Mrs. Ezekwesili, a
former Minister of Solid Minerals and of Education, delivered this keynote
paper at the 42nd convocation of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka,
Thursday, January 24th 2013.
Protocols
I am hugely delighted to return to my alma mater the great and only University of Nigeria to speak at your 42nd convocation. Twenty eight years ago I sat just like you those of you who are part of the graduating Class of 2013; excited by my graduation. It was 1985 and I was very privileged to be one of the then only 3% of our own youthful population that had the opportunity of a university education. Today, you are still fortunate to be one of the yet paltry 4.3% of your own youthful generation with an opportunity for university education. For Nigeria that percentage does not compare favorably with 37.5% for Chile 33.7% for Singapore 28.2% for Malaysia, 16.5% for Brazil and 14.6%. Our lag in tertiary education enrollment is quite revealing and could be interpreted as the basis of the competitiveness gap between the same set of countries and Nigeria. The reason is that “…. tertiary enrollment rate which is the percentage of total enrollment, regardless of age, in post-secondary institutions to the population of people within five years of the age at which students normally graduate high school…….plays an essential role in society, creating new knowledge, transferring knowledge to students and fostering innovation”. The countries with the most highly educated citizens are also some of the wealthiest in the world in a study by the OECD published by the Wall Street Journal last year. The United States, Japan, Canada, South Korea, Finland, Norway, Israel, United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia also have among the largest Gross Domestic Products. All these countries aggressively invest in education.
The same cannot be said of Nigeria. The crawling
progress in tertiary education enrollment since my graduation more than two and
a half decades ago is therefore one key reason former peer nations left us
behind at the lower rungs of global economic rankings. Economic growth rate and
ultimate development of nations are determined by a number of factors that
range from sound policies, effective and efficient public and private
investments and strong institutions. Economic evidence throughout numerous
researches proves that one key variable that determines how fast nations
outgrow others is the speed of accumulation of human capital especially through
science and technology education. No wonder for these same countries by
2011- South Korea of fifty million people has a GDP of $1.12trillion,
Brazil of one hundred and ninety six million has $2.48 trillion; Malaysia of
twenty eight million people has $278.6Billion; Chile of seventeen million
people has $248.59Billion; Singapore of five million people has $318.7
Billion. Meanwhile with our population of 165 million people we make
boasts with a GDP of $235.92 Billion- completely way off the mark that we could
have produced if we made a better set of development choices.
More dramatic is that this wide gap between
these nations and Nigeria was not always the case as some relevant data at the
time of our independence reveal. In 1960 the GDP per capita of all these
countries were not starkly different from that of Nigeria- two were below $200,
two were a little above $300 and one was slightly above $500 while that of
Nigeria was just about $100. For citizens, these differentials are not mere
economic data. Meanwhile by 2011, the range for all five grew exponentially
with Singapore at nearly $50,000, South Korea at $22,000, Malaysia at $10,000,
Brazil at $13,000 and Chile at $14,000. Our own paltry $1500 income per capita
helps drive home the point that we have been left behind many times over by
every one of these other countries. How did these nations steer and stir their
people to achieve such outstanding economic performance over the last five
decades? There is hardly a basis for comparing the larger population of our
citizens clustered within the poverty bracket with the majority citizens of
Singapore fortunate to have upper middle income standard of living.
Again, how did this happen? What happened to
Nigeria? Why did we get left behind? How did these nations become productively
wealthy over the last fifty years while Nigeria stagnated? How did majority of
the citizens of these nations join the upper middle class while more Nigerians
retrogressed into poverty? There are usually as many different answers to these
sets of questions as there are respondents on the reasons we fell terribly
behind. Some say, it is our tropical geography, yet economic research shows it
has not prevented other countries with similar conditions from breaking
through. Others say it is size, but China and India are bigger, yet in the last
thirty and twenty years have grown double digit and continue to out- grow the
rest of the world at this time of global economic crisis. Furthermore, being
small has not necessarily conferred any special advantages to so many other
countries with small population yet similarly battling with the development
process like we are. Some others say it is our culture but like a political
economist posited “European countries with different sorts of cultures,
Protestant and Catholic alike that have grown rich. Secondly, different
countries within the same broad cultures have performed very differently in
economic terms, such as the two Koreas in the post-war era. Moreover,
individual countries have changed their economic trajectories even though
“their cultures didn’t miraculously change.” How about those who plead our
multiethnic nationalities as the constraint but fail to see that the United
States of America happens to be one nation with even more disparate ethnic
nationalities than Nigeria and yet it leads the global economy! As for those
who say it is the adverse impact of colonialism, were Singapore, Malaysia and
even China not similarly conquered and dominated by colonialists?
