Sunday, April 30, 2023

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Augustine Togonu-Bickersteth, Couldn’t Nigeria adopt and adapt these Indian schemes

cornelius Hamelberg  ,
thanks so much for remembering me  I am highly honoured
thus is good education nd information. you have given me.
thanks
augustine

On Sun, Apr 30, 2023 at 7:35 PM Cornelius Hamelberg <corneliushamelberg@gmail.com> wrote:



 I read the article and thought of you, that it's the sort of program that you would like to be in the pipeline / on the agenda of President-Elect Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu's government of national competence..


The First Revolution could enhance the accuracy of voter registration, a much easier identification of voters at the polling booths, and of course the collation of the votes counted.:


India's three revolutions  - according to Fareed Zakaria


"The first revolution was a government initiative called Aadhaar, which gives every Indian a unique 12-digit ID number verifiable by fingerprints or an iris scan. It sounds simple, but it is, in Nobel laureate Paul Romer's words, "the most sophisticated ID program in the world." Today, 99.9 percent of adult Indians have a digital ID that can be used to verify instantly who they are and thus set up a bank account in minutes (literally, I have seen this done!), or to transfer government payments to recipients directly and with little skimming and corruption.


Aadhaar enrollment is open to all and free, but its most distinctive feature is that it is publicly owned and operated, unlike in the West, where digital platforms such as Google and Facebook are private monopolies that can share your data to make a profit. Entrepreneurs can even build businesses on Aadhaar. And when you use the platform to send money or take out a loan, you don't pay those persistent fees so ubiquitous in the West."


"The second is the Jio revolution. Mukesh Ambani, India's biggest and most ambitious business leader, made a staggering $46 billion bet that by offering very cheap phones and data packages through his telecom service Jio, he could get most Indians on the internet. It worked. With most using smartphones as their computers, more than 700 million Indians now use the internet. In 2015, India was ranked 122nd for per capita mobile data consumption. Last year, it was first, exceeding the consumption of China and the United States combined."


"The third is an infrastructure revolution, which is readily apparent to anyone visiting India. Spending on roads, airports, train stations and other projects has exploded. Government capital spending has risen fivefold since fiscal 2014, and the average construction of national highways has roughly doubled, as have seaport capacity and the number of airports. Mumbai is finally building an extensive set of bridges, roads, tunnels and metro lines that could truly connect all parts of India's leading economic center."


"These three revolutions could, this time, truly transform India. But they can best do so by helping in the country's greatest challenge — bringing in the hundreds of millions of Indians who are still on the margins, economically, socially and politically. As of 2019, about 45 percent of Indians — more than 600 million people — live on less than $3.65 a day.

Nandan Nilekani, the visionary architect of Aadhaar, describes how to create jobs in a novel, bottom-up fashion. Rather than the Chinese top-down approach of building 100 new factories that employ tens of thousands, he envisions using Aadhaar to get loans to the millions of small businesses scattered throughout the country. "If 10 million small businesses get loans that let them each hire two more people, that's 20 million new jobs," he said to me.

The even larger challenge of inclusivity involves India's women, who are still pressured in various ways not to work outside the home. Female labor force participation in India is low and, stunningly, has fallen over the past two decades from around 30 percent to 23 percent. Of the Group of 20 countries, not even Saudi Arabia's level is lower. Bloomberg Economics estimates that closing the gap between women's and men's participation would increase India's gross domestic product by more than 30 percent over the next three decades.

A focus on inclusivity would also ease India's religious tensions, bringing into the fold that nation's Muslims (roughly 200 million people, one-seventh of the country), who face persistent persecution. It would also be in character for a country that is an open, pluralistic democracy with a Hindu majority, a religion almost defined by its pluralism and tolerance.

India has the potential to be admired for not just the quantity of its growth but also the quality of its values. And that would truly be an incredible India."


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Listserv moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin
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To subscribe to this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue+subscribe@googlegroups.com
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