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Wednesday 8 July 2015

Read what The Economist wrote about Lagos

In an article titled 'Learning from Lagos', The Economist dragged Nigeria's capital city then patted up on the back. Below is what they wrote;
For a city that dubs itself the “centre of excellence”, Lagos has a lousy reputation. The mere mention of Nigeria’s commercial centre conjures images of crime, corruption and motionless traffic. The bodies of people run over in car accidents can be left on the street for hours and commuters in even the poshest parts of town are sometimes caught in shoot-outs between robbers and policemen. Little wonder then that in a ranking of the “liveability” of 140 cities by the Economist Intelligence Unit, a sister company of this paper, it sits in the bottom five.
The besieged Libyan capital Tripoli scores higher, and war-threatened Damascus only fractionally worse. Its citizens are also an unruly lot: men urinate on the don’t urinate signs, people hawk by the don’t hawk signs and loiter by the no loitering signs.

Yet the city is a lot better now than it was two decades ago. Bola Tinubu, who became the governor of Lagos State when civilian rule was restored in 1999, remembers taking over a “slum”. “The traffic was chaotic. The infrastructure was disintegrating. There were mountains of refuse all over,” he recalls. “People were being murdered. Armed robbery was rampant. Dead bodies were picked on the street on average 10-15 times every week. There was no control of any kind.”

Lagos was rundown in the late 1990s because it was badly run. Rapid population growth, as rural migrants flocked to the big city, outstripped its infrastructure. No one really knows how many people live in Lagos: estimates range from 10m to 21m, but its congested roads and bridges have space for just a fraction of them.

Under military rule, the city was neglected by the central government. In 1991 Nigeria’s capital was moved to Abuja, an orgy of grandiosity built in the middle of the country to symbolise unity. Public spending followed the politicians there to pay for wide boulevards and marble-floored palaces. After the restoration of democracy in 1999 Lagos still found itself neglected, largely because its citizens had the temerity to vote for opposition parties, the forerunners of the All Progressives Congress (APC) that earlier this year unseated the incumbent People’s Democratic Party (PDP) that had run Nigeria for 16 years.

Mr Tinubu and his successor as governor, Babatunde Fashola, both say their efforts to reform were often frustrated by the PDP-led federal government. It failed to upgrade the main roads in the city that were under federal control, including one leading to West Africa’s biggest port. It delayed approval for an important train line that the state government was willing to pay for. “I don’t want to be understood as recriminating,” Mr Fashola says, “but I know things could have been better.”

Instead of relying on Abuja for funds, Lagos learned to generate its own. It created passable systems to monitor its own spending and squeeze taxes out of citizens not known for their eager compliance with such things. Internally generated revenue has risen to 23 billion naira ($115m) per month, from almost nothing a few years ago. That still amounts to only a few tax dollars per person. But the state has been able to borrow against that income to finance projects such as a much-needed bridge linking the upmarket areas of Ikoyi and Lekki. Moreover, its reliance on local tax collection has forced it to improve its services in order to attract businesses.

And in this regard it has done well. The state produces about $90 billion a year in goods and services, making its economy bigger than that of most African countries, including Ghana and Kenya. Much of Nigeria’s industry, which once thrived in the north, can now be found in the suburban manufacturing estate of Agbara. Cranes hang over the city and land is being reclaimed from the sea as developers rush to satisfy the vast appetite for property.

Seth Kaplan of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore argues that whereas national elections in Nigeria are a squabble over petrodollars, local elections in Lagos favour candidates who show competence and pragmatism. The opposition’s success in managing Lagos played a big role in its sweeping victories in state and national elections earlier this year.

Now that the APC holds power in Abuja as well as Lagos, the city has a chance to do better still. Many hope its efforts will not now constantly be stymied by a ruling party afraid of being shown up.
It could also teach politicians in the capital a thing or two. One lesson is that it helps to foster a broad tax base, instead of just relying on oil (which provides more than two-thirds of the central government’s revenues).

Better tax collection would make the budget less vulnerable to wild swings in the oil price. It might also lead to more accountable governance: people who pay tax tend to demand better services in return. Another moral is that better infrastructure boosts economic growth, and if you don’t have the money to pay for it upfront, you can get private investors to do so instead: witness Lagos’s toll-roads and bridges.

For badly run countries in other parts of the world, the big lesson of Lagos is that reforms in one big city can sometimes kick-start wider change.

57 comments:

Davido's driver said...

Nice piece. Kudos and thumbs up

Anonymous said...

SEEN,....TOMJERRYSWIT

Unknown said...

Too long to read, not intersted

ary said...

Did he lie?!

Eze said...

Would love to read .....but no strength.....still looking for wot to eat

Eze said...

Would love to read .....but no strength.....still looking for wot to eat

Bonita Bislam said...