That Nigeria is a paradox of the kind of wealth
that breeds penury is as widely known as the fact that the world considers us a
poster nation for poor governance wealth from natural resources. The trend of
Nigeria’s population in poverty since 1980 to 2010 for example suggests that
the more we earned from oil, the larger the population of poor citizens : 17.1
million 1980, 34.5million in 1985, 39.2million in 1992, 67.1million in 1996,
68.7million in 2004 and 112.47 million in 2010! This sadly means that you are
children of a nation blessed with abundance of ironies.
Resource wealth has tragically reduced your
nation- my nation- to a mere parable of prodigality. Nothing undignifies
nations and their citizens like self-inflicted failure. Our abundance of oil,
people and geography should have worked favorably and placed us on the top
echelons of the global economic ladder by now. After all, basic economic
evidence shows that abundance of natural resources can by itself increase the
income levels of citizens even if it does not increase their productivity. For
example, as Professor Collier a renowned economist who has focused on the
sector stated in a recent academic work countries that have enormously valuable
natural resources are likely to have high living standards on a sustainable
basis by simply replacing some of the extracted resources with financial assets
held abroad. Disappointedly, even that choice eluded our governing class who
through the decades has spent more time quarreling over their share of the oil
“national cake” than they have spent thinking of how to make it benefit the
entire populace.
There are perhaps three broad classes of
resource rich countries. The first are those which like Norway which have built
up all other types of domestic investment from which revenue is generated and
can therefore save their huge revenue from gas in foreign assets. The second
are those mostly of the Middle East countries like Kuwait which also have saved
huge revenue in foreign asset and generate sufficient revenue from the asset to
be better off than other countries without resources. However, for Kuwait
this may be only because they live well from resource rents rather than
becoming productive. The third category of which our country is a classic
example are countries which though resource rich have neither been able to
build up foreign asset for citizens to live well off of nor evolved new and
alternative sectors of productivity.
The appropriate response to the revenue
extracted from our oil over the period 1959 to date would have been to use it
in accumulating productive investment in the form of globally competitive human
capital and physical asset of all types of infrastructure and institutions.
Such translation from one form of nonrenewable asset to renewable capital would
have been the right replacement strategy for a wasting asset like
oil. Unfortunately unbridled profligacy has made us spend and continue to spend
the free money from oil like a tragic Rentier state that we are called in
development circles. We spend most of what we generate on mere consumption with
no tangible productive asset to show for our so called “wealth”.
Due to profligacy we have dismal human
development indicators which are inconsistent with the scale of our earnings.
For example using life expectancy as a proxy measuring how we score on human
development, 51.4years for Nigerians falls far short of the 80years for
citizens of Singapore and South Korea, 78years for citizens of Chile, 73 years
for citizens of Malaysia and 72years for citizens of Brazil. We may in fact be
the world record holder in the rank of natural resources rich countries that
tend to have worse human development scores when compared to countries without
endowments. As our human development scores have lagged, we continued with our
binge on oil revenue and became trapped in cyclical decline of national
competitiveness. It explains why every other economic sector in Nigeria
has suffered the effect of the oil enclave economy. Oil has unleashed shocks
and volatility of revenues on our economy due to exposure to global commodity
market swing, proliferated “weak, ineffectual, unstable and systemically
corrupt institutions and bureaucracies” that have helped misappropriate or
plunder public resources. Nations with abundance of natural resources
especially in Africa, Latin America and part of South Asia have experienced the
fueling of official corruption and “violent competition for the resource by the
citizens of the nation” .
