Monday 23 April 2012

Why Nations Fail

www.nytimes.com/2012/04/01/opinion/sunday/friedman-why-nations-fail.html?_r=1

 
I’M reading a fascinating new book called “Why Nations Fail.” The more you read it, the more you appreciate what a fool’s errand we’re on in Afghanistan and how much we need to totally revamp our whole foreign aid strategy. But most intriguing are the warning flares the authors put up about both America and China.
 
Thomas L. Friedman
 
Co-authored by the M.I.T. economist Daron Acemoglu and the Harvard political scientist James A. Robinson, “Why Nations Fail” argues that the key differentiator between countries is “institutions.” Nations thrive when they develop “inclusive” political and economic institutions, and they fail when those institutions become “extractive” and concentrate power and opportunity in the hands of only a few.
“Inclusive economic institutions that enforce property rights, create a level playing field, and encourage investments in new technologies and skills are more conducive to economic growth than extractive economic institutions that are structured to extract resources from the many by the few,” they write.
“Inclusive economic institutions, are in turn supported by, and support, inclusive political institutions,” which “distribute political power widely in a pluralistic manner and are able to achieve some amount of political centralization so as to establish law and order, the foundations of secure property rights, and an inclusive market economy.” Conversely, extractive political institutions that concentrate power in the hands of a few reinforce extractive economic institutions to hold power.
Acemoglu explained in an interview that their core point is that countries thrive when they build political and economic institutions that “unleash,” empower and protect the full potential of each citizen to innovate, invest and develop. Compare how well Eastern Europe has done since the fall of communism with post-Soviet states like Georgia or Uzbekistan, or Israel versus the Arab states, or Kurdistan versus the rest of Iraq. It’s all in the institutions.
The lesson of history, the authors argue, is that you can’t get your economics right if you don’t get your politics right, which is why they don’t buy the notion that China has found the magic formula for combining political control and economic growth.
“Our analysis,” says Acemoglu, “is that China is experiencing growth under extractive institutions — under the authoritarian grip of the Communist Party, which has been able to monopolize power and mobilize resources at a scale that has allowed for a burst of economic growth starting from a very low base,” but it’s not sustainable because it doesn’t foster the degree of “creative destruction” that is so vital for innovation and higher incomes.
“Sustained economic growth requires innovation,” the authors write, “and innovation cannot be decoupled from creative destruction, which replaces the old with the new in the economic realm and also destabilizes established power relations in politics.”
“Unless China makes the transition to an economy based on creative destruction, its growth will not last,” argues Acemoglu. But can you imagine a 20-year-old college dropout in China being allowed to start a company that challenges a whole sector of state-owned Chinese companies funded by state-owned banks? he asks.
The post-9/11 view that what ailed the Arab world and Afghanistan was a lack of democracy was not wrong, said Acemoglu. What was wrong was thinking that we could easily export it. Democratic change, to be sustainable, has to emerge from grassroots movements, “but that does not mean there is nothing we can do,” he adds.
For instance, we should be transitioning away from military aid to regimes like Egypt and focusing instead on enabling more sectors of that society to have a say in politics. Right now, I’d argue, our foreign aid to Egypt, Pakistan and Afghanistan is really a ransom we pay their elites not to engage in bad behavior. We need to turn it into bait.
Acemoglu suggests that instead of giving Cairo another $1.3 billion in military aid that only reinforces part of the elite, we should insist that Egypt establish a committee representing all sectors of its society that would tell us which institutions — schools, hospitals — they want foreign aid to go to, and have to develop appropriate proposals.
If we’re going to give money, “let’s use it to force them to open up the table and to strengthen the grass-roots,” says Acemoglu.
We can only be a force multiplier. Where you have grass-roots movements that want to build inclusive institutions, we can enhance them. But we can’t create or substitute for them. Worse, in Afghanistan and many Arab states, our policies have often discouraged grass-roots from emerging by our siding with convenient strongmen. So there’s nothing to multiply. If you multiply zero by 100, you still get zero.
And America? Acemoglu worries that our huge growth in economic inequality is undermining the inclusiveness of America’s institutions, too. “The real problem is that economic inequality, when it becomes this large, translates into political inequality.” When one person can write a check to finance your whole campaign, how inclusive will you be as an elected official to listen to competing voices?

