Being an address
delivered by Asiwaju Tinubu as Principal Guest of Honour/Keynote Speaker at the
2017 Annual Dinner of the King’s College Old Boys’ Association (KCOBA) on
Saturday, September 23rd, 2017 at King’s College, Lagos.
THE FITTING TOOLS
OF A GREAT REPAIR
Whatever becomes of what
is said this day, let it be noted that we gathered under this roof in the
spirit of democratic discourse and enlightenment. In the fateful procession of
time and events, Justice, Progress and Compassion shall eventually overcome the
awful strength of their opposites.
In one way or another,
we all have felt the sting of man’s capacity to wrong his fellow man. But we
are also endowed with the God-given spirit to overcome adversity and to make of
old enemies, new allies and even brothers. I stand before you as a faithful
believer in sentiments such as these.
Before I go further, I
thank the Kings College Old Boys Association for the honour you do by inviting
me to this fine occasion.
Collectively and individually
you have contributed mightily to this nation. If there were more people imbued
with the values of King’s College, Nigeria would be a better place.
At the risk of being
somewhat nonconformist, I have modified the topic to reflect something that
requires a bit more reflection. While we are here enjoying a splendid dinner,
let us give ourselves some food for thought as well.
We must clearly
articulate our objectives. That which we cannot think clearly, will not be
attained despite the magnitude of our exertions and expenditure to achieve it.
One cannot be assured that an architect’s fine design will result in a fine
building. Much can go awry during the process of transforming idea into brick
and mortar.
However, we can be
certain that a masterful building is never the result of flawed design.
In this vein, I dabble
not so much in the search for a new Nigeria. I am equally not enthused about
the flaws of old Nigeria. What I seek is a better Nigeria.
I care not whether
something is old or new but whether it shall make us better. Not all change is
good. Not every new thing shall be kind to us.
Yes, Nigeria must change
but some of the changes we need cannot be bought at the store of the new. Many
things we need are shelved in the warehouse of the old. Just as we must learn
new things on one hand, we must remember vital old wisdom on the other.
This is where
associations such as this are so valuable. You represent an inventory of vast
knowledge. This should be used not to stifle change but to guide it toward its
best purpose.
The trend today is to
believe progress and improvement are basically functions of technology and
science. That politics and governance matter little and change almost nothing.
That talk of political reform spills out of the leaking chalice of
dreamers. Or is but an intoxicant used by cynical political operators to
delude the public.
Skepticism abounds. The
only strong belief is to disbelief. Not enough people seek to improve society.
They are told that only the foolish looks out for his neighbor and respects his
adversary.
They are taught the only
thing to do is to look out for one’s self. If thy neighbor stumbles, reach down
not to pick him up but to take those things he dropped while falling. Self-profit
is the only commandment. All else is make-believe, things heard in the
church and mosque but to be left there and not pursued in the course of
everyday life.
The very dynamics of the
current political economy is to separate people from each other. Such mean
isolation was never part of us but it has crept into our culture. Of this brand
of newness, I want no part.
The world has entered a
period where progressive, humane reform are not fashionable. We are told to be
practical, to accept the way things are. There is no struggle over competing
ideals; we are told the current political economy is immutable. The only thing
that matters is whether you master its dynamics to succeed or you sink and
fail. To attempt to change things is as futile as trying to change the sky and
clouds themselves.
This is a blatant lie.
Change is possible and change we must. There is no such thing as having no
ideology. Every political and economic institutions are founded on one thought
system or another. To accept the false premise that there is no alternative to
how things are is to acquiesce in the unfair ideology that has brought us to
our current predicament.
In the hard sciences
such as physics, chemistry or mathematics, one can speak of immutable
principles and objective formula. In the affairs of men, most things are
subjective. Virtue and vice, good and bad, what is optimal and what is not have
no fixed meaning. Definitions change with the ideological and moral perspective
of each person.
In the face of
recession, one man fires most of his employees in order to maintain his own
income level. Another man accepts to receive less income so that he may retain
his workers. Two men faced with the same circumstance. Each made a decision of
equal soundness with regard to the rational or intellectual quality of the
thinking processes that led to the decisions. However, the decisions call forth
two divergent value systems that suggest two vastly different visions of how
the political economy should function whether in or out of crisis.