While there may not be concurrence on the causes
of Nigeria’s colossal underperformance, most of our citizens however agree that
poor governance and the more visible symptom of corruption have had virulent
impact in arresting the development of Nigeria. The poor in our land have paid
the highest possible price for being born into the world’s best example of a
paradox. The common wonderment of these poor citizens – whether east, west,
north and south- is “why would more than half the population of a country that
earned nearly one trillion dollars in oil revenue since the Oloibori discovery
of crude oil; continue to wallow in poverty?” Well, economic evidence shows
that the answer which we must all ponder deeply is that oil wealth entrenched
corruption and mismanagement of resources in government and warped the
incentive for value added work, creativity and innovation in our public,
private sectors and wider society. This being the case, the larger population
of our people is deprived of the opportunity to overcome poverty and this is
what economists call the “resource curse”. The oil revenue induced
choices made by our ruling elite over the five decades of political
independence cursed several of our citizens to intergenerational poverty!
Endowment of oil resulted in an indulgent elite
class – the generations of your great grandparents, grandparents and parents in
leadership- who have made disastrous choices that have trapped the destiny of
Nigeria in oil wells. It is the reason our economic structure has remained
unchanged for more than fifty years. Fact is that our political elite suffers
from delusion of greatness simply because we sell barrels of crude oil to
finance 80% of our national budget, cover 95% of our foreign exchange and petroleum
sectors represents a larger portion of industry’s contribution to our
GDP. Little wonder that manufacturing is a mere 18% of our Gross Domestic
Products compared to that of all those other nations with which we set off on
the development race. Manufacturing which has its major driver as education
enabled those nations develop a huge base of human capital with skills and
competencies to drive new ideas, creativity and innovation. They embraced their
comparative advantage, mimicked nations that were ahead of them, perfected some
aspects of manufacturing and became extremely competitive.
While these countries moved up the manufacturing
and economic development ladder in my fifty years of existence all I can say
for Nigeria is that during the same period I have known at least five cycles of
commodity booms that offered us rare opportunities to use revenues generated
from oil to transform our economy. Sadly, each cycle ended up sliding us
farther down the productivity ladder. The present cycle of boom of the 2010s is
however much more vexing than the other four that happened in the 70s, 80s, 90s
and 2000s. This is because we are still caught up in it even as I speak today
and it is more egregious than the other periods in revealing that we learned
absolutely nothing from the previous massive failures. Furthermore, it is
happening back to back with the squandering of the significant sum of $45
Billion in foreign reserve account and another $22Billion in the Excess Crude
Account being direct savings from increased earnings from oil that the Obasanjo
administration handed over to the successor government in 2007. Six years after
the administration I served handed over such humongous national wealth to
another one; most Nigerians but especially the poor continue to suffer the
effects of failing public health and education systems as well as decrepit
infrastructure and battered institutions. One cannot but ask, what
exactly does Nigeria seek to symbolize and convey with this level of brazen
misappropriation of public resources? Where did all that money go? Where is the
accountability for the use of both these resources plus the additional several
billions of dollars realized from oil sale by the two administrations that have
governed our nation in the last six years? How were these resources applied or
more appropriately, misapplied? Tragic choices! Yes. Our national dignity
continues to be degraded by cycles of stagnation because of the terrible
choices my generation and those before repeatedly make as a result of free oil
money. The wealth and poverty of a nation never found a better Symbol!
