Opinion
Jonathan And The Race Against Time
President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, in his inauguration address delivered on May 29, 2011 at the Eagle Square, declared: “Fellow citizens, the leadership we have pledged is decidedly transformative. Transformation will be achieved in all the critical sectors, by harnessing the creative energies of our people. We must grow the economy, create jobs, and generate enduring happiness for our people. I have great confidence in the ability of Nigerians to transform this country. The urgent task of my administration is to provide a suitable environment for productive activities to flourish. I therefore call on the good people of Nigeria to enlist as agents of this great transformation.”
By his pedigree, many Nigerians believe that President Jonathan has the capacity to drive his transformation agenda for the country to the satisfaction of the people. Before taking the oath of office as the President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria on May 29, 2011, Dr Jonathan had served the country as a Deputy Governor, a Governor, a Vice President, an Acting President, and a substantive President following the demise of the former President, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. Besides, President Jonathan, a former Zoology lecturer, has enviable academic qualifications.
But as the renowned Professor of Economics, W. Arthur Lewis, said many years ago: “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”. According to him, the process of transformation is usually painful, frustrating, and meets with conflicts.
It goes without saying that Nigeria is endowed with abundant natural resources. But to say the least, the country is a land of poverty, chaos, insecurity, violence, corruption, greed, indiscipline, and ineffective leadership. It is characterized by low level of productivity, high and rising level of unemployment and under employment, inadequate housing, poor health, limited education, and a general sense of hopelessness.
The various sectors of the economy are crying for priority attention. These sectors are agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining quarrying, manufacturing, crafts, electricity and water supply, building, and construction. Others include distribution, transport, communication, education, health, and general government.
Consequently, different well-meaning Nigerians, depending on their perspectives of the country’s economic quagmire, are urging President Jonathan to begin his transformation agenda from one sector or the other. For instance, a former President of the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines, and Agriculture (NACCIMA), Dr Simon Okolo feels that starting the planned economic transformation agenda of President Jonathan from the agricultural sector will propel the industrial take-off of the country, diversify its economy, create jobs for the people, and alleviate poverty.
According to media report, a former President of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Mr Olisa Agbokoba, who has called for the establishment of a new Ministry of Shipping Technology, recently spoke of the need for the shipping sector to be included in the transformation agenda of President Jonathan. To him, reforming the shipping sector and regulating the executive agencies would make the country a world leader in the sector.
With the Boko Haram insurgency that has claimed innumerable lives and property, many Nigerians feel that security should top the priority list of President Jonathan’s transformation agenda.
Yet, others argue that electric power supply being an indispensable agent of growth and development of any modern economy should occupy a pride of place on the transformation agenda. In fact, considering the critical role of electric power in the economic life of any country, the power consumption of a nation can serve as a mirror of its level of economic progress.
Though there have been some reports from the presidency that the transformation agenda encompasses all aspects of the Nigerian economy, with the appointment of the ministries and special advisers to the President, the people expect that a well thought-out blueprint for the transformation agenda should be produced and made available to Nigerians. Such a blueprint should clearly spell out the programmes, policies, and strategies that would be employed to deliver the transformation agenda.
Transformation or 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 transformation.
So, if our decade of development has begun. If the march is on. And if the day of transformation has begun as declared by President Jonathan in his inauguration address, then the Nigerian people should also begin immediately to undergo the spiritual, cultural, and attitudinal change required for national progress and prosperity.
The plan for the change 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 measurable and achievable goals and targets for the whole economy.
What time does President Jonathan with his team have to deal with the myriad of challenges confronting the nation? And what time does he have to execute his transformation agenda? Strictly speaking President Jonathan is in a race against time. The four-year tenure is not eternity. But he must strive to write his name in gold and be counted among the great leaders of this world.
Without further delay, President Jonathan should fix his eyes on the bouncing ball and hit the ground running for the manifestation of his transformation agenda.
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