As in almost all social
interactions, there are few acts devoid of subjective ideological coloration.
The decisions we make are determined by how we would like the world to be – our
very actions are determined by what we value so as to keep and what we are
willing to discard when the ship of state is tossed either by storm or errant
navigation.
Since there is no one
objective optimal standard by which to construct a political economy, it would
seem prudent for a nation to dedicate a healthy amount of time discussing this
fundamental matter. For such is the surest path to reaching consensus on what
economic development and good governance mean in our particular context.
Sadly, the obverse is
true. We talk little about this core issue. Instead, we spend inordinate time
bickering over the symptoms of our failure to discuss the core issue.
We are like the
bewildered couple who has gotten their marriage license after a lavish wedding;
yet neither of them really understands the meaning of marriage or their roles
as husband and wife in it. Legally, they are married but functionally, their
union is a crippled one. This couple will be at loggerheads until somehow,
someway they forge an agreement on what type of home they want and what are
their respective duties in making that home come into existence.
It is a rather curious
lapse that a nation with such diversity as ours has not taken the time to give
our legal marriage its proper functional underpinning. In other words, we all
lined up to call ourselves Nigerian without gathering to discuss what it meant.
Thus, we inhabit a nation that has not sufficiently defined its governance. We
may be defined by political borders and boundaries but we have not glued
ourselves to collective purpose and vision. Too many of us are born in Nigeria
but not of it.
Thus, our society is not
a collective enterprise as important to each of us as our own personal
endeavor. It is but a platform, an arena, to claim whatever one can by whatever
means available.
In too many ways we
resemble a wrestling match instead of the nation we were meant to become.
Thus, we argue over
matters that long ago should have been settled. The longer such fundamental
questions fester, the more extreme become the proposed answers.
Thus, we have people
clamoring for secession in one part of the country and the murmur of such a
course grows stronger in other sections.
These other areas resent
that some have advocated secession. Blame and recrimination become the
political currency. Statesmanship falls in short supply. The dominant urge is
to confront instead of reconcile.
It would be wrong to
mistake this for a tempest in a teapot. If not careful, we may be tossed about
like a teapot in a tempest.
We must listen to what
is being said so that we can determine what is really meant.
Let us be frank. Many
who cry separation do so because their personal ambitions will be better served
by such a thing. They believe they will have greater chance at political power
under a different arrangement. Yet the cry for separation has gained traction
among average people; this is due to the chronic failure of government to meet
basic aspirations.
If over the years,
government had delivered on the promise of growth, prosperity, and justice,
those calling for such extreme remedies would be but a small fringe of little
consequence.
Our task is not to
condemn but to listen and understand. I care not at all for this proposed
solution. But I dare not discount the concerns and problems that have led many
people into advocating such a thing.
Here, I want to plainly
state my position. I am a firm believer in Nigeria. I believe this land will
become a great nation and a leader among other African nations. We can resolve
our dysfunctions in a manner that will make this nation rise as a standard of
decency, justice and prosperity for all Nigerians.
So many excellent people
have devoted themselves, even given their very lives, to give life to this
nation. I dare not cast aside their hardy and brave work as if it were
nothing. Many things we now enjoy and see as good are due to these people. We
have benefited from their labor and sacrifice. Many of you have likewise
sacrificed because selfless values and working for something noble and larger
than your own advancement are the precious lessons King’s College taught you.
Morality and my understanding of our history will not allow me to discard such
contributions to our humanity and common welfare.
Being more pragmatic,
separating the nation into small pieces resolves nothing and creates additional
problems. The world marches toward integration. Europe, America, Asia seek
trade and commercial pacts that will make them more integrated markets.
Notwithstanding Brexit, the EU grows more integrated in the functions of
governance by the day. Thus, while nations more powerful and developed than us
seek to pool their wealth and might, some of us seek to whittle this nation
into smaller pieces.
Such a thing would make
us more vulnerable to outside influences. We would forfeit our rightful
place on the world stage and as a leader of this continent.