 

World Bank removes Nigeria, others from aids' list

 World Bank removes Nigeria, others from aids' list












http://www.africanliberty.org/content/world-bank-removes-nigeria-others-aids-list

Saturday 21 April 2012

Only Africans Can Develop Africa, Says Nigerian Philanthropist Tony Elumelu

Only Africans Can Develop Africa, Says Nigerian Philanthropist Tony Elumelu



Tony Elumelu With Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair
Tony Elumelu With Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair
Nigerian banker and philanthropist Tony Elumelu was recently in Washington D.C., where he reiterated his belief that Africans themselves will be at the forefront of the continent’s economic renaissance.
“No one can develop Africa but us [Africans].” That was Nigerian philanthropist Tony Elumelu’s message to international business leaders, global philanthropic organizations and Western development partners during the Global Philanthropy Forum annual conference in Washington D.C on Tuesday.
Elumelu, founder of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, was among the keynote speakers at the annual forum event. He told attendees that Africa’s private sector will be the leading player in contributing to the continent’s economic transformation.
“We are now the world’s fastest growing region,” Elumelu said. “There is a social and economic impact to be derived, but it needs to be done with the right approach – with African leadership and with the private sector, rather than from a charitable orientation.”
Elumelu also seized the opportunity to introduce the audience to Africapitalism, an economic philosophy that embodies the private sector’s commitment to the economic transformation of Africa through long-term investments that create both economic prosperity and social wealth.
A day before he spoke at the Global Philanthropy Forum, Elumelu delivered an African investment-themed lecture to senior management and invited guests of the International Finance Corporation (IFC), an arm of the World Bank, in Washington. During the lecture, he urged those looking to invest in Africa to demonstrate social responsibility even in the pursuit of economic prosperity.
“Investment in Africa needs a different perspective,” he told the audience. “For Africa’s economic growth, the private sector needs to take the lead, invest long term, and focus on making both economic and social gains. In my experience, we have made great profits, but we have also touched lives.”
During the week, the respected banker also honored an invitation from the World Bank Group President Robert Zoellick to participate in a meeting of his Advisory Council of Global Foundation Leaders. Other attendees at the meeting included founders and key representatives from philanthropies like the Ford Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation and The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, among others from Europe, Asia and Latin America. At the meeting, Elumelu advocated for strategic partnerships between the World Bank and philanthropic organizations in emerging economies as well as setting high standards and introducing legislation to foster the development of domestic philanthropic sectors.
“We have an emerging affluent class in Africa. Unfortunately, the institution of giving has not been professionalized,” he lamented. “We need the legal structures in place to really leverage Africa’s own wealth to set the continent’s development agenda from within.”

Elumelu, one of Africa’s most respected business leaders, famously acquired a moribund commercial bank in Lagos in 1997 and transformed it into the $2 billion (market capitalization) United Bank for Africa (UBA), a Pan-African financial services behemoth with a presence in 19 countries and 3 continents. He stepped down as CEO of the bank in 2010, and now serves as Executive Chairman of Heirs Holdings, an African-focused investment holding company, and the Tony Elumelu Foundation, a non-profit that promotes and celebrates African entrepreneurship and leadership.
Follow me on Twitter @EmperorDIV

Wednesday 11 April 2012

Do Brothers Care Enough About Sexual Assault?

http://www.ebony.com/news-views/do-brothers-care-enough-about-sexual-assault

   Rape isn't a women's issue, but Mychal Denzel Smith says that far too many men seem to treat it as such
By Mychal Denzel Smith Writer

