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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ (12244 Views)
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Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by namun(f): 5:53pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
eko o ni baje for the fact that it was mentioned |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by diigirl: 6:06pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
Lagos could be badly rated yes but then the people rating Lagos were not there some hundreds of years ago when their countries and mega cities went through the problems developing nations/ states are going through now. I heard in my human right lectures how torturous it was before they got to where they are now. They should please live us alone. We will get there someday. GOD Bless Nigeria! GOD Bless Lagos! |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by babapupa: 7:39pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
E.G.O: Ode, you put medicine for mouth? Abeg lay down the cheap crack or akpeteshi. Lagos was clean before your people show face with their dirty and slummy behavior, they created all the slums in lagos starting with Ajegunle. I sure can't wait for you guys to leave carry go with your dirtiness, |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by asha80(m): 7:46pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
babapupa: See person wey open thread once dey talk say anyone that jumps into a tribalistic post is a tribalist and that he also has repented as for the bolded even your grand child will wait till eternity for that to happen |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by babapupa: 8:05pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
asha 80: lol. Hey, call it tribalism, call it tribalistic, it's your choice. You can not keep running mouth about dirty Lagos when we all know who brought/started the dirtiness and slum living. That is a fact, not tribalism. And about your bolded part, it's one of the ironies and sad bi polar tendencies some Igbo folks love to display, how do you go around bad mouthing the same place you can not do without? How do you go around and steady bad mouthing the same place you dirty up? |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by asha80(m): 8:24pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
babapupa: My friend na u wey get ur head wrapped up about igbos.na only igbos complain about lagos forthis thread.Look at the names of the early posters for this thread.No worry we no dey leave lagos for you and moreover na yoruba peeps wey get the stereotype of dirtiness so no matter how u yarn here e don stick |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by babapupa: 9:03pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
asha 80: Sorry my friend, our communities were clean and thriving communities before you guys show face with slum and ghetto living. And who else cries and display bad bele over anything Lagos? lol. abeg stop. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by edoyad(m): 9:07pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
You people have started, just because someone registers with chukwu you assume that He's ibo. Some people enjoy the argument and know how to steer some people so easily. Anyways Lagos is not unclean as a result of any people's doing, Nigerians are generally very untidy people regardless whether they rich or poor(including my self). Back then in jos one could tell the house a European on a street just by how tidy and presentable the house looked. And i'm not talking about mansions here. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Nobody: 9:09pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
one could tell the house a European on a street just by how tidy and presentable the house looked this is true. Tidy, presentable, uncluttered. With neat lawns, flowers, etc. various reasons behind it, no doubt. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by asha80(m): 9:27pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
babapupa: yes as clean as ibadan as an example . stop?i never grind beans self .i repeat na yorubas dem carry dirty know. . . na just stereootype. . same with say igbos dey greedy |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Nobody: 9:31pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
^^ stop revealing your slum exposure. You're only saying you've never lived in a clean environment, hence you're only familiar with dirty areas of the places you've stayed. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by asha80(m): 9:34pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
tpia.: Yes tpia ngwa i dey ready for u now.i don ignore you for long U still need servicing just ring me |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Nobody: 9:36pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
^^sis, I'm not gay. I think you have me confused with some other folks here. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by asha80(m): 9:39pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
tpia.: tttttttaaaa you no be otapiapia again Abeg you need it. Ngwa ring me since aloyemeka no want u |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by arogbowei: 11:21pm On Feb 15, 2010 |
Na dem sabi, to me Lagos is gradually wearing a new look. By the way why did they not rate other cities in Nigeria? Bad belle people, dem no go succeed. Eko o ni baje! Had the federal government not criminally neglected Lagos, this rating might have been different. By the way who be the sponsor for this rating, na wetin be their interest/motive? We too will soon embark on rating some key institutions/infrastructures. Bad belle people. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by manny4life(m): 3:04am On Feb 16, 2010 |
