Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,193,453 members, 7,950,961 topics. Date: Tuesday, 17 September 2024 at 07:46 AM

Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj (667 Views)

Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime And Few Jobs / Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs - Al Jazeerah / Over 6,000 Nigerians Under Crime Investigation In South Africa – High Commission (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by KRSWon: 7:13am On Jun 17, 2021
If there was ever a time Nigeria could have taken off, it was in 1999. Democracy had been restored, with its economy reopening after decades of mismanagement and plunder under military dictatorships.

Tomi Davies, a systems analyst, was one of thousands of Nigerians who came home to help rebuild the country. After a few years working on public-sector projects, he was offered a bag full of dollars to add ghost employees to the payroll system he was installing. When he refused, a group of men attacked him at his home in the capital, Abuja.

“I arrived like many others full of hope, but had to escape in disgust,” said Davies, 65, who returned to the U.K., where he is now chief investment officer of Frankfurt-based venture capital firm GreenTec Capital Partners.


Others like him have left too, defeated by the dashed aspirations of a nation that wasn’t supposed to turn out this way. Endowed with some of the world’s biggest oil reserves, plenty of arable land and a young, tech-savvy population of 206 million that sets Africa’s music and fashion trends, Nigeria had the potential to break onto the global stage.

Instead, policy missteps, entrenched corruption and an over-reliance on crude oil mean that a country that makes up a quarter of the continent’s economy risks becoming its biggest problem. A dangerous cauldron of ethnic tension, youth discontent and criminality threatens to spread more poverty and violence to a region quickly falling behind the rest of the world.

Since its discovery in the 1950s, beneath the mangrove forests of its south eastern coast, oil has dictated the boom and bust cycles of the former British colony, with the commodity now accounting for 90% of exports and half of government revenue.

Poverty Capital

The economy has yet to recover from the oil crash of 2014, and is unlikely to do so anytime soon, meaning its population will continue to out pace economic expansion adding more poor to what is already the poverty capital of the world. Over 90 million people live in penury, more than India, which has a population seven times greater.

A presidential spokesman referred questions to the government’s economics team. The finance ministry and central bank didn’t respond to several requests for comment.



The coronavirus has only made things worse. Personal incomes are set to fall to their lowest in four decades, pushing an additional 11 million people into poverty by 2022, according to the World Bank. One in three Nigerians in the workforce unemployed, among the world’s highest jobless rates, fanning social discontent and insecurity.

Policy blunders by President Muhammadu Buhari have complicated the road to recovery. He came to power in 2015 pledging to create 12 million jobs in his first four-year term; halfway through his second term, unemployment has more than quadrupled.

Buhari, 78, revived an import-substitution drive that was popular when he was a military ruler in the early 1980s, crippling businesses that can’t get goods to survive. He has banned foreign currency for imports of dozens of products from toothpicks to cement, closed borders to halt rice smuggling and refused to fully ease exchange controls.


Policies like this have curbed foreign investment, pushed food inflation to 15-year highs and scared off companies such as South Africa’s supermarket chain Shoprite Holdings Ltd.

“The government made so many mistakes even before the pandemic made things worse,” said Amina Ado, who was one of Buhari’s oil advisers from 2017 to 2020. “We need to urgently change course because we are big enough to matter in the world.”


The roots of the malaise though, predate Buhari. Under British rule, Nigeria’s three main regions, divided along ethnic and religious lines, were awkwardly sandwiched together in a 1914 amalgamation. Since independence in 1960, elites from the largely Christian south west and south east have tussled for power with the Muslim north.

“Political instability is a huge obstacle to the kind of deep, long-term institutional economic reforms needed for Nigeria to be able to kick start,” said Zainab Usman, director of the African program at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Oil led to the dismantling of what little industry there was by opening the floodgates to cheap imports financed by a strong local currency. Countries like Malaysia and Indonesia, which were as poor as Nigeria in the 1960s, have surpassed it in per-capita income after diversifying.



A surge in corruption also wrested away resources needed for infrastructure and a reliable power supply — both of which are lacking.

“In a lot of countries, people are used to officials skimming something off the top, but ultimately delivering something,” said Matthew T Page, an associate fellow at Chatham House in London. “In Nigeria, everything is skimmed off the top and nothing is delivered.”

Security Meltdown

Mistrust of the state and poverty seeded violence. A decade-long jihadist insurgency in the northeast rages on despite Buhari’s claims to have defeated Boko Haram militants in 2015. Piracy has also made the Gulf of Guinea one of the world’s most dangerous waters, while inland, a deadly conflict between nomadic herders and farmers in the middle of the country is moving south. A new separatist rebellion is emerging in the south east, where a secessionist attempt to create the republic of Biafra sparked civil war in the 1960s.

Kidnapping has surged to its highest in at least a decade, according to data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project. Nearly 900 students were taken from schools in mass abductions since December, according to the United Nations.



