Governor Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State believes the oil
wealth accruing to the country constitutes a major obstacle to Nigeria’s
ability to think and innovate its way out of underdevelopment.
He wishes the oil wells and the ‘free money’ there from dry
up so that the government and the people can get serious about making the
country realize its full potentials.
el-Rufai spoke yesterday in Ibadan at the 2017 Town Hall
Meeting/ Founder’s Day Celebration in memory of renowned economist, Professor
Ojetunji Aboyade.
He also made a fresh case for state policing, and warned
against allowing the federal character policy become an enemy of merit in
appointments. The governor who was the special guest of honour at the
event said: “Because Nigeria gets easy money from oil, the nation has lost its
thinking initiative on how to develop other sources of revenue and diversify
the economy.
“We get easy money, we do not collect taxes and our taxes
are six per cent of Gross Domestic Product; that is an average of 21per cent.
We stop respecting the intellectuals that we have in our universities because
we get easy money. “This is very sad, I wish the oil will dry up so that we can
begin to use our brains because we have stopped using our brains and we have
stopped respecting intellects because of easy money.
On policing, he said: “It is obvious that Nigeria is
severely under-policed, and will require more personnel, intelligence assets,
better training, technology and equipment for its security agencies for the
country to be a credible guarantor of security. “Even if these were to be available, it is also debatable
whether a single centralised policing system, structure and staffing for 200
million citizens is viable in a diverse, multi-lingual, multi-cultural and
multi-ethnic nation like Nigeria.”
He also addressed the issue of federal character, saying:
“To complement the pursuit of the Sustainable Development Goals, we must have
discourse around the imperative of a project dedicated to enabling equal
opportunity so that the circumstances of a citizen’s birth don’t prescribe his
or her ceiling in life.
“How can we promote a national subscription to meritocracy?
How can we ensure that the imperative of reflecting federal character does not
become the enemy of merit and quality of appointments? Today, we don’t plan. We
don’t have national plan and if we don’t plan, we are planning to fail.
“Having suffered brain drain, how do we attract back our
Diaspora and the brain-gain associated with it like the Chinese and Indians
have witnessed? These are the questions a distributive mentality around easy
oil revenues is dodging.
“The earlier the oil dries up the better for our national
ability to think, be innovative and respect intellect and academic achievement. el-Rufai spoke on “Public Policy research should promote
national consensus.” In his presentation, the lead speaker, Professor Sam Olofin,
explained that indeed the country is technically out of recession but that it
requires sustained efforts for an economy to be progressive.
He noted that many Nigerians are confusing the country’s
underdevelopment with recession adding that with the reversal of the growing
negative rate of the economy, the country is technically out of recession but
that the positive growth must also be sustained and continuous so that it would
rub on the overall economy.
He stressed that if Nigeria doesn’t diversify its dependence
on oil early enough, the country will remain an underdeveloped economy for a
long time. Chairman of the occasion, Professor Oladipupo Akinkugbe,
said Nigeria keeps chasing potential but that the country will have to get
there fast and as early as possible.
He lamented that many of the excellent ideas churned out by
many research institutes are often allowed to gather dust. He said that if some
of the ideas and recommendations made by many researchers over the years had
been implemented, the country would not be where it is today.
The event which had the theme “Achieving the United Nations
Sustainable Development Goals in Nigeria,” was organised by the Development
Policy Centre, Ibadan.

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