Former
Vice-President Atiku Abubakar says Nigeria will continue to grapple with the
crisis of severe and debilitating socio-economic problems unless it gets the
structures of the federalism and governance right.
Atiku stated this in a paper
titled; “The Challenge of Unity, Diversity and National Development: Nigeria at
a Crossroads’’, which he delivered at the formal public presentation of the
Daily Stream newspaper, at the Banquet Hall, Nigeria Air force Conference
Centre, Kado, Abuja.
According to him, the current
system, which is characterized by a focus on sharing rather than production, is
clearly not conducive to development.
He noted that virtually all the
development indices had not been favourable to Nigeria: massive and pervasive
poverty, double-digit inflation, unemployment, dwindling foreign exchange
receipts, poor GDP growth rates, high infant and maternal mortality, high
levels of illiteracy, and millions of school-age children out of school.
“For Nigeria to develop – or even
make any appreciable progress – we must re-structure Nigeria’s political,
administrative and political architecture.
“That way we can free resources
that would otherwise go to unviable ventures and projects, then commit same to
areas that directly cater for and benefit the people.’’
He said restructuring would
facilitate the emergence of a leaner bureaucracy, enhance efficiency, block
wastages and promote more prudent management.
He said this would make for
happier constituent units more committed to the progress and unity of the
country and the emergence of a sense of nationhood.
“However,
I am not here just to lament over the sad and unenviable state of affairs in
Nigeria.
“I firmly believe in the viability
of the Nigerian Project, I remain unshaken and completely persuaded that we can
eventually change the story of Nigeria for good by collectively making Nigeria
a productive, prosperous, peaceful and united nation whose people are happy and
contented and one that is able to really lead Africa and assume a pride of
place in the comity of nations,’’ he added.
Atiku, who narrated his
experiences from his recent trip to Malaysia, said he had concluded
arrangements to assemble a class of economic experts to brainstorm on the best
ways to boost the economies of the three tiers of government in Nigeria.
The former vice-president, who
affirms that Nigeria is truly in crossroads, said “the problem with our
federalism is that over the years it has become so skewed in favour of the
centre that it impedes our economic development, distorts our politics, weakens
our people’s commitment to the country and threatens our existence as a united
country’’.
He, therefore, stressed the need
to discuss and agree on the kind of federal structure desirable for the
country.
“Reverting to the regions of the
past seem untenable because those minority groups which feel that they have
been liberated from their bigger, dominant neighbours, are unlikely to accept a
return to that older order.
“We may consider using the
existing the geo-political zones as federating units because they will be more
viable economically and address some of the minorities’ concerns?
“If we prefer to keep the current
state structure, could we consider introducing a means-test such that a state
that is unable to raise a specified percentage of its revenues from internal
sources would have to be collapsed into another state?’’
Abubakar, who described himself as
more of a businessman than politician, said he would never implement a uniform
National Minimum Wage structure across the 36 states of the federation and the
Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
He said under his leadership,
state governments in Nigeria would be allowed to pay their workers’ salaries
based on their respective financial standing.
(NAN)
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