Moreover, not every
split solves a problem. The political mentality, either good or bad, that
defined a group before the split will remain after the divide. If one is imbued
with factionalism, that perspective will remain even when the immediate problem
is surmounted. Division will manifest differently, but manifest it will.
A new factional bigotry
will arise to replace the old. The cycle of tension and unrest will take its
inexorable toll. Just ask the people of South Sudan if their woes ended when
they left Sudan.
When your heart is
geared toward division, you will seek it within a single tribe, even a single
family. The gossamer of ethnic unity will be ripped apart by sub-ethnic
squabble. An angry man outside his home remains angry inside it as well and a
thief steals from both stranger and friend.
Driven by such a
mentality, even someone you once called your brother becomes a nuisance, then a
burden, and ultimately your enemy in short order.
Thus, I oppose talk of
break-up and all other exotic political arrangements tantamount to it. That I
am a foe of disunity does not mean I have blinded myself to the truth that our
nation is in need of great repair.
We all see the nation
for what it is. Some look further to see the nation for what it is not and they
rush to condemn it.
I choose to see the
nation for what it can be and thus seek to nurture and cultivate it so that
this Nigeria may bring forth the fullest blossoming of its riches, resources and
ingenuity of its diverse people.
We need a better Nigeria
and we must move toward it with speed. Once an ally, time no longer is on our
side.
To achieve this better
place means some old things must change. But it also means that we must revive
some practices we have tried to forget.
I will offer you a
thematic overview for laying the foundation of a better nation. I pretend not
to give all the answers. What I give is my humble initial contribution to the
overdue discourse on how to mould and shape our political economy.
Our current national
economic model is but an old, crumbling house. Repairing this edifice is the
greatest challenge confronting us.
We allowed a once
vibrant, diverse economy to atrophy into something overly dependent on oil
revenue and on the rent-seeking behavior such revenues encourage. Even at the
best of times and with the highest of oil prices, the economy was characterized
by imbalance and inefficiency. Widespread poverty, gross inequality and massive
unemployment described our condition.
We survived but did not
flourish. But bothered not to change because we thought oil would always be
able to pay for everything.
Because of this, we left
millions upon millions of our people in the clutch of destitution.
Poverty became their abundance and joblessness their vocation, despair their
faith.
The secular decline in
oil prices revealed our extant economic model for the travesty it is. Should we
continue along its sad path, history will write of us that we chose
self-destruction over progress for no reasons other than inertia and
arrogance. Future generations will utter “there went the best chance of
Nigeria.” This is not a verdict I want attached to my name and our generation.
We must refuse to be
bondsmen to failure.
Here are some ideas that
may aid this vital economic repair.
We are among the world’s
most populous nations. We must realize that no populous nation has ever
attained broadly- shared prosperity without first creating an industrial
capacity that employs large numbers of people and manufactures a significant
quantity of goods for domestic consumption or export.
In one form or another,
England, America and China implemented policies to protect key industries,
promote employment and encourage exports.
These three nations
represent the past, present and immediate future of national economic
achievement. A strong common thread is their policies of buffering strategic
industries in ways that allows for the expansion and growth of the overall
economy.
We must press forward
with a national industrial policy fostering development of strategic industries
that create jobs as well as spur further economic growth. Whether we decide to
focus attention on steel, textiles, cars, machinery components, or other items,
we must focus on manufacturing things that Nigerians and the rest of the world
value and want to buy.
We must partially reshape the market place to accomplish this. The federal government should institute a policy of tax credits, subsidies and insulate critical sectors from the negative impact of imports.
We must partially reshape the market place to accomplish this. The federal government should institute a policy of tax credits, subsidies and insulate critical sectors from the negative impact of imports.
We need a national
infrastructure plan. Roads, ports, bridges and railways need enhancing and new
ones need to be built, the goal must be a coherently-planned and integrated
infrastructural grid. A national economy cannot grow beyond the capacity of the
infrastructure that serves it. Good infrastructure yields a prospering economy.
Weak infrastructure relegates the economy to the poorhouse. Government must
take the lead.
The focus on
infrastructure has important corollary benefit. Federal expenditure for needed
infrastructural spending has empirically proven in every place and in every era
to boost recessionary economies and provide employment when sorely needed.