asha 80: tpia.: asha 80: We have some funny people on this thread, Wait o, tpia did you call asha (m) sis? |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by whiteroses(f): 3:25am On Feb 16, 2010 |
arm robber infested city kmt but i grew up there and luv it tho. btw why is brasil not on that list |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by ziga: 4:01am On Feb 16, 2010 |
whiteroses: I think the list is real suspicious!!! I'm sorry, but i don't swallow everything i read. Anybody can come up with any rating he likes. They even say Nigerians are the happiest people on earth!!! |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Sonofpeace(m): 11:03am On Feb 16, 2010 |
@ziga, yes, Nigerians are regarded as the happiest people on earth cos we are always comfortation with ourselves no matter how poor we find ourslelves that is why we are blaming the raters of lagos state as the 5th worst city in the world instead of asking ourselves what can we do to be among the best in the world. A city like Algiers that is more condusive for living is rated 3rd worst city on earth. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by xreal: 5:39pm On Feb 16, 2010 |
Anything wey dem talk - na 4 dem pocket. EKO O NI BAJE; ALIMOSHO O NI DARU; IKOTUN NI 'LE jooo. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by jona2: 6:42pm On Feb 16, 2010 |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by jona2: 6:44pm On Feb 16, 2010 |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by edoyad(m): 6:51pm On Feb 16, 2010 |
Lagos eyes too dey tear abeg. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Kob: 8:44pm On Feb 16, 2010 |
How Africa is Becoming the New Asia By Jerry Guo | NEWSWEEK Published Feb 12, 2010 From the magazine issue dated Feb 22, 2010 Share:FacebookDiggTweetLinkedInBuzz up! Tools: 0 Post Your Comment Print Email China and India get all the headlines for their economic prowess, but there's another global growth story that is easily overlooked: Africa. In 2007 and 2008, southern Africa, the Great Lakes region of Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda, and even the drought-stricken Horn of Africa had GDP growth rates on par with Asia's two powerhouses. Last year, in the depths of global recession, the continent clocked almost 2 percent growth, roughly equal to the rates in the Middle East, and outperforming everywhere else but India and China. This year and in 2011, Africa will grow by 4.8 percent—the highest rate of growth outside Asia, and higher than even the oft-buzzed-about economies of Brazil, Russia, Mexico, and Eastern Europe, according to newly revised IMF estimates. In fact, on a per capita basis, Africans are already richer than Indians, and a dozen African states have higher gross national income per capita than China. SUBSCRIBE Click Here to subscribe to NEWSWEEK and save up to 85% >> More surprising is that much of this growth is driven not by the sale of raw materials, like oil or diamonds, but by a burgeoning domestic market, the largest outside India and China. In the last four years, the surge in private consumption of goods and services has accounted for two thirds of Africa's GDP growth. The rapidly emerging African middle class could number as many as 300 million, out of a total population of 1 billion, according to development expert Vijay Majahan, author of the 2009 book Africa Rising. While few of them have the kind of disposable income found in Asia and the West, these accountants, teachers, maids, taxi drivers, even roadside street vendors, are driving up demand for goods and services like cell phones, bank accounts, upmarket foodstuffs, and real estate. In fact, in Africa's 10 largest economies, the service sector makes up 40 percent of GDP, not too far from India's 53 percent. "The new Africa story is consumption," says Graham Thomas, head of principal investment at Standard Bank Group, which operates in 17 African countries. Much of the boom in this new consumer class can be attributed to outside forces: evolving trade patterns, particularly from increased demand coming out of China, and technological innovation abroad that spurs local productivity and growth like the multibillion-dollar fiber-optic lines that are being laid out between Africa and the developed world. Other changes are domestic and deliberate. Despite Africa's well-founded reputation for corruption and poor governance, a substantial chunk of the continent has quietly experienced this economic renaissance by dint of its virtually unprecedented political stability. Spurred by eager investors, governments have steadily deregulated industries and developed infrastructure. As a result, countries such as Kenya and Botswana now boast privately owned world-class hospitals, charter schools, and toll roads that are actually safe to drive on. A study by a World Bank program, the Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic, found that improvements in Africa's telecom infrastructure have contributed as much as 1 percent to per capita GDP growth, a bigger role than changes in monetary or fiscal policies. Shares of stocks in recently privatized local airlines, freight companies, and telecoms have skyrocketed. Entrepreneurship has increased at the same time, powered in part by the influx of returning skilled workers. Just as waves of expats returned to China and India in the 1990s to start businesses that in turn attracted more outside talent and capital, there are now signs that an entrepreneurial African diaspora will help transform the continent. While brain drain is still a chronic problem in countries such as Burundi and Malawi—some of the poorest in the world on a per capita basis—Africa's most robust economies, such as those in Ghana, Botswana, and South Africa, are beginning to see an unprecedented brain gain. According to some reports, roughly 10,000 skilled professionals have returned to Nigeria in the last year, and the number of educated Angolans seeking jobs back home has spiked 10-fold, to 