Kingsley Moghalu OON Profile picture
Mar 26, 2020 12 tweets 4 min read Read on X
#BIGVisionNigeria #MoghaluSeries

Vision 5: Institutions and Why They Matter (Contd)

In Nigeria, after the era of military rule from 1984 to 1999, the return of Democracy in 1999 saw an effort to develop institutions. This happened largely under the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency.
Examples of institutions established in this period included the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC @officialEFCC ), Independent Corrupt Practices Commision, Pension Commission @PenComNig , Bureau of Public Enterprises, and Buteau of Public Procurement @BPP_NG.
These institutions were all created by legislation, giving them a sound basis in law and public policy. Although their track record has been mixed, their existence has created an institutional foundation on which we can build, with better governance, to make them more effective.
But, today in our country, all national institutions have been weakened because political leaders have increasingly bent them towards partisan political ends. This means these institutions are not as independent as they should be. @cenbank and the judiciary are important examples
Both the economy and the rule of law have suffered as a result. Politically influenced exchange rate policies, based on populist but not necessarily rational impulses, for example , have hurt the economy over the past several years. As for the judiciary, it has been severely
weakened by the corrosive influence of partisan politics. Judges play a key role in society, and should be above politics. Our judges were once an elite group of men or women of unmistakable distinction. This is not the perception today, although, good judges still exist.
But the Nigerian judiciary dealt itself a body blow when corruption began to fester among men and women of the wig and the robe. The widespread view today is that justice can be bought and sold, especially when it concerns electoral disputes. Having sunk to the bottom, our once
outstanding judiciary has nowhere to go but up, if it can. My vision of Nigerian institutions is one in which institutional appointments are made in the basis of professional competence and character, the line between politics and professional stewardship of these bodies clear.
First, prominent members/ operatives of political parties may be appointed to the non-executive boards of public corporations (with the exception of institutions such @cenbank and the National Judicial Council). But such persons must never be appointed as chief executives of
public institutions. The result of such appointments, which are now prevalent, is that public institutions are steered to achieve partisan outcomes and therefore lose the independence essential for optimum performance because good corporate governance becomes impossible.
Second, the principles of corporate governance must guide the governance of public corporations. Bad corporate governance means achieving mandates that will benefit citizens broadly is difficult. Third, privatization/commercialization of public corporations must be transparent
and professionally done. This will avoid cronyism and increase confidence in public sector management in Nigeria. Institutions matter. We ignore them at our national peril.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Kingsley Moghalu OON

Kingsley Moghalu OON Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @MoghaluKingsley

Oct 2
Multiparty democracy , to be real and benefit Africa, must mean 7 things that are broadly absent presently:

1. The contest for electoral offices must be for authority to govern, with the legitimacy from the popular vote, not for power for its own sake or for self-enrichment.
2. Electoral contests must be a contest of alternative ideas, visions or philosophies about how society can make progress. Every successful democracy is based on contending IDEAS.

3. The PROCESS of elections must have integrity in order to be legitimate. This means the umpire
must be neutral as between contending parties & must be truly independent, not controlled/influenced by government, ruling or opposition parties.

4. The electorate must be both basically and politically literate. This is necessary to have capacity to assess candidates for votes.
Read 13 tweets
Aug 12
I respectfully disagree with President @officialABAT ‘s response to the visit to him by The Patriots, led by former @commonwealthsec Secretary-General Chief Emeka Anyaoku, during which the group (of which I am a member) pressed for a new Constitution for Nigeria as a matter of Image
urgency, and recommending specific steps to achieve this. While PBAT received the eminent elder statesman and his colleagues with the appropriate dignity and protocols (“this is a group I cannot ignore”, Tinubu noted), the President asserted that economic reform (and the
crisis that it has created in the country) is his priority right now, but that his government would of course study the recommendations of The Patriots and respond (hopefully with action and not merely words). What Nigeria’s leaders fail to understand is that it will be extremely
Read 13 tweets
Jul 24
The @nnpclimited v @AlikoDangote saga is a sad tale of how successive governments of Nigeria have failed to create a real economy that generates wealth for its citizens. Our economy works only for a very few who get rich while Nigerians continually get poorer. #Rentseeking
The economic failure of Nigeria's leaders because of loyalties to vested interests and unholy ties between "business" and government is deeply unfortunate. @NigeriaGov is, and has been unable, either to stimulate through effect economic policy a set of strategic oligopolies
across sectors under which smaller businesses and supply chains thrive, making up a successful national economy as in South Korea. Neither has the government, on the other hand, been able to create a truly competitive, level playing field for business in Nigeria so that wealth
Read 7 tweets
Jun 4
In the debates on national wage in Nigeria we miss the fundamental point: there is little or no productivity in the economy. If we had a truly productive economy there is no reason we can’t have the kind of minimum wage of 400 or 500K that Labour wants. But we can’t, because the
level of productivity in the economy cannot support it. Remember, minimum wage is not just about government salaries. There are not more than 2, at most 3 million civil servants in Nigeria. It is even more about what is paid in the private sector, to household staff, etc.
All of this is why, all things considered, including avoiding a minimum wage that multiplies already ravaging inflation (assuming such a wage can even be paid), I recommend a minimum wage of between N75,000 and N100,000.

In fact, speaking about productivity, how productive is
Read 5 tweets
Apr 29
The Naira tanking back down to the 1,400s to $1 demonstrates what some of us have been saying. Seeking a falsely “strong” currency when the fundamentals are out of whack is shadow chasing. The focus should be on the STABILITY of the exchange rate, not a populist exchange rate
and premature declarations of “best performing currency”. Reports that there are now multiple exchange rates to BDCs, Customs, and NAFEX are also worrying. It’s not yet uhuru. Let us stabilize the Naira at whatever is its true market value and then pivot to the real issues:
taking Nigeria to 20-25K megawatts of 24 hour electricity in 2-3 years starting with Lagos, Kano, Onitsha and Nnewi (Aba seems promising with Geometric power) so we can create a truly productive economy. Dealing decisively with oil theft and ramping up oil production to bring in
Read 6 tweets
Jan 26
Our relationships with others sometimes deepen or shrink in strange ways. When I was a Deputy Gov at the CBN, there was this bank MD that wanted my approval for certain things concerning his challenged bank. But he would not follow the guidelines we gave him, instead looking for
shortcuts and expecting me to play along. One day my patience snapped. I terminated our conversation and showed him the door of my office. Long story short, the matter was eventually resolved after the bank met certain regulatory conditions. Today that MD (since retired) is
a good friend. After I completed my tenure in November 2014 and left the apex bank, my deceased father in law was buried in early 2015. The MD sent a personal representative to the funeral with a gift. Note the phrase “after I had completed my tenure and left the apex bank”.
Read 5 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(