Business Day (Nigeria)

Focusing on the right thing

- POSITIVE GROWTH WITH BABS BABS OLUGBEMI

The recent economic growth prediction by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) that put Ethiopia as the fastest growing economy in Africa is an attestatio­n that the Ethiopian government is focusing on her economy. According to the IMF, Ghana, whose economy is expected to grow ahead of other African countries, is now third due to the reduction in its estimated growth to 6.3% from 8.9%. The Ethiopia economy was predicted to witness an increase of 8.5%, followed by Cote d’ivoire with 7.4% in 2019.

The fact that countries like Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Tanzania that were once considered as weak and slow growing economies are now forces to be reckoned with confirmed the saying that what is focused on will be magnified if the focus is on the right thing. Recently, I wrote on how Rwanda has been tagged the “Africa’s biggest success story”, a country from the civil war to second in the ease of doing business with 100% enrolments into her primary schools. The same positive narratives have been noted for Tanzania, where the former president, Kiwete Jakaya, increased the budg

etary education allocation to 20% and achieved 96% primary school enrolment. Ghana is another prosperous example from the days of the transforma­tional Jerry Rawlings, who is still acting a common man directing traffic on the streets of Accra. Ghana is a country with consistent growth, moderate democracy and smooth transition of power without numerous court cases and deadly violence after elections.

The question is, what has been the focus of the Nigerian leaders in recent time, and where are the results to show for their efforts? The harvest of insecurity in the North East, the kidnapping, the yahoo boys, the cattle rustlers and the incessant killings by the herdsmen are the products of what our leaders focused on or failed to focus on. The level of peaceful cohabitati­on and religion tolerance in the South West of Nigeria and the level of the region’s developmen­t are traceable to Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s focus on education for all the residents of the region irrespecti­ve of their tribes or ethnicity. What has been the focus of all the other leaders after the leadership of the nationalis­ts that struggled for our independen­ce?

Nigeria, without a doubt, is blessed with resources and the uncontroll­ed population. However, it was the failure of our leaders to develop the human and material capacity of a potentiall­y great nation. Unlike Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore, our leaders have been playing politics with our lives using the swords of religion and ethnic sentiments as the platform for the struggle for power and influence. They have focused on what divides people instead of harnessing the potential in our human capital. Our leaders have ruled a big country yet leave their primary constituen­cies in poverty with beggars flooding the streets of the country. They have focused on enriching themselves and sharing the wealth of the nation among a few political elites. The poor masses are not just victims but accomplice­s in the act that encourages focus on what is not in the best interest of all. We have danced, sang praises of elected politician­s who used 10% of our money to build bridges with inflated prices and wasted others on themselves in the name of security votes, donations to the political parties, inefficien­t political structure and rewarding sycophants. We are reaping the reward of our leaders’ focus (pauperized citizens, insecurity, political nepotism, deteriorat­ing public image, etc.) and the followers’ ineptitude for mediocrity instead of the demand for stewardshi­p and accountabi­lity. I cannot agree less with Dr Remi Adekoya’s position that ‘Nigeria is a rich country’ is nothing but a myth given the value of the national budget to her population size. More pathetic is the fact that we are now a poor country amid abundant resources because of the poor focus of our leaders, political structure and the culture of mediocrity establishe­d and sustained by the ruling class.

To end the myth, we need to hold our leaders accountabl­e for the mandate given to them. It is time our votes are not taken as open cheques to unexplaine­d wealth and freedom to enslave others. Recently, I demonstrat­ed how holding public institutio­ns could help us to move Nigeria forward. I was in the training room when one of the participan­ts asked me to tell the class my unique selling propositio­n as a coach. I promptly answered without knowing my answer will set me up. I replied, ‘I help individual­s and organisati­ons to focus on the right thing’. He further asked where I live. As I mentioned where I live, and he pointed out the obvious. The road along the expressway to my house was repaired by a top constructi­on company in Nigeria but with a shoddy job done on one of the bridges. My unbearable participan­t became a pain in my neck when he demanded to know what I have done to make the company do the right thing. I was at first defensive. I told him companies and individual­s need to be my clients before the opportunit­y to help them to focus on the right thing can become available to me. As uncomforta­ble as I was, I remember I had related with someone who’s an employee of the constructi­on company when I was in the banking industry. I put a call to Victor in the presence of my audience and reported the bad work his company did on the bridge leading to my house. I demanded he ask the company’s technical team to drive and assess my complaint the next day. I stylishly follow my request with an unintended threat to write about the situation and his company’s poor execution of the contracted work if nothing is done within five days. Victor pleaded that I shouldn’t not write against his company. He said I dare not do that as his friend.

The rest of this article continues in the online edition of Business Day @https://businessda­y.ng

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