SOCIO-POLITICAL STABILITY: A PREREQUISITE FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF NIGERIA
Date
1994-11-30
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The National Institute
Abstract
This project is an attempt at laying the building blocks to understanding the
dynamics of a beloved country and seek to address some possible solutions. The
selection of this topic was motivated by a sense of deep concern at the state of the
nation and the factors inherent in her psyche that militate against her developmental
efforts.
The problem in the economic sphere is undergirded by Nigeria still operating the
structures inherited from her colonial masters 34 years after the attainment of
independence. This import dependent industrial sector resulting in no organic linkage
between the various segments of the economy is a huge drain of resources which
constitute a lot of difficulties for development. Furthermore, her monocultural revenue
base, the lack of any meaningful local research and development effort and a lax in
socio-cultural moral values resulting into endemic corruption are some of the factors that
exacerbate the situation.
The study is even more relevant against the present backdrop of socio-political
turmoil, economic decline, mass poverty, unemployment and misery. The socio-political
upheavals reflect the plural nature of the Nigerian society has not been sublimated as in
countries like Indonesia and Malaysia into a veritable tool for development. Despite her
enormous human and natural resources she is yet to attain a take-off to self-sustained
growth. Also, the frequent change of government, for example, in 1993 alone, there
were three Heads-of State. This encourages unnecessary policy shifts and poisons the
investment climate.
The theoretical framework that underline the study is based on the system theory.
References were made to library books, journals, magazines and newspapers. The
methodology used is historical, descriptive, analytical and deductive.
Based on the findings of this study, it was recommended that Nigeria should build
the mediating structures and evolve the mediating culture that the democratic values of
tolerance, participation and accommodation instill, which is the foundation of stability.
Secondly, the incessant military intervention in politics stifles the political
evolution of the nation and the military would require political education to de-link them
from politics.
Above all, Nigeria should evolve and adopt an economic managements style that
will ensure the diversification of the revenue base and achieve the appropriate intersectoral
linkages for the smooth growth of the economy by utilising the oil wealth to lay
a durable foundation by bringing to fruition the Ajaokuta Steel project, the petrochemical,
gas and aluminum projects among several.
Description
Economic Development
Keywords
industrial sector, monocultural revenue base, enormous human, natural resources
Citation
ESSAY SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE AWARD OF MEMBERSHIP OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE (mn)