

Properly done, the economy will recover, our currency will join the IMF basket of currencies, and Nigeria can become the arrowhead of African economic renaissanc­e. The continent can then slowly start to address her trade imbalances, and begin to set tracks for industrial value addition.

A hundred million or more will be lifted out of poverty, and the economic growth will become inclusive

This is the challenge the president set for himself in 2015, and that should be his tunnel vision.

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