Do Brothers Care Enough About Sexual Assault?
As I recently listened to Nas’ 1999 album I Am--a record I'd always considered to be somewhat underrated-- when the song “Dr. Knockboot” came on and made me rethink my position. Not only is the song an atrociously awkward guide to becoming a “sexpert,” Nas drops this gem: “DON'T: take the pussy, if she fighting/Cause you saw what happened to Tupac and Mike Tyson/'Specially if you large, some hoes is trife/Get you on a rape charge, have you serving your life.
It was disturbing, not just content-wise, but for the callousness in his voice. From his tone, the prospect of the rape charge and subsequent punishment was exponentially worse than the rape itself. It calls into question the way we think of rape and what we teach men in particular about sexual violence, ultimately coming down to the idea that women have a right to their bodies only because it’s illegal to take what is rightfully yours. That’s scary.
I’d love to write this off as the thoughts of a singular man, but looking back on events of just the past year or two tell a different story. Whether it was the gang-rape of an 11 year-old girl in Cleveland, Texas, or the alleged assault of Nafissatou Diallo at the hands of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, or Too $hort’s “fatherly advice” on XXL’s website that amounted to a step-by-step guide for effective sexual assault, or even the rhetoric of the current “war on women” and the push for mandating transvaginal ultrasounds as a precondition for abortion, the message comes in from every corner of society: women’s bodies don’t belong to them. And with that mentality, why would anyone take sexual assault/violence of women seriously?
A glance at the statistics should frustrate everyone. According to the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN), 1 in 6 American women has been the victim of an attempted or completed rape during her life, with 44% of victims being under the age of 18. There is an average of 207,754 victims of rape or sexual assault per year, or one in every two minutes. Those are just the numbers. Victims of sexual assault are more likely to suffer depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, abuse alcohol and/or drugs, and contemplate suicide.
By contrast, 97% of rapists will never spend so much as a day in jail. This isn’t a plot used to trap men or enact revenge. If it were, it’s highly ineffective. Even as the rate of rape/sexual assault declines, far too many are left to experience this inexcusable crime, and the indifference on the part of men is a contributing factor.
Cold feelings on issues of sexual assault not only robs men of their empathy and humanity, it prevents them from dealing with their own instances of abuse. One in 33 American men (3%) have experienced an attempted or completed rape in their life. It’s obviously not as prevalent as among women, but it’s a problem nonetheless, one exacerbated by an unwillingness to come to terms with its existence.
A brother I worked with years ago once told me, and these are his exact words, “I was molested when I was six years old, but I was aight because it was a bitch. That’s why I’m a freak now.” That mix of denial and hypermasculine posturing would be a gift to any psychologist, but it speaks to a larger cultural issue.
We can’t solve the problem of rape/sexual assault/sexual violence if we don’t understand what it is, who it affects, and how it affects them. We can’t understand any of that if we possess a callous indifference to the fact that anyone experiences sexual assault. We can’t afford to let our humanity slip away.
Mychal Denzel Smith is a writer, social commentator and mental health advocate. Visit his official website or follow him on Twitter.

