Opinion
Lessons From Recession
Recession has to do with a “period of time during which there is less trade, business activity and wealth than usual.” But definition is not as important as the reality anyone can see on the ground or the lessons anyone can learn from the phenomenon. Usually, recession is the “passing away” of an old but unpleasant, opportunistic past characterized by predatory tendencies and propensities.
Truly, the experiences which Nigerians are passing through currently, have their origins in activities that date back to 50 years ago. Visible results of several under-the-table activities were the crisis in Western Region of Nigeria 1963-1965, culminating in military intervention in Nigeria’s political history. Without going into little-known aspects of what happened in 1965/66, the Nigerian Civil War 1967 – 1970, was another issue having something to do with the current recession.
There are certain things one would not say about the unfortunate past, but there are plausible evidence that nature has a mechanism for redressing past reckless human activities. Scientists would tell us that the cells in human body regenerate and replace themselves on a septimal basis, such that in every seven years, a total replacement takes place. Thus, we can talk about an “Iron Law of Movement” just like political scientists talk about an Iron Law of Oligarchy.
Whether we know it or not and whether we believe it or not, life is not without definite laws; it seeks neither our permission nor renders any apology to anyone, as it operates and goes about its functions. So, the current recession in Nigeria is by no means an accident, neither can anyone or any authority engineer it away by any legislation. The laws must have their “pound of flesh”, or those who broke them must mend or break.
Recession is indeed the tip of an ice-berg as well as a distant, early warning phenomenon, demanding that people should read and interprete the “hand-writing on the wall”. There is no doubt that a number of people had committed unspeakable atrocities in the past whose re-visiting consequences culminate in what we call recession. The biting effects manifest more visibly in the economic and political domains, but individuals must be shaken up from a state of lethargy.
Like the passing away of an unpleasant past, recession has a time span as well as a message, while economists and political scientists may use several theories to predict the duration or time span of a recession, the “message” goes beyond economic and political permutations. The message-bundle which recession drops at our door-steps as individuals and as a nation demands that we learn the following lessons.
Population control: Large families, including polygamous ones, definitely find it hard to cope with the challenges that recession has thrown up. It is pathetic to see what many mothers, particularly single mothers, do to their children. Does anybody need to preach family planning to any couple?
Unmerciful waste of resources: Does the fact that “each Nigerian Senator gets emoluments estimated to be four times the salary of the President of America,” translate into Nigerian politicians being four times as productive and patriotic as their American counterparts?
Forced awakening: Rising incidents of fraud, insecurity, mendacity and shenanigans are not merely survival strategies employed by unscrupulous people, but they are wake-up calls forcing everybody to be cautious and on the alert in their dealings with everybody else. Since the weak are usually pushed to the wall in a predatory society, do we not see rising aggressiveness and militancy among those who had been oppressed and cheated for too long in the past?
Re-discovery and repositioning: The change mantra that is a current political jingle, is quite indicative of the fact that people are re-discovering and repositioning themselves. This gambit is not only meant to discover and cross over to where the grass is greener (like politicians do), but it also involves a re-examination and re-evaluation of value orientations. House wives are not only discovering that they had married the wrong men, but some of them are also finding how to add value to their lives and to make ends meet, without looking at any-body’s face.
Value-added opium: Religion and personal salvation are important issues in a depressing economy. Religious activities not only serve as anti-depressant therapy and aphrodisiac, but religious leaders have also learnt to add value to their economic status. People have been known to “sow seed” with their cars, houses, gratuity and even children are often given as gifts to the church. Private jets are not meant for the politicians and business tycoons alone!
Break-down of family bonds: Extended family culture and the burdens connected with it is passing away. Who would want to feed and cater for many relatives when one is “laid off” from job? With “Single Treasury Account” and BVN, which sugar daddy would buy a car for a 19-year-old ward?
Amirize writes from Port Harcourt.
e-mail:Bamirize@yahoo.com
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