There is no better example of the cost of the
imprudent choices than what has happened to Education. The failures and
limitations of the education you have received during your time here leading to
your graduation today will become clearer to you should you ever seek to do
what was very easy for me to do –that is, gain admission to one of the best
schools in the world for my graduate studies simply on the strength of my University
of Nigeria education. Countries invest in the human skills that can help their
citizens use modern technology and eventually rise to the stage where those
same citizens can develop their countries’ own technology. A country’s
educational system is the key to its long-run development. According to
economic study of the role of education in economic development, “Less than
half of the rise in living standards since 1960 in industrial countries has
been due to savings and investments from its citizens. The rest of the increase
– more than 50% has been due to rising educational levels and to improvements
in technology that raise factor productivity across the board”. I had known
this as a Minister of Education in this country a few years ago. That knowledge
inspired and fueled my zeal to bring education to the front burners of our
national development at that time. The result of the diagnostics that we
produced on the state of our education system and sector was so heart wrenching
that I was filled with angst at how low we had sunk educationally. Deciding to
channel the angst positively, we built a strong team that articulated some
three hundred and sixty eight ‘root and branch’ reforms measures across the six
levels and aspects of education- early childhood, basic, secondary, tertiary,
special needs and adult/informal education. The response of resistance by some
of the key political elite to the absolutely necessary reforms when we laid
them out before the nation to generate consensus and implement is made clearer
by what one today knows of the incentives that drive the choices of extractive
elites. I will return to this as I get closer to the conclusion of my speech.
I read an article by David Wraight in which he
posits that there is a globalized generation of youth – often referred to as
the Millennial Generation. “They believe that they can change the world for the
better, but they are unsure what they should change the world to; so they
search for an ideology or system of belief to use as a foundation for the
change they seek. They are actually searching for something worth living for
and dying for.” They are optimistic and idealistic with a deep desire to make
their mark in the world. They dream of what can be, and follow their dreams
with passion and perseverance. They are no longer prepared to be spectators
watching the world go by, but want to be ‘players’, to get their hands dirty,
to make a difference. They are knowledgeable about the affairs of the world and
very mobile, travelling as much as resources and opportunity allow.”
As globalization and modern technology continue
to shrink our world people are connecting worldwide as never before –
particularly young people – and overcoming cultural, geographical, language and
ethnic barriers with ease. For the first time in human history we are seeing
the emergence of a global youth culture with common values, dreams and desires.
You are actually not different from your generational peers in Tunisia, Egypt,
the United States and many other countries that have have questioned and
overturned the status quo and established new norms in the governance of their
nations. When it becomes an imperative for your generation to save Nigeria from
its cycles of disastrous and destructive choices promoted by the older
generations then you can rightly be called the Turning Point Generation. The
turning point is when there begins to emerge a New Nigeria that is radically
different from all that we have known of failure. The turning point is the
point of restoration of Dignity. Yes. That quality or state of being worthy of
esteem or respect; of being regarded as nobility and having worth!
One of America’s legendary leaders; President J.
F. Kennedy called it the “source of national purpose” when he said “I believe
in human dignity as the source of national purpose, human liberty as the source
of national action, the human heart as the source of national compassion, and
in the human mind as the source of our invention and our ideas”. Like
individuals, nations have or lack dignity depending on how well they practice
these famous words of John D. Rockefeller – “I believe in the dignity of labor,
whether with head or hand; that the world owes no man a living but that it owes
every man an opportunity to make a living”. Dignity of honest toil and the
sweet triumph that results from such strenuous effort is after all what confers
deserving honor on people and societies. Booker T. Washington expressed this
Truth powerfully when he wrote that “no race can prosper till it learns that
there is as much dignity in tilling a field as in writing a poem”. We must take
way a lasting message from the profound thoughts of these historical figures
that helped build the still greatest nation in the world- the United States of
America.
The clear message is that Dignity is conferred
on a life of effort and hard work and not on a life of ignoble ease for the
latter can easily become dulled by contemptible wealth. To be born into
inheritance like our nature endowed oil wealth does not of itself confer any
deserving honor on us and our nation. Our oil rich nation merely makes us a
Rentier state. Even worse, the oil wealth has created not the right kind of
Elite class across the length and breadth of our nation but rather an
Extractive Elite class. These political and business elite have been
comfortable with living on rent from oil revenue without seeing the desperate
need to redirect the focus of this nation to sources of economic growth that
are more lasting than the depleting riches of natural commodities. They fail to
realize that a Rentier economy like Nigeria sows the seed of its implosion if
it does not advance into a productive economy. Had we been of a lesser population,
we may perhaps have been able to all comfortably live off the income from oil
as the revenue will make Nigeria sufficiently rich to be able to provide all of
us high incomes on a sustainable basis like my friend Paul Collier so scholarly
wrote drawing a parallel between individual bequeathed and inheritance and a
nation blessed with natural resources. Collier wrote “just as a billionaire can
ensure that his descendants need never work. But, just as many billionaires
realize that it is good to earn a living, so all societies sensibly aspire to
be productive. Resource extraction should make a society more productive”. My
dear young friends, all Nigerians but especially our very prebendalist
leadership class must realize that it is good for both individuals and nations
to earn their living!
