The Guardian (Nigeria)

Class consciousn­ess and the Nigerian condition

SOCIAL COMMENTARY Ayo Sogunro

- @ayosogunro

THisweek, as Nigeria observes “Democracy Day” and civil society honours the memory of victims of violence, we are once more compelled to reflect on the value of the Nigerian citizenshi­p. Clearly, Nigeria is not getting better. In fact, it has worsened steadily since October 1, 1960. Thanks to modern technology, this fact is often disguised. But the reality persists patiently behind the façade of technologi­cal progress. As social media denizens often remark, just one major illness stands between many of us and destitutio­n.

But Nigerians in general have become so used to this state of affairs that we no longer have proper standards for judging between bad and good. Ideally, bad governance should be one that falls below the standards we have attained in the past. Mediocre governance should be one that achieves the standards we have once attained. Good governance should be one that surpasses any- thing in our history. But in our current reality, bad no longer exists, mediocrity has little meaning, and literally anything done by a government is now commendabl­e. For many Nigerians in troubled areas, just getting home alive is enough to thank government.

Worse than these deteriorat­ing expectatio­ns, government also tries to normalise the minimum, wounding our collective psyche in the process. In a country that built what was once the longest bridge in Africa, public officials some thirty years later proudly celebrate the constructi­on of minor link roads. The government unashamedl­y makes a show of the most mundane projects, as if daring us to reject its notion of magnanimit­y.

Consider poverty alleviatio­n: this idea has been reduced from a premise of comprehens­ive legal and policy reforms to “constituen­cy projects”: gifts to the less privileged to “enable” them eke out an unsustaina­ble subsistenc­e through what are often skills that have little demand in the world market. This is why, for example, in Kano last week, the Vice President could praise (without irony, I assume) the launch of a training on tricycle repair and vulcanizin­g as a “unique initiative” which “will help to further build the capacity of the youths…across the country.” Naturally, some have agreed that this project is commensura­te capacity developmen­t for poor Nigerians.

But there is nothing mystical or inevitable about poverty. Poverty is, to put it simply, a socioecono­mic condition arising from either the lack of social safety nets for the unfortu- nate or the deprivatio­n of equal opportunit­ies and access to social goods and public resources. And the Nigerian government reinforces poverty. This is not just in the management of the economy and the arbitrary allocation of resources, but also in the way it normalises the subsistenc­e market. The general attitude of public officials to the less privileged – a majority of Nigerians – is patronisin­g and paternalis­tic: some things are too good for the poor.

Yet, on the other side of town, another level of constituen­cy projects exists. These are the negotiatio­ns for and awards of tax breaks, major economic licenses, government waivers and exemptions, and even land use concession­s to the political elite. At this level, decisions on Nigeria’s income and expenditur­e are made with little or no reference to the interests of poorer Nigerians. Basically, internatio­nal trade deals and massive infrastruc­tural project are intended for the direct benefit of the political elite. In many cases, these decisions are directly injurious to the welfare of the masses. For example, a government can make a decision to eject the poor occupants of land (possibly the same recipients of tricycle and vulcanizin­g hand-outs) in order to build a luxury estate. If the government cares enough, it may smoothen its detrimenta­l decisions with sermons on patience and faith, and assurances that things will eventually get better. But nothing gets better except where the elite will benefit from the improvemen­t. And so, the political elite deals with individual­s in government while the majority, negotiatin­g from a place of powerlessn­ess, have to confront unresponsi­ve systems. Dangote walks in to see the Minister while Yakubu can barely access the ministry’s gate. But democracy requires that the life of every citizen is equal in dignity and rights. The president should not be superior to his driver outside their official roles; Dangote’s transport business should have exactly the same access to tax breaks or waivers as Yakubu’s keke business; and one woman should not get an oil bloc while another gets a sewing machine under the guise of “different realities” when the difference in their realities is itself a consequenc­e of bad governance.

Now is the time to reflect on the trajectory of a state that has refused to become a nation. We ought to reflect on the relationsh­ip between each individual Nigerian – whether farmer or herder, banker or trader – and the state. How long will the Nigerian state continue to exist independen­tly of its people? How long will the approval of the elite be the preconditi­on for policy direction? When will ordinary Nigerians shape the direction of public policy?

It is time to think beyond the four-year span of individual­s in government and start seeing the systemic persistenc­e of an unchanging and unchalleng­ed ruling class.

Readmoreon guardian.ng/contributo­rs/ayo-sogunro/

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