Thursday, August 25, 2016

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Can this be true?

Dear Prof. Brother and Mentor,

Thank you sir.   You just reminded me of a discussion I had with Prof. Adebayo Adedeji ex Fed Minister, ex USG United Nations world acclaimed orifessir if development economist.

He told me how he started life as a DO District Officer in the 50s in Ilaro my home town.  One of his first duties was to take baton wielding police men to arrest his maternal uncle from Ijebu Ode who was a cocoa dealer but was not paying taxes to government.

Later after all back taxes were paid the uncle went to his mother in Ijebu dialect, "Ye Bayo nse ni omo re Bayo ko Olopa wa la kondo mo oruwo mi!" Bayo's mum your son Bayo brought police men to hit my head with their batons.

The civil service you describe here is no more. The civil service that Pa. Simeon Adebo in 1955 built from scratch to the awesome admiration of colonial civil servants who thought it was impossible is no more.

That Western Region civil service was so successful that it was used as the model for the civil service in British East Africa - Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. They came to understand and understudy it and technocrats were sent to help them with setting up theirs too.

From 15 January 1966  the ignorant soldiers have consistently eroded the civil service and have turned it into a very corrupt unmeritotious over bloated institution.

The reality on the ground is that the current civil service both at the centre and in the states are over bloated inefficient and a drain on resources. The oil boom is gone and the huge subsidy that subsidises our inefficiencies and unproductive lives is no longer available.

The reality is mass retrenchment of the bloated civil service. The first step is identifying the ghost workers and prosecuting the humans collecting the salary of the ghosts and mass retrenchment.

The Benue and Imo experiment will soon be copied by the over 20 states of Nigeria that are not viable because they can not sustain themselves without federal allocation or are too indebted to pay salaries.

The Governors of states have looted the treasuries of states brazenly especially under the PDP.

It is pay back time and we must all brace ourselves for the consequences of many years of bad governance.

Abo mi re o!
.
Cheers.

IBK


On 19 Aug 2016 14:35, "Toyin Falola" <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:
IBK:
Thanks. I have received many private Email messages saying the same thing. In effect, Nigeria operates some kind of welfare system without saying so! Indeed, one of the private contacts said that in his office, eleven of them report to work daily but there is no work  ever assigned to them.  
An unknown part of my life to many people is that I was once a civil servant, an Administrative Officer. It was such a difficult job to get. Following the British system, we did written exams. in the last year of a degree program. Those exams were graded by neutral agents. Months later, rigorous oral interviews were conducted. At the end of it, the State only hired 5 of us. The governor of the state or the permanent secretaries could not influence the process. The five were then assigned to ministries on the basis of performance. I was posted to the Civil Service Commission, headed by Mr. Faturoti, a distinguished school principal whose son, Demola, is on this list. I was trained on how to handle promotion and disciplinary matters. I became powerful! Tough work. At 5 PM, you checked all the cars that no one senior to you was still around, and you must never leave. Should the Commissioners keep working till 9 PM, I had to stay till 9.30. The work could never be completed.

….and institutional decay and collapse began to set in gradually from the 1980s. Governors became emperors. Politicians enlarged the bureaucracies as these are the places they can get jobs for their followers…

Today, the disaster you reported below….the rot of a nation begins slowly

In textbooks on politics, one that we now have to revise in Nigeria, the civil service is the force of stability and planning. Politicians come and go, the civil servants remain the rock. 

Alas! Since there is no work for them to do, as you pointed out below, they are now being asked to recede to the farms, as educated peasants! I thought all the theories of the late colonial and early years of Independence asked them to leave the farms!

I thought part of the path to the civil war was that one part of the country was accused of dominating another via the civil servants, with innocent lives eliminated in the process.

I thought over 80% of the country's annual revenues are committed to personal matters and overheads.

Question: why not allocate the budget to agriculture, and go back to the basic—develop the rural areas so that the genuine farmers are empowered, and the civil service is cut by 60%?

Drastic circumstances call for drastic measures., although I understand that cutting off a head may be too drastic a cure for a lingering headache.

A mass movement, cutting across all religions and all ethnicities, must emerge to begin planning for a mass revolution that will change cultures and values, rethink politics and democracy, etc. 
TF

Toyin Falola
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
104 Inner Campus Drive
Austin, TX 78712-0220
USA
512 475 7224
512 475 7222 (fax)


From: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Ibukunolu A Babajide <ibk2005@gmail.com>
Reply-To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Date: Friday, August 19, 2016 at 4:01 AM
To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>

Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Can this be true?

Dear Prof.,

The civil servants do nothing. They will be more productive on their farms.

The alternative is mass retrenchment in the public service which is worse than the current policy.

Cheers.

IBK


On 18 Aug 2016 18:47, "Toyin Falola" <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:
Can someone please confirm that a state in Nigeria, Benue, has decided to have a 4-day working week, saying that state workers should use Friday and weekend to farm?
And that Governor Okorocha is planning the same?
I want to think that the information is not correct.
If it is correct, how do we convince "power" that productivity is key to economic development?
TF

Toyin Falola
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
104 Inner Campus Drive
Austin, TX 78712-0220
USA
512 475 7224
512 475 7222 (fax)

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