So I ask you as representatives of your
generation, “Who will restore the Dignity of Nigeria?” As my big brother,
former President of South Africa -Thabo Mbeki- once asked along the same vein
“When will the day come that our dignity will be fully restored, when the
purpose of our lives will no longer be merely to survive until the sun rises
tomorrow”! Your word of response to my difficult question will not persuade
anyone. It is the follow on action that stands the chance of being persuasive.
The reason is simple. Word is cheap. As was profoundly observed by Marti
Jose, “other famous men, those of much talk and few deeds, soon evaporate.
Action is the dignity of greatness”. So I ask you again, “Who will WALK AND
WORK to restore the Dignity of Nigeria?” Through my probing question, I
abide with the challenge of Shriver Sargent who believed that every new
generation must be taught the dignity of work- “Do we talk about the dignity of
work? Do we give our students any reason for believing it is worthwhile to
sacrifice for their work because such sacrifices improve the psychological and
mental health of the person who makes them?” Do you know that your embrace of a
new mindset – an entrepreneurial mindset that takes pride in problem solving
can change the course of our history and place us on a new economic development
trajectory? Do you know that in order to herald a New Nigeria we must accept
the words of Michelle Obama on learning about dignity and decency – “that how hard
you work matters much more than how much you make…..that helping others means
much more than just getting ahead yourself” is what we need to herald a New
Nigeria?
A New Nigeria would be one where the citizens
and leaders alike converge on a common vision for our nation. That vision need
not be complex. It is in fact extremely important that because everyone who
reads it must desire to run with its ideals that the Vision must be simple. For
me a simple Vision will read- “we believe in Dignity”. Although it sounds
so ordinary but it profoundly conveys that we believe in the Dignity that lays
within ourselves and not the fleeting sense of wealth that oil money creates.
WE are our best endowment. Our capabilities- nurtured and nourished by a just
society- and not our oil, not our gas not even our thirty four classes of
minerals scattered across the country represent the lasting and renewable asset
of our nation. Whereas as a Madagasy proverb says, oil induced “poverty
won’t allow us lift our heads; dignity which is the fruit of hard work won’t
allow us bow them down.
For Nigeria’s dignity to be restored your
generation must build a coalition of your entrepreneurial minds that are ready
to ask and respond to the question “What does it take for nations to become
rich? Throughout economic history, the factors that determine which nations
became rich and improved the standard of living of their citizens read like a
Dignity treatise in that they all revolve around the choices that ordinary
citizens made in defining the value constructs of their nation. We learn that
it takes a very strong interplay of political and economic dynamics for nations
to climb out from the rung of poverty and raise the standard of living of
citizens. The political foundation of nations emerges as the principal reason
why some nations grow rich while others remain poor in the field of development
economics. A ground breaking work by Daren Acemoglu, a professor at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and James Robinson (economist), a Harvard
professor has brought politics to the center stage of economic development.
Although sound policies and access to capital for investing in development
priorities remain very important for economic success no country can however
achieve development without having a strong political foundation made up of
political players, system, processes and structures that are grounded in
inclusivity and accountability. The active participation of the citizens who
seek to restore their individual and collective dignity in the politics of
their nation is what ensures that THE PEOPLE and not a bunch of power hungry
and extractive elite will set the agenda and determine the quality and
substance of governance.