Spot on! Reforms in one big city like lag can have a ripple effect on smaller ones

Unknown said...

Indeed, a great transformational Odyssey has begun! Let other states like Anambra learn from Lagos!

Unknown said...

Nothing interesting about this article jare.
Just wasted my time.

Anonymous said...

Hard to accept but simply the truth

Unknown said...

I would keep saying it. God's abundant blessings shall not depart from Fashola's home. Linda take note!

Unknown said...

I would keep saying it. God's abundant blessings shall not depart from Fashola's home. Linda take note!

naija dj said...

If lagos can do it, then there us no reason why Port Harcourt, Calabar and Warri (all Sea Port) cities cannot do the same.

NaijaDeltaBabe said...

Too long biko

Unknown said...

An interesting article. After lambasting Lasgidi, they came to praise her again. Hummmmmm......



#TeamBlessed#

dmj said...

Points clearly stated. This shows the bad image we have projected and has now become our definition, also a clear evidence of the lies told by past governors grossly exaggerating their achievements and overstating the lack of support like they did all they could at all times. it is shameful. Let's look to the future and be better citizens of the state, stop all the aggression and rudeness that have become us.

Unknown said...

FASHOLA IS WORKING AN HE REALLY WORK HAHAHAHAHA DAFT PEOPLE.LAGOS IS ONE OF THE USELESS STATE IN NIGERIA.

Anonymous said...

Nice one of that Linda take beep.




Mabogunjefemi

yourstrulyblogposts.blogspot.com said...

Hmmmmm

Anonymous said...

Everything said was true. In fact the article was nicer than it shld've been

Eny said...

Really?! Is the Lagos that was so badly "rundown in the late 1990s because it was badly run" the same one I grew up in?? Our former Capital??? All I see in this post is "Sponsored by APC"!

Unknown said...

Wow! Nice write up, and I agree wit every words dat detailed here mostly "For a city that dubs itself the “centre of excellence”, Lagos has a lousy reputation".

Unknown said...

An almost perfect analysis.
Never Z to miss its Editorials.
'The Daily Beast' also got some Dope ish

Unknown said...

lagos is doing better than most states....nice article.

FRESH said...

Brilliant write up! Lagos can sure do more.

Anonymous said...

yes I'm glad they stated it the way it is...things will never get solved if we continue to conceal the ugly reality. a lot of lives can be improved if they commit to an infrastructure. HOWEVER, the public also need to b willing to change and look after their environment.

Unknown said...

This piece is objective. Lagos has had cosmopolitan politicians and leaders coupled with a functional and cosmopolitan public service. Governance isn't just about the ruling class alone. The bureaucrats and technocrats in Lagos have been helpful in transforming the state from a mega slum to a megapolis. In many other states, politics isn't about discussing real issues. 2015 has been able to change this in some states with the emergence of a seasoned technocrat like El Rufai in Kaduna.

Anonymous said...

everything depends on the leadership, if the head is correct, the rest will flow

Anonymous said...

I hope you don't work or live in Lagos.

yawanow said...

well written and articulated article but there are some discrepancies in the article where it made mention about neglect on the part of GEJ during his tenure. Lagos is an industrious state and generate income through tax and other community development levies including monthly state allocation.

Anonymous said...

yes I'm glad they stated it the way it is...things will never get solved if we continue to conceal the ugly reality. a lot of lives can be improved if they commit to an infrastructure. HOWEVER, the public also need to b willing to change and look after their environment.

Unknown said...

The Lagos you grew up in. Olodo! Is the Oshodi of the 90's the same as the Oshodi of 2007. When our leaders do well, we should learn to say so lest they get weary. BRF really tried in terms of sanity. Surulere, Oshodi etc were horrible places in the late 90's. Lagos state govt should pls try and rehabilitate Mushin.

Unknown said...

Eko Ko Ni Baje...
I agree wit dis write up. Nice one!

Jasmine Joseph said...

Na who wan read dis long story???

Okaforna said...

Why are we Nigerians so lazy to read. Even a short piece like this, many complain it's too long. Sigh!!!!

Okaforna said...

Why are we Nigerians so lazy to read. Even a short piece like this, many complain it's too long. Sigh!!!!

Anonymous said...

Lagos is doing better than most COUNTRIES you mean.

Someone mentioned above that Anambra should learn from Lagos. Yes Anambra can learn how to increase and account for internally generated revenue. However Anambra cannot RIVAL Lagos in any way. Anambra does not even have a fraction of the corporations (local & intentional) or federal parastatals that are present in Lagos, and as a result the number of taxable entities. Also the population is nowhere compared to Lagos.

It is actually Kano state, the state with the highest population in the country according to census figures, that we should be asking questions of regarding internal generated revenue.

Anonymous said...

good for us

Anonymous said...

