Bakare, made the veiled remark to the president-elect, while speaking
among a set of panellists at Wema Bank Plc’s 70th anniversary
commemorative lecture titled: “Why Nations Succeed,” that took place in
Lagos monday.
According to Bakare, although several nations have been commending the
outcome of Nigeria’s recently concluded presidential elections, the
“undercurrents in the nation today is the idea that it is ‘our turn.’”
He added: “We just have to wait for few weeks to see how things would
go. I pray that the north that has been out of power for some time will
not say, ‘now it is our turn,’ whether we would see round pegs in square
holes and begin to attract incompetent people. The most competent, the
fittest and people with capacity and ideas should be the ones to go for.
“It would look beautiful to put things together if you have the mind to
do it and if you have the right people to occupy these places,
regardless of their religion, regardless of their agenda and what part
of the country they are from, as long as they are able to deliver what
would bring us out of this backwardness.”
According to Bakare: “It is the choices that you make that will make
you poor or rich. We must make the right choices as we have the
opportunity now. We have campaigned on ‘change,’ Nigerians have trusted
us on ‘change,’ but I want to look at those that would be the agents of
the change. The choices we made in the past are the cause of the
consequences we are dealing with today,” he added.
On her part, the Co-convener of the Bring Back Our Girls group, Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili, stressed the need for the building of lasting institutions in the country.
On her part, the Co-convener of the Bring Back Our Girls group, Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili, stressed the need for the building of lasting institutions in the country.
According to the former Minister of Education, institutions are
accumulated practices based on common sense of shared purpose and
destination.
“What we have seen in that in institution building, there is the supply
and demand side of the matter. So, in our society, we have had supply
side activities for building institutions, but we have not seen the
commensurate demand activities. It is the demand activities of the
citizens of any society that would push the frontiers of the extractors,
who monopolise power. But when the citizens are completely disengaged,
nobody will do it for them. So, we need to become active participants in
governance.
“There is need for strong institutions that are functional, that thrive
on the rule of law, that are predictable in the way they behave. Also,
there is need for sound macro-economic policies and then effective and
efficient investments, whether public investments or private sector
investments. These are the framework for economic growth.
“We have serious issues of poor governance of resources, so that public
investment don’t end up producing the kind of output we produce because
of the quality of individuals. So, what quality of individuals are
involved in the process of institution building?” she aske.
Earlier, the guest lecturer, who is the co-author of the book: “Why
Nations Fail,” Prof. James Robinson, noted that the failure of Nigerian
leaders and other African leaders to organise their economies the way
they should be were responsible for the poor output and slow pace of
development by the continent.
According to Robinson, Nigeria had suffered from a long history of
exploitative and extractive institutions. However, he acknowledged that
since 1999 when the country returned to democracy, it has recorded a lot
of progress economically as well as the strengthening of some
institutions due to reforms.
He stressed the need for inclusiveness for any nation to attain its potential.
“All countries which now have inclusive institutions, historically had extractive institutions,” he said.
Also, the Dean, of Lagos Business School of the Pan-Atlantic
University, Mrs. Enase Okonebo, noted that for any nation to develop, it
has to focus on education, saying that Nigeria is one of the poorest in
terms of out-of-school children.
In his remark, a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Lagos,
Prof. Oyewusi Ibidapo-Obe, said “we need to dislodge the elites from
their comfort zones.”
No comments:
Post a Comment