The simple version of this thesis is “sort out a
nation’s political mess and you improve the chances of getting a productive
economy that grows and delivers the benefits of growth in the form of jobs and
improved incomes to all citizens”. Although this advice is rooted in
empirical evidence from economic research it does sound very basic. Not being
one of those earth shattering solutions that Nigerians are often enamored of,
we may choose to ignore it. Yet if we are willing to confront our past
and present reality with sincerity and ruminate on our political history, this
thesis may actually be a Turning Point “Aha” moment for us. The Turning Point
is that moment when we all suddenly realized that Politics- a process that
defines the How, Who, Which, Where, When and for What any individual or group
of persons who seek to govern Nigeria- is indeed the root cause of our
repeated failures. Neither our thirty four years of cumulative military
governance nor the nineteen cumulative years thus far of our democratic
governance provided us “inclusive and accountable governance.” Evidently, it is
the undeveloped character of our political history, inchoate political
structure and system and mostly uninspiring cast of political leadership that
threw Nigeria into a hole from which it must climb out quickly to secure its
continuing existence. Instructively, a person or as in our own case; a nation
is counseled to “stop digging when in a hole”. Lamentably, in our case we have
consistently rebuffed the wisdom behind that counsel. We have instead dug
deeper and the more we have dug, the deeper into the hole we have sunk and all
because of political misadventures.
Trace the political history of our country since
independence in 1960 and you will better understand the horror of our faulty
political foundation. The first democratic government ushered in an
independent Nigeria but was cut short by a coup in 1966, a counter coup
in 1967, civil war from 1967 to 1970, military rule from 1970 at the end of the
war until another coup in 1975, another unsuccessful coup in 1976 the then Head
of State was murdered, continued rule of the military until 1979 when a
successful political transition ushered in the second republic but it became a
democratic process that was known more for its prodigality than for governance
until it was cut short in 1983 by yet another military coup but this new junta
was itself sent packing by a coup in 1985 with a new military junta ruling from
1985 until 1993 when it thwarted the political rights of citizens who had
elected a democratic president by annulling the elections. It responded
to the public disturbance and agitation that followed by installing an interim
national government that lasted only three months following yet another
military intervention that was more heinous than ever until 1998 when divine
providence cut short that particular leadership ushering in yet another
military ruler who committed to and successfully conducted a transition that
ushered democratic governance in 1999. That it is now fourteen years of
uninterrupted even if fledgling democratic governance since 1999 is perhaps the
very tiny ray of light in what is otherwise a canvass of political tragedies.
Yet, despite the general consensus satisfaction
with the record number of democratic years since 1999, darkness still ominously
clouds our political landscape. While the nation continues to experience
the paradox of plenty and citizens are once again provoked by this latest round
of prodigality of our political elite one cannot but sigh in disbelief that
these casts of gladiators seem not to have learned anything from our inglorious
political history. The recklessness and impunity with which public institutions
and resources are being handled; the daily news of systemic and now
democratized corruption by political office holders and their business elite
collaborators has entrenched cynicism and pessimism in the land. How can our
political elite not see that we are all sitting on kegs of gun powder? How can
they not see that whatever peace we may appear to have at this time is like the
peace of the graveyard? How can they not see that the teeming population of
extremely angry and more interconnected young people cannot be silent for too
much longer? How can they not know that preachments of patience and sacrifice
will no longer placate the two million young people who annually enter the
terribly constrained labor market pushing up the already worrisome 40%
unemployment ratio among our youthful population? How can they not see the
hypocrisy of the platitudes on sacrifice to poor citizens who thanks to greater
access to information are able to closely follow the lifestyle of delusional
grandeur and debauchery that their leaders finance from the public treasury?
Where is the much needed innovative and entrepreneurial mindset that the public
sector must earnestly deploy in solving the multiple problems of our
nation? Why does our own variant of political elite not even understand
the most basic necessity for change of the status quo methods that have failed
to deliver benefits of governance to citizens? “Elites resist innovation
because they have a vested interest in resisting change — and new technologies
that create growth can alter the balance of economic or political assets in a
country. Technological innovation makes human societies prosperous, but also
involves the replacement of the old with the new, and the destruction of the
economic privileges and political power of certain people,” wrote Acemoglu and
Robinson. Yet when elites temporarily preserve power by preventing innovation,
they ultimately impoverish their own states. Sadly, they most often do not care
what happens to the rest of the nation, and that arguably has been the lot of
Nigerian through the years.