It wasn’t always like this. As a child in the 1980s, Alvari Banu remembers the short road trips to visit the family farm between Abuja and the northern city of Kaduna. Now, kidnappings on the same road have kept him away for almost three years.

“The situation is getting worse,” said Banu, 41, a financial consultant. “The government has completely failed to provide even basic security.”

Disorder is a huge impediment for growth, costing the economy $10.3 billion in 2020 — more than the federal government’s total revenue that same year, according to official estimates. Without key reforms, Nigeria’s economy will remain anemic, expanding little more than 2% this year and next, still below the population growth rate, according to the International Monetary Fund.

In the meantime, the government is living on borrowed money, with debt service costs eating up over 80% of its revenue.

“This could end up in an external debt default if things don’t change,” said Charlie Robertson, global chief economist with Renaissance Capital, an emerging and frontier markets investment bank.


To avoid calamity, the government needs to allow the currency to depreciate, invest in electricity and campaign to lower fertility rates, which at 5.3 births per woman is one of the world’s highest and saps savings, said Robertson. Climbing oil prices, a planned sovereign bond sale and upcoming disbursement of IMF resources will help the country muddle through for now, said Omotola Abimbola, an analyst at Lagos-based investment bank Chapel Hill Denham.
The brunt of the economic decline is falling on the young, two-thirds of whom are either jobless or under-employed. With a median age of 18, the country’s population is growing restless and disconnected from the aging political class that lives in luxury. Last year, protests over police brutality became a nationwide uprising that paralyzed major cities, curbed only by a violent crackdown that killed dozens.

“There is a lot of frustration because there are a lot of overqualified people unemployed,” said Chioma Okafor, a 32-year-old public health-care expert who moved back to Nigeria in 2014. After two years making $200 a month in consulting in Abuja, and with no prospect of a better job, Okafor borrowed money to buy a one-way ticket back to the U.S.

“When Buhari came to office, people were expecting things to change,” she said. “But it’s not just Buhari that failed. The system is broken.”

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG

https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2021/6/15/once-africas-promise-nigeria-is-heaving-under-crime-scare-jobs

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by MansoryMX(m): 7:19am On Jun 17, 2021
She said and I quote “When Buhari came to office, people were expecting things to change,” she said. “But it’s not just Buhari that failed. The system is broken.”

The moment this administration started doing giveaways called N-power to silence people instead of creating employments and making the country productive! I knew Nigerians have entered one chance!

Under Buhari these are the following results in percentage below:


Electricity sector- 0%

Security- 0%

Road - 0%

Portable drinking water - 0%

GDP in the last 6 years - 0%

External Debt falls to

Purchasing power of Naira - -000%

Employment - 0%

Inflation of Commodities - 700%

Tribalism - 100%

Nepotism - 3000%

Religious bigotry - 8000%

Nigeria's foreign exchange reserve falls to lowest in 10 months by 1.79%

External Debts 7 trillion naira ($33.3 billion)


BMCs; Children of stupidity who have been Zombified will still tell you Buhari is working!



[img]https://media1./images/21131d0988f996d094987caf48bb7084/tenor.gif?itemid=13752202[/img]

9 Likes

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by richmond500: 7:20am On Jun 17, 2021
Me, I am going to enjoy my life, if my future wants, let it not be bright and be following Nigeria.

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by FarahAideed: 7:20am On Jun 17, 2021
Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs and BUHARI!!!

2 Likes

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by Shedrack777: 7:37am On Jun 17, 2021
all these crimes wey dey happen for nigeria na my fault. blame it on me
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by RuddyFusion(m): 7:38am On Jun 17, 2021
Reaping the seed sown to push out GEJ.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by Kriss216: 7:42am On Jun 17, 2021
BUHARI has nothing to offer Nigeria/ns. Man is a failure!


Some dickheadss are still clamouring for Tinubu, an international well recognized thief to take over from Buhari, a failure. Peak of foolishness!

2 Likes

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by psucc(m): 7:51am On Jun 17, 2021
The problem with Nigeria is inborn. It all started with the yoking of unequal Protectorates or Countries together. The Britain set a time bomb that is now killing Nigerians apandan.

Till it is separated, the quest to measure up with others, by any means available, including killings, corruption, etc remains.

2 Likes

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by colorsofrainbow: 7:52am On Jun 17, 2021
APC miscreants are scarce these days on nairaland cos most headlines these days aren't ESN/IPOB/Nnamdi Kanu related,instead it's all about Buhari's failed leadership.
Just post one thread and tag ipob/Nnamdi Kanu boom! they would fall in like recently released refugees.

1 Like

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by Otuegbe: 8:31am On Jun 17, 2021
Buhari, you are a failure.
Even Abacha govt was better
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by FreeIgbos: 8:34am On Jun 17, 2021
The country is now a huge a huge disappointment, an embarrassment to Africa and Blacks globally.