Ogologo akuko uwa

Jy said...

It will be awesome if other state can key in to the Lagos State initiatives and start generating revenue instead of waiting for the Federal allocation and doing nothing with it.

Anonymous said...

THIS COULDN'T HAVE BEEN WRITTEN ANY BETTER...PERFECT DESCRIPTION OF THE CITY I LIVE IN AND GOOD UNDERSTANDING OF ITS POTENTIALS

Twitch said...

Hmmmmmmmmmmm. Well written, Nicely criticized.

Anonymous said...

What? this fool thinks the way to generate revenue other than oil is to squeeze more tax from the citizens? tax that tinubu will still take his share. This is why we are not developing. What we need is a government ready to invest in the private sector by providing infrastrucure for private businesses to operate succesfully. This will lead to a more stable self sufficient economy. combine this with effective mgmt of our natural resources and we can be great as america in 10-15 years



Fuck you bastards that come to a blog but are too lazy to read shit. Our country is in the gutter because of people like you.

nunulicious said...

What the heck?! second time this week the economist is coming for us Nigerians. Trust our low self-esteemed Nigerians to whole heartedly agree. I remember when "keeping it real with Deola" heckled president Mugabe, the Zimababwe folks came for her! Even though he looks ridiculous to the outside world, they defended him.
So dear Lagosians why don't you pick up your self pride from the gutter and call these western-media with their falsified reports and data to order?!!
Dear economist,
I grew up and was "bred and buttered" in Lagos. This mega city OF MINE has given me the hustle mind and has taught me that I don't need anyone to survive. This mega city has triggered so many start up businesses. So what if we have a few bad points? give us 20 years from now and you'll eat your words! ptsheeeew!

Anonymous said...

It's called constructive criticism
Moreover did you see the quotes? They just repeated what Thiefnumbu said.

Anonymous said...

True. We must give Jagaban his credit where it is due. They cleaned up Lagos. but they also stole billions and did all sorts of unprinted stuvvs while at it...#TIA

Anonymous said...

Sure, tax money is not magical but serious hard work, strategy, orientation. The man @ helm and his team made it happen and still doing their best. Whoever (state, person, country) cares to copy Lagos on how to generate internally must ready to face d consequence and also pay d price. Gbam!

Udybabes said...

What are our youth turning in to, very interesting piece and someone is complaining here it is too long , then how the hell did you pass an exam , how do you ever want to broaden your horizon except by doing fraud , carrying cocain and becoming an armed robber .
It is a big shame that the love for reading and intellectual debate is diminishing in our youths , big shame , this piece could have been good for discuss , negative or positive but since it's not about wiz kid , davido or football it is lost .
In future you'd be blaming the witches in your father's compound for not allowing you progress.

Totally agree with the write up , in the 80s yes the decay was much but even with Tinubu's thievery there has been great improvement , bet you most states would try and be like Lagos .

Anonymous said...

If Fashola did it Anambra can do it , instead of looking for handouts. Onitsha market , Nnewi factories etc. Lazy men should learn from the ants

Anonymous said...

If Fashola did it Anambra can do it , instead of looking for handouts. Onitsha market , Nnewi factories etc. Lazy men should learn from the ants

Anonymous said...

Lol@national elections in Nigeria are a squabble over petrodollars.
The NASS should swiftly approve additional local governments for Lagos which was then frustrated by Obasanjo.
The victorious APC government owes this much to Lagosians who staunchly supported the party.

abujakenneth said...

APC ego massaging

Anonymous said...

Great nations in the world equally generate a Huge chunk of funds from taxation so it's nothing new.. It is legally wrong not to pay or evade tax

Anonymous said...

The writer of this article is confused to an extent, especially when he ranks Tripoli, a war-torn city higher than Lagos in a peace time period. Is the article seeking to scare away potential foreign investors from Lagos and Nigeria as a whole? Yet, on the other hand, his observations about the unruly and uncouth manners of Naija men in Lagos and even the entire nation, should serve as a reminder to not wash ones dirty laundry in public. Perhaps, this could spur all levels of government to embark on public service announcements with focus on good manners/etiquette in public spaces. Same was done in China with huge fines imposed to stop the Chinese from picking their noses, urinating and eating dog meat in public places.

m3star said...

The dodgy 'ranking of the “liveability” of 140 cities' aside, this article is spot on regards revenue generation and disbursement in Lagos. ‘Eko oni baje’

Anonymous said...

Lesson: other port cities e.g. Calabar, the first capital of Nigeria and perhaps, Port-Harcourt ought to give Lagos serious competition as the destinations for multi-national conventions and serious business. Roads, ports, ammenities and infrastructures would need to be modernized. Already, the people are very neat, health conscious, industrious, friendly and forward-looking which is great.

om said...

nice piece but there was never a time much of Nigerian industries was in North

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