Column
A Peep Into 2021
“We spent January 1 walking through our lives, room by room, drawing up a list of work to be done, cracks to be patched. May be this year, to balance the list, we ought to walk through the rooms of lives – not looking for flaws, but potentials. – Ellen Goodman
The beginning of every year comes with looking back to
see what the future can hold for humanity.
“Life can only be understood backwards but it must be lived forward” – Sovon Kuerkegard.
Let us have a peep into 2021 which many predict will be a year of relief, relief from the pains of this “yester year” of grief and disappointment with scattered drops of joy that were overshadowed by overwhelming grief.
To see into 2021 let us start by looking at what 2020 looked like.
The year 2020 has been portrayed in multiple perspectives. It is said to be a mysterious year of pandemic and confusion across the globe.
The attendant backlash of the monstrous COVID -19 which the year 2020 embraced in an unrestrained manner turned out to be an unbridled romance of death and economic woes, in every part of the world.
The year 2020 was a year of great promise, a year of expectation and magic.
It was the end of a decade that had many projections. To the global community, it ought to have marked the climax of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) which was expected to change the world into a prosperous universe, bringing poverty to half by 2015. Five years beyond 2015 was expected to be half a decade of consolidation.
Nigeria had big dream(s) of 2020 when it launched Vision 2020, which was aimed at making Nigeria one of the 20 strongest economies in the world.
The year ended with recession a second one in five years. Vision 2020 was launched in 2009 by the administration of President Yar’Adua when it became clear that Vision 2010 had failed.
Making Nigeria a strong economy among 20 economies in the world became a façade that led to nowhere but to a recession dead end and low Human Development Index.
It is no longer news that a new long term plan has been launched in Nigeria to replace Vision 2020.
It is called Vision 2030. Vision 2030 is modeled after the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals which requires among other provisions, employment creation strategies which deals with resource allocation to priority areas of development.
Nigeria therefore plans to “costumise” the integrated S.D.G.
Long term development plans in Nigeria dates back to the 1960s, but the tragedy lies in failure to achieve sustainable implementation.
What does 2021 hold for Nigeria? Much is expected.
Eleanor Roosevelt opined that the future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.
What dreams are there for Nigeria?
The long term plans should no longer be like the end to gas flaring plan where the terminal date is usually changed like Monkey Post in children arena games.
Dreaming and planning for the future is not synonymous with prophetic apocalypse that prophets read out every end of the year, it is purposeful, realistic, goal oriented and scientific.
If Nigerians and the leadership can give the kind of attention they give to prophetic revelations to economic planning and implementation, much will be achieved in 2021.
2021 is a year leaders in public and private sector will be planning to restore all that were lost in 2020.
Much will be done to clean up the mess. First task in 2021 will be to manage a National budget that has about 60 per cent deficit.
Managing the precarious oil price which the economy depends on is a serious business for 2021.
The bench mark on oil price is a factor in managing the budget but more serious is the burden of transparency from operators and politicians.
The educational system which has suffered great damage by the nine months ASUU Strike will need to be radically revamped.
Nigerians will expect a new work ethics for lecturers and students will need the right psyche to adjust.
New normals for the new COVID-19 era are expected to be in place in different sectors of the economy. 2021 is the first half of the present administration which was voted into office in 2019 at Federal and State level. This is the year of local government elections in Rivers State. It is expected that a new electoral culture of free and fair election will emerge.
Development efforts are expected to be given new impetus. Projects planned for this first half are expected to be accomplished. New Projects are expected to be flagged off.
This is the year Governor Wike of Rivers will inaugurate most of the legacy projects that are completed especially the flyover bridges.
2021 will usher in new hopes.
By: Bon Woke
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