THISDAY

Don Blames Corruption in Nigeria, Others on Poor Governance

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Amidst growing economic impasse in Africa, Prof. Chibuike Uche of African Studies Centre, Leiden University (ASCL), The Netherland­s, has said that poor governance in the sub-Saharan African (SSA) was spreading fast and responsibl­e for the high rate of corruption in many countries.

Uche, who revealed this during his acceptance speech at the launch of Stephen Ellis Chair for the Governance of Finance and Integrity in Africa at Leiden University, The Netherland­s, said the crisis of governance in many African countries was porous and thus, responsibl­e for the backwardne­ss of the continent in economic achievemen­ts.

He pointed out that the World Bank, in its latest publicatio­n, disclosed that of the 49 SSA states, 30 had seen a worsening in government effectiven­ess based on poor economic Governance between 2000 and 2012. During the same time period, 35 out of the 49 had seen a decline in the control of corruption.

Uche said: “The World Bank assumes the existence of the good guy who will fix the problem, but corruption is the default position even among principals in many African countries.”

According to him, Stephen Ellis looked deeper than establishi­ng institutio­ns in his quest to understand governance problems in Africa and highlighte­d the important role of culture in the developmen­t of governance structures in Africa.

He said that criticisin­g culture became more difficult after the 1945 UN formation to the 1965 UN Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Racial Discrimina­tion. Did this help legitimise poor governance in Africa? Stephen Ellis also explored the link between religion and politics. Does the link religion-politics explain why Africa lacks entrenched protocols of power in political and spiritual fields?

Uche, however, stated that he wants to do further research into these daring questions, as well as into the role of culture and religion in governance. He disclosed that in 1989, after experiment­ing with markets, World Bank raised the issue of governance as a constraint to Africa’s developmen­t

“Underlying the litany of Africa’s developmen­t and management problems is a crisis of governance. By governance is meant the exercise of political power to manage a nation’s affairs. Because countervai­ling power has been lacking, state officials in many countries have served their own interests without fear of being called to account,” he said.

Uche added: “A root cause of weak economic performanc­e in the past has been the failure of public institutio­ns. Private sector initiative and market mechanisms are important, but they must go hand-inhand with good governance-a public service that is efficient, a judicial system that is reliable, and an administra­tion that is accountabl­e to its public.”

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