| Nigeria: Obasanjo’s Economic Reform - A blessing or a curse? |
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| By Ola Kazeem in Lagos | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 28 March 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Nigeria has never had it so good, at least that is what the economic strategists of this regime say. Nigeria economy has been growing at an impressive rate of 6.5% since 2003 as against 2.8% in the 1990s, (how reliable this figure is, is another question) the inflation rate has dropped from 26% to 9% (December 2006), and the Naira has now appreciated against international currencies. Foreign reserves have grown from $4 billion in 1999 to $43.5 billion as at December 2006, even after paying $14 billion to the Paris and London club. This regime has also celebrated a huge debt relief of $33 billion from Paris and London club. The reality of the Nigerian situation
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| 10 states with highest incidence of poverty (all in North) | 10 states with lowest incidence of poverty (all in South) |
| 1. JIGAWA ----- 95.0 | 1. BAYELSA ------- 20.0 |
| 2. KEBBI ------- 89.7 | 2. ANAMBRA ------ 20.1 |
| 3. KOGI -------- 88.6 | 3. ABIA ----------- 22.3 |
| 4. BAUCHI ----- 86.3 | 4. OYO ------------ 24.1 |
| 5. KWARA ------ 85.2 | 5. IMO ------------ 27.4 |
| 6. YOBE -------- 83.3 | 6. RIVERS -------- 29.1 |
| 7. ZAMFARA ---- 80.9 | 7. ENUGU --------- 31.1 |
| 8. GOMBE ------ 77.0 | 8. OGUN ---------- 31.7 |
| 9. SOKOTO ---- 76.8 | 9. OSUN ---------- 32.4 |
| 10. ADAMAWA-- 71.7 | 10. EDO ------------ 33.1 |
What makes this picture worse is the fact that, according to the last census result the population of the North is 63.7% of the total population. This is obviously an inflated figure for political gains. Nonetheless it gives an idea of the situation. The Nigerian ruling class has exploited politically the backwardness of the North since independence. Rather than carry out a genuine programme of development, the Nigerian ruling class is eating the fat on this extreme gap existing between the North and South.
Why has Nigerian Ruling Class been unable to develop Nigeria?
By 1998, 67% of working capital in the Nigerian economy was foreign. With the speed at which the present regime has been privatising since 1999, there is no doubt that this percentage must have risen tremendously.
Over 66% percent of Nigerian workers now work for foreign owned companies with almost 30% working for the State. Therefore, the question to be asked is: who owns Nigeria? Why is it that CNN is more concerned about sensitive issues in Nigeria than Channel, which is a local TV station? Why does the Nigerian situation always gain such prominence in the US Congress? Why does the Chinese government never sleep with two eyes close over the Nigerian crisis? The answer is simple: because they own Nigeria!
The real master of Nigerian society is imperialism. They only employ the Nigerian ruling class to watch over their property on their behalf. The real class struggle going on in Nigeria is between the Nigerian working class and the imperialists, with the Nigerian ruling class playing a reactionary role of forcefully keeping the Nigerian workers down for the imperialists to exploit, making sure that a conducive-environment is provided for intense exploitation of the Nigerian working class. They emerged onto the arena of economic activity when the imperialists had already accumulated all the wealth in their hands and when the workers has already matured as a class. Therefore, they have nothing left for them to do, other than be the watchdog of their imperialist Godfathers. The ruling class in all backward countries like Nigeria, is reactionary, feeble, docile and completely lacking any initiative of their own. To expect anything different is to expect lions to eat grass.
This is how Karl Marx characterized them in similar situation:
"From the very beginning ready to betray the people and to compromise with the crowned representatives of the old regime, because the bourgeoisie itself belongs to the old world; keeping a place at the steering wheel of the revolution not because the people were back of them, but because the people pushed them forward; ... having no faith in themselves, no faith in the people; grumbling against those above, trembling before those below; selfish towards both fronts and aware of their selfishness; revolutionary in the face of conservatives, and conservative in the face of revolutionists, with no confidence in their own slogans and with phrases instead of ideas; frightened by the world's storm and exploiting the world's storm, - vulgar through lack of originality, and original only in vulgarity; making profitable business out of their own desires, with no initiative, with no vocation for world-wide historic work ... a cursed senile creature condemned to direct and abuse in his own senile interests the first youthful movements of a powerful people, - a creature with no eyes, with no ears, with no teeth, with nothing whatever, - this is how the Prussian bourgeoisie stood at the steering wheel of the Prussian state after the March revolution."
These words describe today's Nigerian bourgeoisie very well!
The tasks of the Nigerian working class
Despite the enormous propaganda that is published daily, despite all the fantastic statistical figures that the ruling class think-tanks churn out, they cannot understand why there is so much anger against the government that has performed these "wonders". They cannot provide an answer to why there is so much political instability. And this is all happening during a period of so-called economic boom. What will happen when there is recession?
The working class needs to be told that the answer lies in overthrowing this system that subordinates labour to capital, this system that values wealth over the welfare of the people, that measures growth based on the well-being of the few and misery of the many, a system that can only operate on the basis of half-truths and not the whole truth, a system that exists for the few to the detriment of the overwhelming majority, a system that thrusts the mediocre forward and silences the intelligent, a system that makes the stupid the master at the expense of the capable. Nigerian workers must rise up to their historical responsibility of salvaging Nigeria and rescuing us from the gaol of this docile Nigerian ruling class.
Forward To Workers Power!
See also:
- Ranbaxy Nigeria Limited - Rosemary Olagoke victimised for a just cause by Oke Ogunde in Lagos (March 15, 2007)
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Labour Party: What manner of Workers’ Party? by Oke Ogunde in Lagos (March 15, 2007)
- 2007: The Options before the Nigerian Working Masses (May 2006)
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Nigeria: Workers' Party Now! Workers Need To Take Power! (July 2004)
- June general strike highlights need for genuine workers' party in Nigeria by Fred Weston (June 2004)