1,000, in the last five years. Bart Nnaji gave up a tenured professorship at the University of Pittsburgh to move back to Nigeria in 2005 and run Geometric Power, the first private power company in sub-Saharan Africa. Its $400 million, 188-megawatt power plant will come online this fall as the sole provider of electricity for Aba, a city of 2 million in southeast Nigeria. Afam Onyema, a 30-year-old graduate of Harvard and Stanford Law, turned down six-figure offers in corporate law to build and run a $50 million state-of-the-art private hospital with a charitable component for the poor in southeast Nigeria. Many experts believe Africa, with its expansive base of newly minted consumers, may very well be on the verge of becoming the next India, thanks to frenetic urbanization and the sort of big push in services and infrastructure that transformed the Asian subcontinent 15 years ago. Just as India once harnessed its booming population of cheap labor, Africa stands to gain by the rapid growth of its big cities. Already the continent boasts the world's highest rate of urbanization, which jump-starts growth through industrialization and economies of scale. Today only a third of Africa's population lives in cities, but that segment accounts for 80 percent of total GDP, according to the U.N. Centre for Human Settlements. In the next 30 years, half the continent's population will be living in cities. Nowhere is this relationship between the consumer class and urbanization more apparent than in Lagos, Nigeria, a megalopolis of 18 million that has the anything-goes pace of a Chongqing or Mumbai. On Victoria Island, the city's commercial center, real estate is as expensive as in Manhattan. Everywhere you look, there is construction: luxury condos, office buildings, roads, even a brand-new city nearby being dredged from the sea that will hold half a million people. "Everything is in short supply, so everything's a high-growth area," explains Adedotun Sulaiman, a venture capitalist and chairman of Accenture in Nigeria. "In terms of opportunities, it's just mind-blowing." Aliko Dangote, Africa's richest black entrepreneur, has also cashed in on this consumer culture, with a net worth of $2.5 billion, according to Forbes. His empire, which began in 1978 as a trading business that imported, among other things, baby food, cement, and frozen fish, is focused on Nigeria's burgeoning domestic growth, producing cement for shopping and office complexes; renting luxury condos; making noodles, flour, and sugar; and now expanding into services such as 3G mobile networks and transportation. "There's nowhere you can make money like in Nigeria," says the 53-year-old Dangote. "It's the world's best-kept secret." Not anymore. A recent study by Oxford economist Paul Collier of all 954 publicly traded African companies operating between 2000 and 2007 found that their annual return on capital was on average 65 percent higher than those of similar firms in China, India, Vietnam, or Indonesia because labor costs are skyrocketing in Asia. Their median profit margin, 11 percent, was also higher than in Asia or South America. African mobile operators, for instance, showed the highest profit margins in the industry worldwide. As a result, foreign multinationals like Unilever, Nestlé, and Swissport International report some of their highest growth in Africa. So even as foreign direct investment fell by 20 percent worldwide in 2008, capital in-flows to Africa actually jumped 16 percent, to $61.9 billion, its highest level ever, according to a report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Even Chinese companies are thinking of outsourcing basic manufacturing to Africa. The World Bank is now helping China set up an industrial zone in Ethiopia, the first of perhaps several offshore centers akin to the sprawling free-trade zones that opened up China's economy in the 1980s. Still, Africa remains at the very frontier of emerging markets. Despite its gains, the difficulty and cost of running a business there are the highest in the world, according to data from the International Monetary Fund. Couple that with pervasive corruption—Transparency International calls the problem "rampant" in 36 of 53 African states—and it's no wonder Africa is often regarded as a toxic place to operate. But World Bank president Robert Zoellick says that in the aftermath of the economic crisis, long-term investors have recognized that "developed markets have big risks too." Like China and India, Africa is exploiting that fact, and perhaps more than any other region it is illustrative of a new world order in which the poorest nations will still find ways to steam ahead. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by CGKing(m): 12:43am On Feb 17, 2010 |
Thank God they called it a city. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Sonofpeace(m): 8:41am On Feb 17, 2010 |
CGKing:what do you call Eko before, A village? |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by ezeagu(m): 9:45am On Feb 17, 2010 |
Sonofpeace: Some call it a glorified slum. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Nobody: 9:48am On Feb 17, 2010 |
^^ they're welcome to their opinion |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by Jayjj(m): 11:22am On Feb 17, 2010 |
Thank God lagos was recognise it means we are means we are moving somewhere up lagos state. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by persius: 2:30pm On Feb 17, 2010 |
lagos is what it is because of that filth. white men wont understand it. people make a living, live and feed from the filth. lagos the garbage city.at least it is not worst than onitsha |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by xreal: 3:42pm On Feb 17, 2010 |
Jayjj:Indeed a newbie. U wellcome anyway. |
Re: Lagos Rated ‘fifth Worst City’ by An0nimus: 4:18pm On Feb 17, 2010 |
Na new thing?, NEXT!!! |
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