The only way out now is to balkanize it, divide the contraption into manageable countries and save lives!

People should look critically at the things that dashed our hopes and you will notice how it was the North!
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by descarado: 12:04pm On Jun 17, 2021
With selfishness at the top of the ladder
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by TheFreeOne: 12:37pm On Jun 17, 2021
Instead, policy missteps, entrenched corruption and an over-reliance on crude oil mean that a country that makes up a quarter of the continent’s economy risks becoming its biggest problem. A dangerous cauldron of ethnic tension, youth discontent and criminality threatens to spread more poverty and violence to a region quickly falling behind the rest of the world.

Disorder is a huge impediment for growth, costing the economy $10.3 billion in 2020 — more than the federal government’s total revenue that same year, according to official estimates. Without key reforms, Nigeria’s economy will remain anemic, expanding little more than 2% this year and next, still below the population growth rate, according to the International Monetary Fund.


“When Buhari came to office, people were expecting things to change,” she said. “But it’s not just Buhari that failed. The system is broken.”


The system needs to be restructured fast lest everything falls of the cliff into dissolution but the selfish political leaders are in slumber thinking all is well.
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by festacman(m): 12:45pm On Jun 17, 2021
Ok
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by xxxXXXxxx: 1:13pm On Jun 17, 2021
The reality of a false contraption.

"As the individual reaps what he sows, so the nation, being a community of individuals, reaps also what it sows. Nations become great when their leaders are just men; they fall and fade when their just men pass away.
Those who are in power set an example, good or bad, for the entire nation.

Great will be the peace and prosperity of a nation when there shall arise within it a line of statesmen who, having first established themselves in a lofty integrity of character, shall direct the energies of the nation toward the culture of virtue and development of character, knowing that only through personal industry, integrity, and nobility can national prosperity proceed."

Excerpt from James Allen's Mastery of destiny.
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by KRSWon: 2:38pm On Jun 17, 2021
TheFreeOne:







The system needs to be restructured fast lest everything falls of the cliff into dissolution but the selfish political leaders are in slumber thinking all is well.

It seems like the country was built on a faulty foundation.
undecided
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by TheFreeOne: 11:12am On Jun 22, 2021
KRSWon:


It seems like the country was built on a faulty foundation.
undecided

The 1963 constitution in terms of federalism, fiscal control, the distribution, management and control of resources is the best thing to have ever happened to this country.

Until we restructure, the country will keep going in circles of failures and injustices with no genuine development and sense of belonging of the various components within this geographical space of disunity that is fast tilting towards dissolution.
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by CSTRR: 11:45am On Jun 22, 2021
Go to Twitter.

There are still some people defending Buhari.

Just like the article has rightly said, in 2023 we need a direct opposite of every policy Buhari represents or it is over.
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by nijabazaar: 12:34pm On Jun 22, 2021
If I should ever become president, the most important policy is to find a way to lower fertility rates. An educated south might understand the need to have fewer children but you see the Neanderthals up north, they will never see. A people that believes that the number of children they have is an indication of Gods grace is a stupid race.


Now let me market myself. I do visual effects for films. If you need an animated music video or a creature for your films, call my team 0905. 1 6 7 5481

Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by KRSWon: 12:39pm On Jun 22, 2021
TheFreeOne:


The 1963 constitution in terms of federalism, fiscal control, the distribution, management and control of resources is the best thing to have ever happened to this country.

Until we restructure, the country will keep going in circles of failures and injustices with no genuine development and sense of belonging of the various components within this geographical space of disunity that is fast tilting towards dissolution.

Which do you feel might the way to go for the individual regions: restructuring or dissolution?
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by IGBOSON1: 1:28pm On Jun 22, 2021
How are the mighty fallen!

I wonder what the likes of Zik, Awo, etc would say if they were raised from the dead to see what has become of the country they were going to England for in the 50s for all those constitutional conferences in preparation for independence! Imagine the hopes and aspirations they had for their people back then...compare it to what’s on ground today!
Re: Once Africa’s Promise, Nigeria Is Heaving Under Crime, Few Jobs- Bloomberg/aj by mushystuff: 1:36pm On Jun 22, 2021
Lai Mohammed and Shehu Garba will soon call them enemies of Nigeria and IPOB tools of disintegration.
Shebi that idiot called Lai just claimed that Agriculture is awesome and that food prices have crashed? In the same country that farmers are unable to repay CBN anchor borowers loan because of insecurity?

2 Likes

(1) (Reply)

2023: PDP’ll Be Back In Aso Rock- Secondus / Nnamdi Kanu Set To Land In More Trouble, Read The New Charges / Apply: This Two Companies Want To Make 300 Youth Millionaires

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 44
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.