There is one fundamental truism that has now
been fortunately forced into the development discourse across the globe. This
truism is that development is all about the people. In other words, any
development efforts that are not conducive to the eventual empowerment of those
they are meant for are, by that fact, futile.
The seeming ordinariness of this thesis, as
well as its revolutionary character, can only be appreciated if the historicity
and the ideology of the global understanding of orthodox development discourse
are properly contextualized. The current discourse that underlies the
Washington Consensus sees development essentially as a catch up game; the rest
of the world, and especially the struggling states in the third world, are
expected to look to the West for development paradigms, insights, models and
direction. This meant that models of economic development and governance
paradigms can only be shipped down to, say, Africa for the various governments
on the continent to just accept and deploy.
We really do not need to look far for the
consequences of these development assumptions. They are glaring in the gross
infrastructural deficits that face every African state since the coming of the
World Bank and the IMF, and their interventions in the development equations in
Africa. Beginning from the structural adjustment programmes (SAPs) of the 90s,
citizens in most African countries were forced to swallow the bitter pills of
austerity measures arising from the conditionalities imposed on the governments
to achieve the development models prescribed by the Bretton Wood institutions.
Yet, Africa has been struggling with development ever since, and into the
twenty first century. And the indices of our struggles keep getting aggravated
with bad statistics. In summary, Africa is home to most of the least developed
states in the world. It is a bad investment location. It has the highest
mortality, illiteracy and child education rate. It is the poorest continent in
the world. And it houses most of the most corrupt states on the Transparency
International Corruption Index.
The complement of the truism that development
is about the people is that those who achieve significant development do so on
their own term, while voluntarily but critically adopting and adapting global
best practices that are close to their own internally-generated ideals of
development. Fabricating that idea depends on the ideological assumption that
any state has adopted as the guiding framework for ordering its internal
matrices and external relations. This is what China has done with the Beijing
Consensus. No matter what reservation we may all have about China’s human right
credentials, no one will doubt that China has gone very far in positively
affecting the lives of her citizens. China’s infrastructural achievements are
fast becoming the cynosure of the global eyes.
We cannot say the same for Nigeria. The
infrastructural deficit stands at $8 billion annually. In the 2016 budget,
capital expenditure stands at a meager 30%. But this is not the fundamental
source of the development issue. What is fundamental is the appropriate model
for instigating development that will not only be about the people, as we have
noted, but will also be accelerated in Nigeria’s own unique development terms.
The answer lies in the dynamics of local governance that speaks directly and
immediately to the grassroots where Nigerians are. This is not a new insight,
even though it is just now forcing its way into development thinking. And
amongst those who got to its fundamental essence first is the redoubtable Prof.
Akinlawon Ladipo Mabogunje. Renowned as the father of African geography, Prof.
Mabogunje did not only give a significant African visibility to the obscure
discipline, but he also factored Africa’s postcolonial predicament into the
theoretical and substantive intellectual dynamics of the discipline. In
Nigeria, for instance, Prof. Mabogunje’s brand of geographical reflection on
Nigeria spans such significant and critical national issues like housing, land
reform, poverty alleviation, census taking, public service review, planning,
community banking, urban development, the university, rural development and
forestry. All these issues have, in one way or the other, some critical place
in Nigeria’s federal palaver. Land and land use in Nigeria are a critical
example.
Nigeria’s land troubles commences with the
1978 Land Use Act which effectively and unfortunately undermines the very
spirit of federalism because the Act is a federal law which overrides any
peculiar customary or legal statutes existing within the states. In a true
federal situation, land belongs with the local communities, and hence with the
state governments. And it is at this juncture of federalism, local dynamics of
development and genuine land reform that Prof. Mabogunje interjects his reform
recommendations. This begins, according to him and the committee on land reform
inaugurated by the Yar’Adua administration, with a thorough cadastral mapping
and registration of all lands in Nigeria. The land reform project involves a
long term objective of registering all the land in Nigeria for the purpose of
generating enormous revenue for the government as well as injecting capital
investment into the country.
This reform dynamics is further connected to
the second reform programme that is associated with Prof. Mabogunje. This is
the OPTICOM rural development initiative which takes the grassroots locality as
the first condition for thinking about development in any community.
Development, in other words, commences from the identification of
community groups and groupings that can facilitate development insights and
ideas that the entire community can rally round and consolidate.
There is one cogent point that the above
demonstrates. And this is that the present centralized logic of the Nigerian
state and its governance model has been constraining development.