Deficit spending in our own currency to advance this mission is neither a
luxury nor a mistake. It is a fulcrum of and balanced and shared prosperity.
We must overcome the
economic, political and bureaucratic bottlenecks preventing us from achieving
reliable electrical power.
This is perhaps the
single greatest impediment to economic advancement. The lack of power inflates
costs, undercuts productivity, causing havoc to overall economic activity and
job creation. Our economic situation is literally and figuratively in the dark.
The hurdles we face are not technical in nature.
The hurdles we face are not technical in nature.
We must convince those
political and economic factors currently impeding our quest for reliable power
to step aside that we may obtain this critical ingredient to economic vitality.
Modern economies are
based on credit. However, credit for business investment is too costly in
Nigeria.
The long-term economic
strength of the nation is dependent on how we deploy now idle men, material and
machines into productive endeavor. And this is highly dependent on the interest
rate.
The CBN must cure its
affection for high interest rates. Lower rates are required so our
industrialists may borrow without fear that excessive costs of borrowing will
consign them to irredeemable debt. The normal profit rates in most business
sectors cannot support the burden imposed by current interest rates.
If our industrialists do
not invest in more plant, equipment and jobs, the economy will stagnate. The
banking system would have achieved its goal of low interest rates at the
greater costs of economic growth. This is as misguided as trying to save a
branch by chopping down the tree.
Consumer credit must be
more accessible to the average person. The prevailing norm is for a person to
purchase high -priced items such as a car in one lump sum. This is oppressive.
It defeats the average person and constrains transactions in real estate,
vehicles and appliances that could vitalize the economy.
The government-backed
home mortgage system must be re-engineered. Mortgage loan agencies must
be better funded, and liberalize their eligibility requirements so that more
people qualify. They need to provide longer-term mortgages with manageable
interest rates. Government should provide the supporting guarantees to make
such financing a reality.
By sparking the
effective demand for housing, the overall economy is enhanced. The construction
sector and the industries allied to it will surge.
Moreover, to the extent
that a man has a house he calls his own, that man is content; his contentment
and innate common sense will act as brakes against instability and reckless
political conduct.
Also, a workable credit
system lessens corruption. The current lump-sum payment requirement tempts
people toward misconduct. They see no other way to secure such large sums.
Their wages will not suffice. Thus, they either must steal the money, beg for
it or forego the purchase. Having an accessible credit system that provides for
periodic installment payments places a purchase within the reach of a person’s
wages. They no longer have to equate being honest with doing without.
Agriculture remains the
backbone of the nation. We must help the common farmer by improving rural
output and incomes. This is best done via ensuring minimum prices for
crops strategic to food security. Here, we must revive an old practice and
policy that served us well. Though effective, this policy was shunned because
it conflicted with the free market totems that we were asked to erect against
our own interests.
We must return to commodity exchange boards which will allow farmers to secure good prices and hedge against loss. An agricultural mortgage loan corporation should be inaugurated to further promote these goals.
We must return to commodity exchange boards which will allow farmers to secure good prices and hedge against loss. An agricultural mortgage loan corporation should be inaugurated to further promote these goals.
The proposals stated
above are largely within the province of the federal government. Focusing on
these and other such things will keep the federal government sufficiently busy.
Sadly, the federal government is now doing things the states can perform with
equal dexterity and which detract the federal government from the key missions
only it can perform.
This imbalance between
the roles of the federal and state governments lies at the root of our
difficulties.
To achieve better levels of overall governance, we need to re-balance the duties of the federal and state governments. The legacy of undemocratic rule has arrogated too much power and resources to the federal at the expense of state governments. The quest to correct the imbalance is the essence of federalism I have advocated for so many years.
Due to our particular political history and its military legacy, the quality of our federalism and the quality of our democracy are intertwined. The more we repair federalism, is the more we improve democracy.
In my mind, federalism denotes a division of labour between the federal and state governments that functions to maximize the benefits of governance to the people. True federalism is that brand which provides that the federal government should focus on those few but essential things only it can provide such as foreign policy, defense, and national economic policy. Additionally, in those matters where uniform standards and requirements are appropriate, the federal government must take the lead.
To achieve better levels of overall governance, we need to re-balance the duties of the federal and state governments. The legacy of undemocratic rule has arrogated too much power and resources to the federal at the expense of state governments. The quest to correct the imbalance is the essence of federalism I have advocated for so many years.
Due to our particular political history and its military legacy, the quality of our federalism and the quality of our democracy are intertwined. The more we repair federalism, is the more we improve democracy.
In my mind, federalism denotes a division of labour between the federal and state governments that functions to maximize the benefits of governance to the people. True federalism is that brand which provides that the federal government should focus on those few but essential things only it can provide such as foreign policy, defense, and national economic policy. Additionally, in those matters where uniform standards and requirements are appropriate, the federal government must take the lead.
All other matters should
be left to the states. If there is doubt over a particular issue, the
presumption should be that the states, not the federal government, should take
the lead.
Here, I say to those so
eager to dispense with federalism in favour of more rash and impractical
remedies, let us first truly practice federalism before we deem it a failure.
If given but a fair chance, we just might perfect federalism by making it work
for the benefit of all of us.
Constitutionally, we are
a federation of 36 states. However, the vestiges of past military rule continue
to haunt the democratic road we hew. We function like a unitary state in many
ways.
We cannot become a better Nigeria with an undue concentration of power at the federal level. Competition for federal office will be too intense, akin to a winner-take-all duel. Those who lose, will bristle at the lack of power in the periphery they occupy. They will scheme to pester and undermine the strong executive because that is where they want to be. The executive will become so engaged in deflecting their antics, that it will not devote its great powers to the issues of progressive governance for which such powers were bestowed. Things will be in a constant state of disequilibrium and irritation. Such a situation augurs toward the maintenance of an unsatisfactory status quo in the political economy. It augurs against reform.
It would be better to restructure things to attain the correct balance between our collective purpose on one hand and our separate grassroots realities on the other.
Many of the 68 items on the Exclusive Federal List should be transferred to the Residual List. This would be in harmony with the 1963 Constitution, again an instance of reaching back to revive something old yet more likely to give us a better Nigeria.
That prior constitution granted vast powers to the regions enabling them to carry out their immense responsibilities as they saw fit.
By virtue of the clear fact that regional governments were closer to the people, they had a better feel for the material and intangible priorities of their populations. We must return to this ideal.
Some items which should left for the states to handle such as police, prisons, stamp duties, regulation of tourist traffic, registration of business names, incorporation of companies, traffic on federal truck roads passing through states, trade, commerce and census are now on the Exclusive List for the federal government.
Regarding the all-important electrical power, while the federal government takes the lead, there is no logical reason to limit states to generate, transmit and distribute electricity only to areas not covered by the national grid.
The states should be allowed to augment power generation so long as they do not undermine federal operations. For instance, a state may wish to develop an industrial park or housing estate either of which will require a boost in power generation. However, if the national government does not agree, the state will be foreclosed from projects that provide jobs and better living conditions to its people. This is not in keeping with the spirit of federalism. It is consonant with an undemocratic tradition that keeps us from approaching a better Nigeria.
As an adjunct, we should also seek to re-calibrate the revenue sharing formula in order to bring more funds to the state and local levels so they can answer their enlarged responsibilities.
We cannot become a better Nigeria with an undue concentration of power at the federal level. Competition for federal office will be too intense, akin to a winner-take-all duel. Those who lose, will bristle at the lack of power in the periphery they occupy. They will scheme to pester and undermine the strong executive because that is where they want to be. The executive will become so engaged in deflecting their antics, that it will not devote its great powers to the issues of progressive governance for which such powers were bestowed. Things will be in a constant state of disequilibrium and irritation. Such a situation augurs toward the maintenance of an unsatisfactory status quo in the political economy. It augurs against reform.
It would be better to restructure things to attain the correct balance between our collective purpose on one hand and our separate grassroots realities on the other.
Many of the 68 items on the Exclusive Federal List should be transferred to the Residual List. This would be in harmony with the 1963 Constitution, again an instance of reaching back to revive something old yet more likely to give us a better Nigeria.
That prior constitution granted vast powers to the regions enabling them to carry out their immense responsibilities as they saw fit.