In the course of the last six months of my
returning home to Nigeria after five year in international public service at
the World Bank in Washington DC, I have many times come across the cutting
anger of unemployed, disillusioned citizens who are louder in their
disaffection with the condition of the country. The strident voices of citizens
in public debates of national issues are louder and more penetrating than ever
before. We are indeed at a turning point. How it turns however will be
determined by you my dear friends. Today, you are the generation that holds the
ace. You are the generation for whom the stakes are highest on the issue of how
well this nation turns its governance corner. You are the generation that can
define a new character and quality of politics in Nigeria and inherently the
quality of governance outcomes in the decades and century ahead. You are the
generation that can birth a New Nigeria devoid of all negatives that have
inhibited our greatness and one in which every citizen is mobilized to
construct a “National Integrity System” which is imperative for the building of
every decent society.
You can do so by seeking to understand and to
engage the stunted political context and nation that you have inherited. You
will have to take hold of both and turn them around into a mature democracy and
nation. What you must seek to do is to create a new political context in which
citizens’ demand for good governance and accountability begins to compel those
who govern to persistently make choices that will more likely improve the
outcomes of economic management for the larger number of Nigerians. You have
the tools needed for massive political and civic education of your illiterate
peers on the importance of political rights and participation in the political
process. By virtue of your university education and experiences you understand
the economics of politics in Nigeria better than your illiterate peers who
ignorantly trade off their political rights and chances for better governance
outcomes for a mere mess of porridge.
Economics teaches us that there are some basic
Smithian conditions (as espoused by Adam Smith in the Wealth of Nations) for
sustainable economic growth. No country has become rich, and stayed that way,
without establishing these conditions. Countries such as Great Britain and the
United States became rich because their citizens overthrew the elites who
controlled power and created a society with political rights more broadly
distributed and the government accountable and responsive to citizens. In these
countries the great mass of people could take advantage of economic
opportunities and so the entire nation prospered. To the contrary, nations
dominated by self-centered elite fail and they are extremely poor.
Your generation can work as collectives across
this country and set the agenda for lasting positive change in the political
architecture of Nigeria. Only after reading Why Nations Fail did I finally
understand the wise words of Plato that “one of the penalties for refusing to
participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors”.
Therefore, do not be like me and my kind who have ignored politics and left it
to professional politicians to determine its character and substance. The
incentive that must drive your own impulses on whether to engage or not is the
knowledge that except the insalubrious political context that has produced a
persistently failing Nigeria changes positively; your individual talents,
opportunities and greatness will not materialize nor be maximized. In deciding
to free Nigeria from its legendary political failures, you will actually free
yourselves to excel like your contemporaries in the rest of the world. “The
positive dimensions of succeeding at this task democratizing political powers
beyond the minuscule are accountability, property rights and rule of law, which
in combination provide low transactions cost so that markets can work
effectively and efficiently. When these conditions are absent, a society faces
corruption, instability and poor human rights. Investors, including domestic
investors, flee such settings”. Do you now see how inextricably connected our
political and economic fortunes are in determining the quality of life of the
Nigerian? Do you now see what our Big Problem is?
A recent global survey showed that your
generation around the world stands out as the most connected to the
developments in international affairs. So, most of you will assuredly be aware
that not just in our nation but that everywhere else world over, people are
seeking for those who can solve the Big Problems in their respective nations.
In several other nations the solutions to Big Problems are coming from your
generational peers. Surely, having established that our own Big Problem is the
failure of politics to deliver the right environment in which a productive
economy can thrive outside of the extraction of natural resources that fuels
the destructive choices of our ruling elite you have the information needed for
driving change. You would have to decide whether you are ready to play the role
a change catalyst or would rather adopt the safer option which is to “siddon
look.” There is no better time to make such life changing decisions than
the day of one’s graduation from College.