Centralization limits grassroots development initiatives because it ties
development to the unitary framework which in itself limits national
integration. Federalism has entered into popular consciousness as the best
system to adequately resolve Nigeria’s plurality. The federal option allows for
a decentered federation that permits the federating units to pursue unit-,
regional- or zone-specific development that emanates from a particular locality
and its unique development problematic. Centralization was the choice
postcolonial alternative especially in the immediate post-independence period when
development planning in Nigeria requires the presence of the government at what
was called the “commanding height” of the economy to facilitate the
government’s capacity to steer the state along the path of development
prosperity. This was significant given the urgent need for modernization of the
Nigerian state after colonization.
In post-independence Nigeria, the problem of
development was simultaneous with that of the national question of fashioning
“one Nigeria” out of the many ethnic identities contending for relevance and
the scarce resources of the state. However, we have the singular Civil War as
the attestation of the failure of centralization of the Nigerian federation.
Since independence, we also have the limitations of the numerous planning efforts
as the negative testament to the inadequacy of centralized planning for
development. But with the new democratic consciousness that is infusing
political reflection about government, centralization is fact giving way to the
idea of participatory understanding of government and governance. The idea of
development democracy demands that the “commanding height” which the government
seeks should be brought low to the level of the grassroots where the people
themselves can become the real center of democratic and development
participation. Thus, development democracy begins at the level of local
governance.
The local government within the lopsided
federal arrangement in Nigeria is the most neglected tier of government in the
theory and practice of democracy and federalism in Nigeria. And this becomes a
deep indictment of Nigeria’s democratic and development credentials because it
is at this level that most Nigerians have their beings. For instance, the
infrastructural efforts of government barely manage to percolate down to the
different localities that make up the different local government areas in
Nigeria. Nigeria’s top-down development model ensures that the resources are
effectively frittered away before they get down to the real places where the
real people, the struggling Nigerians, are.
The challenge that democratic governance
therefore poses for Nigeria’s development dynamics is the urgent need for an
overhaul of the local government administrative and governance frameworks.
Local government administration must, in other words, transition into a local
governance dynamics that will efficiently transform the lives and existence of
the grassroots which legitimize all development models, and is in turn
empowered significantly to participate and benefit from the democratic process.
To achieve a meaningful local governance capacitation model, there is a need
for both decentralization of institutional frameworks and the devolution of
powers. Decentralization requires, as a first condition, the substantive recognition
of the local government as a tier of democratic empowerment. Within the
Nigerian context, this inevitably requires some proactive institutional
arrangements that will constitute the administrative matrix for facilitating
local governance. The governance structure can be greatly facilitated, for
instance, around the sustainable development goals (SDGs). In fact, it seems to
me that the local governance structures and dynamics represent the best means
by which the SDGs can best be achieved. This is because, essentially, the SDGs
are brought down to earth amongst those they are meant to benefit and empower.
But the constitution must remain the central
focus for any substantive decentralization of institutional frameworks and
devolution dynamics that will make local governance a reality. As it is,
Nigerians have already commenced self-help in the absence of the state and its
empowerment in their lives. But if the state must truly become democratic and
legitimate, there is the need to tinker with the constitutional requirements
that would shoot the local government into democratic reckoning in governance
matters. Decentralization requires the devolution of powers. The unitary
federal arrangement in Nigeria already loads the dice against the local government
and its grassroots requirements. The executive and the concurrent legislative
lists in the Second Schedule of the 1999 Constitution are constituted in such a
way that they have stifled the governance capacity of the residual list. What
is left on that list are residual list are mere residues of governance, like
chieftaincy matters, which has barely any effect on the effective empowerment
of the people.
Bottom up development therefore requires that
cogent issues like policing, extraction of mineral resources, taxation, trade
and commerce, etc. be reallocated into the residual list to make it truly
conducive for democratic governance to gain ground among the people that
matters. These substantive issues provide the context for wider governance
participation amongst the citizens, the civil society, global partners and
state actors to ensure that Nigerians get the best of good governance. In the
final analysis, it seems to me that while the clamor for the restructuring of
the Nigerian polity is a welcome development, it is not something that can be
achieved in the twinkling of an eye. Our best bet remains a gradualist
approach. Decentralization and devolution of powers, within the ambit of
constitutional amendment, provides a logical win-win situation which the Nigerian
state can explore as part of its conditions for an effective good governance
for Nigerians.
Source: TheCable
No comments: