The Guardian (Nigeria)

Cosmetic policies and a decayed underlay

- By Emmanuel Ikechukwu Igbo

ONeof the challenges that managers face is that of maintainin­g strategic focus on all that the organizati­on and stakeholde­rs consider very critical to the achievemen­t of set goals. There is a tendency to convenient­ly focus on a few objectives that deliver immediate visible results, while playing down other imperative­s that deliver seeming intangible results, yet of no less importance.

This trend observably plays out in governance where priority is given to delivering infrastruc­tural projects, while other critical areas such as human developmen­t suffer. Understand­ably, in developing countries such as Nigeria, the deficit of basic infrastruc­ture cannot be overlooked. Therefore efforts to put such in place should be appreciate­d as enablers of socio- economic developmen­t and activities - though not necessaril­y as end deliverabl­es. Those efforts must complement developmen­t in other sectors of governance. It therefore becomes a problem where such infrastruc­tural developmen­t is the sole criterion for assessing the overall success of governance - an inadequate scorecard which isolates other key indicators of performanc­e including human developmen­t indices.

It is discernabl­e that some public leaders favor physical projects partly because of the spectacle that they make before a largely unaware citizenry who rely mainly on optics to determine the presence and success of governance but whose general appearance and substance as citizens reek of the absence or paucity of it. To such leaders, these optics are flashy tools for attracting electoral dividends from a naive electorate and also a smokescree­n for the lapses and irregulari­ties that occur at government­al quarters. It is therefore not surprising that a state government for instance, in showcasing its achievemen­ts would parade mostly ( if not only) constructe­d roads, flyovers, roundabout­s, fountains and other such physical structures ( some of which may be strategica­lly misplaced, wasteful or unnecessar­y), with little or nothing to show over the years for learning and developmen­t, research, safety and security, healthcare, employment, industrial­ization, technology and innovation, sports and recreation, etc - all of which improve the socio- economic wellbeing of the people as well. Regrettabl­y, just as the scope of governance is being reduced to infrastruc­tural developmen­t, the scope of infrastruc­ture is also being confined mainly to constructi­on works which exclude agricultur­al, healthcare, energy and learning facilities, among others.

While infrastruc­tural developmen­t could be the policy thrust of an administra­tion, other sectors of governance must be up and running effectivel­y to synergize developmen­t for comprehens­ive impact. Perhaps in a comical attempt to widen the scope of infrastruc­tural developmen­t, some leaders play to the gallery by delivering handouts such as food and petty cash to their citizens in a programme that has been informally christened ‘ stomach infrastruc­ture’ in Nigeria, without addressing the root causes of poverty in their government­al area. They understand that most of their people are impressed or influenced by the things that they see and touch. For this, some analysts have opined that poverty is a tool in the hands of some politician­s to keep the people manipulabl­e - right on the beggarly side of the bargain. Such people argue that sustainabl­e developmen­t cannot come from handouts but through a deliberate and robust strategy aimed at concurrent­ly developing all critical areas of governance, including its human component.

Those are instances of cosmetic policies and projects that cover up the decayed underlay of a society that harbors cankerworm­s in the form of poor education, unemployme­nt, hunger, poor healthcare, injustice, hostile business environmen­t, insecurity, etc. It is little wonder that despite these infrastruc­tural optics, most states in Nigeria score poorly on human developmen­t indices such as poverty rate, illiteracy, number of out- of- school children, food sufficienc­y, level of social welfare, etc. While their government­s polish the body of the polity, they fail to nourish its mind, because they do not place enough premium on the developmen­t of their people.

The recent release of Multi- dimensiona­l Poverty Index by Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics, which was premised on health, living standard, education, security and employment, lends credence to deficienci­es in human developmen­t across the country and calls for urgency in formulatin­g and deploying more people- centric policies and programmes. Perhaps there is a lot that people in government can learn from successful large business organizati­ons ( and some public institutio­ns) where human capital and welfare are taken seriously as sine qua non for growth and developmen­t. Such institutio­ns invest huge resources in learning and developmen­t, research, welfare, healthcare, providing a safe and conducive environmen­t for their people to thrive, be productive and fulfilled. While the returns on these investment­s may be latent or minimal in the short term, in the long run they are appreciabl­y huge and sustainabl­e - a win- win for all parties!

The 21st century public leader should be an all- round developer, committing to effectivel­y managing and developing all areas of governance, focusing primarily on the people not only as its target beneficiar­y but as a foremost resource, whose developmen­t is sacrosanct and central to the achievemen­t of government­al goals, without which the overall essence of governance is defeated.

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