I should know about making decisions on
graduation day! On my graduation day in 1985, my fertile mind having absorbed
as much of the eclectic knowledge available on this campus as possible was
budding with curiosity about the challenges of good governance in Nigeria. I
made up my mind at that time to never lose my VOICE in the society and that for
as long as I lived, I would always speak up on matters of governance,
transparency, accountability and probity. Divine providence followed that
decision and the supportive actions I took to back it and my steps began to be
ordered on a trajectory that had me as one of the leaders of our own
generations’ campaign for democracy and good governance- The Concerned
Professionals with the likes of Pat Utomi, Sam Oni, Morin Babalola and many
others. Staying committed to that decision that I made on graduation day was
what provided me the rare privilege of becoming one of the few co-founders and
a founding director of Transparency International the Berlin based global
non-governmental organization that pioneered the work on anti-corruption and
promotion of transparency. That decision that I made on graduation day informed
all my life choices and paved the path for what you know of my vocational
endeavors. So what decisions are you prepared to make today, dear friends? I
assure you that the greatest gift of God to mankind is the power to choose. You
are therefore empowered to make decisions and choices today that will
ultimately determine what, where and how you will be in the next twenty eight
years and beyond……..
But I warn you to be mindful and not rush to
decide. You will need to fully assess all the possible costs of your decisions
and choices and then determine whether you have the strength of will to bear
them. Whatever choices you make from today for the purpose of helping build a
New Nigeria will most certainly cost you something. Such is the reality of
nation rebuilding. Those who truly build their societies pay a price. They are
not For example you cannot be one given to the lure of free money, one who
cannot defer gratification and one for whom the path of least resistance holds
abiding fascination; and then say you are part of the Turning Point Generation.
No! The willingness to “enjoy” wealth that is not earned is not consistent with
such Turning Point paradigm. For example, for anyone of you in the Class
of 2013 you cannot having perverted the maxim “reward for effort” cheating in
exams or using forged certificates to gain your admission and say you are a
catalyst for the emergence of the New Nigeria. If your decisions or
choices from today are driven by some selfish interest of replacing the failed
and fading generations so as to repeat their nation-hobbling pattern then
please know that you are not of the Turning Point Generation.
I have spoken to you today to stir up your
collective effective angst at the indignity of your inheritance. If I have
succeeded in raising your determination to free our nation from the trap of
oil, then my coming is worthy. If I have succeeded in helping you see how
continuous education not more extraction of oil will help you outperform and
take Nigeria up the economic development ladder, then my coming worthy.
If I have succeeded in preparing you to embrace dignity of labor as your
philosophy of life –never shunning legitimate vocation that helps you earn a
living regardless of how lowly it might seem- then my coming is worthy. If
today, I have succeeded in preparing you for a life of private and public
integrity then my coming is worthy. If I have deposited in you a deep seethed
contempt for poor governance, then my coming is worthy. If I have succeeded in
preparing you for a lifetime of costly choices that invariably ennoble your
path then my coming is worthy. If I have succeeded in helping you realize that
you are not weak- that you are actually very powerful- and have both the
exceptional opportunities and the tools like your peers in other nations to
solve our own Big Problem then my coming is worthy. If I have moved you to
decide that you will be one of those that will redefine and build a New Nigeria
of our dream then is my coming worthy. If I have succeeded in inspiring a
resolve within you to uphold from today a strong sense of personal
responsibility for the political governance of Nigeria then my coming is
worthy. Above all, if I have succeeded in getting you motivated and empowered
enough to walk out of this hall seeing ready to walk and work as a part of the
Turning Point Generation that courageously dares to restore the dignity of
Nigeria then my BEING is truly worth it!
I salute you, the great lions and lionesses of
the class of 2013! All of you, my dear fellow alumnae of the University of
Nigeria are indeed the true Wealth, the Greatness and above all the Dignity of
Nigeria!!
Thank you for listening.
OBIAGELI KATRYN EZEKWESILI
CLASS OF 1985, UNIVERSITY OF NIGERIA
SENIOR ECONOMIC ADVISER, AFRICA ECONOMIC POLICY
DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE
OPEN SOCIETY FOUNDATION
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