Saturday 7 April 2012

Oke-Odo 42: When a nation fails its children

Nigerian children
As a youth corps member serving in Awkunawnaw Secondary School in Enugu, to get my monthly allowance at Umuchinemere Microfinance Bank, I must pass in front of the Holy Cross Rosary College, Enugu both to and fro, which from inside and outside represents a foremost educational institution, which till date offers pious comportment as curriculum coupled with quality educational environment for these wonderful children to grow up into responsible adults.
This is one school that protects its own jealously. However, far away from the watchful eyes of its progenitors, an avoidable and unfortunate tragedy occurred at Oke-Odo, Ogun State when 42 pupils of the school were reportedly waylaid, robbed and raped by armed robbers on their way to Lagos on Saturday, March 31. The attack on these children represents a grievous assault on our collective sanity and sanctity of human life; one attack too many on the foundation of this entity called Nigeria and the faith of millions of Nigerians.
In the final analysis, we have all failed them; we failed a generation of innocents; we failed at the breaking forth of a blossoming destiny; we failed 42 legacies that would probably become Okonjo-Iwealas, the 42 female students of Holy Cross Rosary College.
The Presidency has failed them, the National Assembly has failed them, Ogun and Enugu state governments have failed them; the Nigerian Police, Federal Road Safety Corps, and other state security apparatus have all failed.
Up till the time of writing this piece, President Goodluck Jonathan has not found his voice to condemn in strongest terms the perpetrators of this heinous act; the Governors of Ogun State, Ibikunle Amosun, and Enugu State, Sullivan Chime, carried on as ostriches with heads in the sand on the development, none has called for the arrest of the perpetrators of this evil.
It has been nine years since young Adeife and Akinola Sodipo-Akindeko were killed during an alleged robbery attempt on the convoy of Senator Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello in 2003. Pronto, state apparatus were deployed to arrest the culprits, which led to a brief closure of the border with Benin Republic.
Adeife and Akinola would have been nine years older now had they not been brutally murdered. What nation wastes its young population like Nigeria and expects prosperity? I know none.
The ordeal of these 42 secondary school pupils was not enough to draw the attention of any member of the Federal Executive Council not even the Vice –President, Senate President or the Speaker of the House of Representatives. Not even the Speaker of the Ogun State House of Assembly in whose domain this tragedy took place has thought it fit and proper to take a position on this evil and deploy state apparatus to bring speedy justice.
Do politicians move around in the night? If they do, have you observed the retinue of security apparatus that is deployed to secure them? The luxury bus in which the pupils were travelling was held in traffic, no thanks to bad roads, which our leaders would not fix year after year. Above all, they took the few well equipped security officers to guide themselves at the expense of 42 innocent schoolgirls.
So I ask, what is government for? Could this have happened to the children of our legislators and governors and they would have been silent? This argument of travelling at night which makes the victims and drivers culpable stands logic on the head.
Does the constitution not guarantee safety of lives and property? The Nigerian Constitution states clearly in Section 14, subsection 2(b) that, “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.” The primary purpose of all forms of governance from Local Government to Federal Government is to provide security and welfare.This was what every government swears to uphold at every inauguration. Is this the case with the “Oke-Odo 42″? So does this constitutional provision exclude travelling at night?
If the roads were good would the vehicles be breaking down intermittently? It is the collective failure of us all, Nigerian citizens, that have so far failed to call our rulers/leaders to question on governance; failure of the respective local government chairmen to secure their parts of that treacherous portion of Sagamu/Benin Expressway.
It’s the failure of the Ogun State government to tinker with its internal security apparatus to secure its domain. It’s the greater failure of the Federal Government, who failed to provide adequate security for the 42 schoolgirls.
The constitution states clearly that “…it shall be the duty of the State to provide adequate facilities for and encourage free mobility of people, goods and services throughout the Federation.”
These are the provisions of the Nigerian constitution that guarantee the safety of these children wherever they may be travelling to within the Nigerian federation. It’s therefore not tenable to explain it away that they were travelling at night made them or the driver culpable.
Robbery on that axis of the federal highway has been on the rise in recent times and what has the Nigerian Police and SSS done to secure victims?
This is one serial failure that ought to induce a total overhaul of the state security apparatus. Is it not shameful for the Ogun State police spokesman, Muyiwa Adejobi, to allude the escape of the culprits to the mastery of the terrain? You mean over the past 60 years, the Ogun State Police Command has yet to have knowledge of its terrain?
So, if you don’t know your terrain, why and what are you policing? After reading from parents and victims that the girls were violated, all our police spokesman told Nigerians was that “the police were not in the know of the rape as the students only complained about the robbery attack and not rape.” Did Adejobi conduct diligent investigation before arriving at his conclusion just because nobody reported?
Adejobi’s advice, though wise on the surface, lacked constitutional backing because the Nigerian constitution did not create movement dichotomy between daylight and night travel. It is stated clearly in Section 41, subsection (1) “Every citizen of Nigeria is entitled to move freely throughout Nigeria and to reside in any part thereof….” I am not a lawyer but I am informed of my rights which are constitutionally guaranteed but we have collectively accepted that we could live by being denied our basic rights.
Adejobi’s philosophy of ‘no night travel’ is just begging the question, because robbers operate in broad daylight on that same axis. Therefore, it means we should also avoid travelling in broad daylight. In another report, he told us that the police arrived and dislodged the hoodlums, so you dislodged them and not one was apprehended (Haba! The Ogun State Police Command you can do better).
Three days after the incident, the Police Command gleefully announced the arrest of the driver of the luxury bus and about four others. The question remains, are these real culprits or is it one of those public anger management antics of the police?
Ogun State has suddenly become the den of armed robbers yet its governor is busy chasing shadows while his state burns. He should refocus and learn from his closest neighbour, Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos.
Though Lagos is not totally crime-free, one can see that the Lagos Police Command demonstrates good policing strategy. I have observed that once a car breaks down on any major road at night, you can be sure that police patrol vans will park and possibly tow your vehicle to the nearest safe spot. This is not without the support of the Lagos State government and the Private Public Partnership with financial institutions.
Like I said earlier, in the final analysis we have all failed the Oke –Odo 42. Nothing will assuage the pain and anger of these young ones other than quick dispensation of justice through the arrest and prosecution of the real inglorious men.
The best justice to this sad commentary on our national psyche is to provide special emotional rehabilitation for the girls; provide for their education through a special scholarship scheme to the tertiary level and finally ensure the robber-rapists are apprehended even if it takes five years; they must be made to account for the event of March 31, 2012.
•Adesida wrote in from Lagos, via picazy@yahoo.com (text only: 08058230994)