By virtue of the clear fact that regional governments were closer to the people, they had a better feel for the material and intangible priorities of their populations. We must return to this ideal.
Some items which should left for the states to handle such as police, prisons, stamp duties, regulation of tourist traffic, registration of business names, incorporation of companies, traffic on federal truck roads passing through states, trade, commerce and census are now on the Exclusive List for the federal government.
Regarding the all-important electrical power, while the federal government takes the lead, there is no logical reason to limit states to generate, transmit and distribute electricity only to areas not covered by the national grid.
The states should be allowed to augment power generation so long as they do not undermine federal operations. For instance, a state may wish to develop an industrial park or housing estate either of which will require a boost in power generation. However, if the national government does not agree, the state will be foreclosed from projects that provide jobs and better living conditions to its people. This is not in keeping with the spirit of federalism. It is consonant with an undemocratic tradition that keeps us from approaching a better Nigeria.
As an adjunct, we should also seek to re-calibrate the revenue sharing formula in order to bring more funds to the state and local levels so they can answer their enlarged responsibilities.
In this regard, the
residual effect of the old unitary system has made hash of the Paris Club
refunds owed the various state governments. Money that is owed the
states, belongs to the states. We all support propriety of expenditure. The
sentiment behind the withholding is understandable if not laudable. But the
federal government has no right to withhold funds that constitutionally belong
to the states. The fear of possible misuse of funds is no reason to violate the
constitution. Provide the funds to the states as legally required.
Committed and fine governors will use the funds wisely. And the people will be
better off. As to those who squander the money, there are appropriate ways to
expose and sanction them. This is where the federal government can
appropriately step in. However, to withhold the funds, no matter how well
intended, is to undermine federalism and the rule of law. It will have adverse
long-time consequences; as such, it is too high a price to pay.
CONCLUSION
When we unite and not
untie, we build on an existing maxim of ONE NIGERIA by describing that ONENESS
as the fabric of a larger society S.E.W.N. (South East West North) together.
In closing, Kingsmen and
distinguished guests, as we continue our collective journey to a better
Nigeria, permit me to borrow and slightly modify, for tonight, the chorus of
your timeless School Anthem
“Sound Nigeria’s
praises, trumpet forth her fame,
Though of many nationalities we are all still the same,
Brothers with a common debt,
Resolved to forgive and forget;
Though of many nationalities we are all still the same,
Brothers with a common debt,
Resolved to forgive and forget;
Let us pray that from
what we have been given
We will render service to the living,
And honour to the dead”
We will render service to the living,
And honour to the dead”
The ideals for which
Kings College is known speak neither to the old or new Nigeria. They speak to
the integration of the best of both into a better, more progressive Nigeria.
We exist in an era where
progressive reform and compassion in governance are not oft spoken. It is a
dark period the world has entered, where the lesson is the powerful do as they
will and the weak suffer as they must.
Yes, we resist this
trend; it holds nothing good for Nigeria. We must adhere to the values and policies
that suggest tomorrow can be made a better place than today.
I refuse to believe we have become such an untoward lot that the longer we live together, the more estranged we become.
Just as we have gathered here today, we must gather about the national table to repair our political discourse. In this way, we begin the process leading to policies that bring – civic kindness, generosity of spirit, sustainable growth, equality and peace to every Nigerian who seeks these good things. These are the pillars of a better Nigeria. By the grace and mercy of our common Creator, we shall build such pillars so that we and succeeding generations may come to build even greater things upon them.
I refuse to believe we have become such an untoward lot that the longer we live together, the more estranged we become.
Just as we have gathered here today, we must gather about the national table to repair our political discourse. In this way, we begin the process leading to policies that bring – civic kindness, generosity of spirit, sustainable growth, equality and peace to every Nigerian who seeks these good things. These are the pillars of a better Nigeria. By the grace and mercy of our common Creator, we shall build such pillars so that we and succeeding generations may come to build even greater things upon them.
May the College of
Kingsmen always flourish.
Thank you for listening and good evening to you all.
Thank you for listening and good evening to you all.
Tinubu’s
speech was read by Mr Olawale Edun, one time commissioner of Finance in Lagos
state.
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