Opinion
Jonathan’s New Dev Agenda
After taking the oath of office as President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria administered by the Chief Justice of the country, Aloysius Katsina-Alu on Sunday, May 29, 2011 at the Eagle Square, Abuja, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan declared in his inauguration address: “Over the next four years, attention will be focused on rebuilding our infrastructure. We will create greater access to quality education and improved health care delivery. We will pay special attention to the agricultural sector, to enable it play its role of ensuring food security and massive job creation for our people.”
In the address titled: “Transformation is Now” President Jonathan also promised to fight for an efficient and affordable public transport system. He promised to deal with the country’s endemic problem of corruption. He promised to actively promote the development of the Niger Delta region and provide a suitable environment for productive activities to flourish. And he pledged to strengthen the country’s economic relations with the international community.
Apparently, the Nigerian state has been encumbered with myriad of socio-economic challenges over the years, and each one calls for a priority attention. To transform the country as promised by President Jonathan will mean dealing with all the challenges simultaneously. This will be a herculean task.
But how does social change, transformation, modernisation, or development come about? To Comte,the development of all societies is based on the evolution of ideas and the successive rationalisation of human thought. To Spencer, modernisation comes about by a multiplicity of internal and external factors such as soil, and climate, population size and density, technology, economic factors, welfare and commercial contacts with other societies. Tonnies considered trade as a stimulus to modernisation. Durkheim attributed the transition from simple to advanced society to the pressure of population growth and density. Marx emphasised economic factors, mediated by class struggle, as the major sources of social change. W. Arthur Lewis explains that the process of transformation is painful, frustrating, and meets with resistance. It engenders conflicts. In his words|: “Every country converting from a poor, subsistence economy to a rapidly expanding market economy undergoes profound cultural changes in family structure, land tenure, tribal loyalties, political institutions, religious beliefs, degree of urbanisation, and almost any other cultural feature you care to mention.”
So, where does Nigeria come in here? And what are the critical factors, Dr. Jonathan and his team require to execute his new development agenda and to transform the country? It goes without saying that Nigeria has the most enviable economic profile on the African continent. It has an area of over 923,773 square kilometres, the largest single geographical unit along the west coast of Africa and a population of 140, 000,000, at the 2006 census, the largest in Africa.
And by the goodness of God, Nigeira is richly endowed with abundant natural resources. It has a series of rivers, calm lagooms, and a network of creeks and waterways that provide valuable means of communication across its length and breath. It has a wide range of economic trees. It has friendly climate and fertile land, the sine qua non for agricultural production. Nigeria is the leading producer of crude oil and gas in Africa and about the 6th in the world. And it is also a leading world producer of coal, tin, and columbite.
Yes, Nigeria is richly endowed with natural resources. But it has become obvious that the country’s natural endowment alone will not fulfill Dr. Jonathan’s dream of socio-economic transformation for the nation.
So if our decade of development has begun. If the march is on. And if the day of transformation has begun as declared y Dr. Jonathan in his inauguration address, then the Nigerian people especially the leaders should also begin immediately to undergo the spiritual, cultural, and attitudinal change required for national progress and prosperity.
Such a change does not fall from heaven like manna. This means that the people particularly the managers of the economy must be ready and willing to plan and work for the change which will put the country on the path of growth and development.
Such a plan should be a structural one concerned with the creation of political, sociological or cultural, economic, and spiritual consciousness suitably oriented to the transformation of the country. It should be a deliberate effort on the part of government to improve the well-being of the people. And it should be concerned with identifying constraints, disseminating information, and setting goals and targets for the whole economy.
In the days ahead, Nigerians will be expecting Dr. Jonathan’s new leadership and development agenda for the country to translate their aspirations into goals and goals into targets. Goals and indeed, targets serve as basis for evaluating change; and they can help to stimulate and motivate the people to make their own contributions towards the transformation of the nation.
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