Lamentation For Nigeria's PoorPoverty, Violence, and the Failure of Economic Imagination
Preamble:
There are moments in the life of a nation when statistics stop being statistics.
They seep into the roads, the markets, the posture of citizens, the temperament of drivers, the architecture of homes, the language of politics, the psychology of survival.
Eventually, poverty ceases to belong only to the poor.
It becomes the climate in which everyone lives. Nigeria may already be there.
The Arithmetic of Despair
100 million people live in abject poverty.
Pause there.
Do not rush past the number.
Assume the average family consists of eight people:
two parents and six children.
That gives us:
12.5 million families
25 million parents
75 million children
Mostly out of school.
Or never enrolled at all.
And perhaps the most frightening thing is not even the poverty itself.
It is the absence of national imagination regarding it.
There appears to be no coherent long-term strategy to economically absorb these millions into productive life.
No serious architecture of hope.
No deliberate system for transforming dependency into participation.
So society improvises.
And improvisation, when multiplied across millions, eventually becomes instability.
When Poverty Becomes Atmospheric
Our strategy increasingly appears to be this:
Each day, pray that we ourselves do not become victims of the methods desperate people devise to separate us from the wealth accumulated around them, and often at their expense.
The signs are everywhere.
Pension funds looted.
Contract prices inflated beyond reason.
Public office converted into private extraction.
Police forces informally privatized by the wealthy, leaving ordinary citizens underprotected.
Imported bulletproof vehicles purchased at enormous cost from foreign manufacturers, placing further pressure on local currencies already weakened by import dependence.
Meanwhile, local manufacturers struggle to survive.
The irony becomes almost unbearable:
the same economic structure that impoverishes millions also weakens the productive sector capable of employing them.
And then society acts surprised when violence expands.
Violence As Culture
Violence is no longer merely criminal.
It has become behavioral.
Even driving reflects it.
Motorcyclists weave recklessly through traffic, daring collision itself.
Not because they are fearless, but because they understand something profound about the psychology of modern Nigeria:
Fear has become social currency.
The assumption is simple:
if anything happens, the crowd itself may become violent.
And so caution no longer emerges from law or civic culture.
It emerges from fear of collective instability.
This is what societal stress looks like before societies openly acknowledge it.
The Economics of Extraction
Consider the structure of public contracting.
Road projects worth hundreds of millions of dollars are awarded to a tiny network of contractors and subcontractors.
At completion, often after questionable workmanship, the proceeds frequently disappear into:
luxury holidays abroad,
imported vehicles,
sprawling mansions occupied by only a handful of people,
garages filled with exotic automobiles,
symbols of insulation from the society producing the wealth itself.
But infrastructure spending is supposed to circulate through an economy.
That is the point.
Public works historically succeed not merely because roads are built, but because employment spreads.
The multiplier effect matters.
A state spending hundreds of millions with thousands of direct beneficiaries creates stability far more effectively than concentrating wealth within a narrow elite circle.
This is why infrastructure projects have historically revived stagnant economies across civilizations.
Not because concrete itself possesses magic, but because participation creates ownership.
Direct Labour and Economic Distribution
A society serious about stability would rethink how public projects are executed.
Direct labour models, despite inefficiencies, possess one overwhelming advantage:
they distribute participation.
The obsession with elite concentration masquerading as efficiency often produces the opposite:
high unemployment, weak circulation of wealth, and deepening alienation.
An economy cannot permanently exclude millions from meaningful participation without eventually producing social consequences.
This is not ideology.
It is arithmetic.
The Two Economic Religions
Every political system eventually divides itself between two economic philosophies.
The first believes wealth should circulate broadly through society by empowering ordinary people directly.
The second believes wealth should first accumulate heavily at the top, after which economic laws will somehow allow benefits to “trickle down.”
History remains unconvinced.
Yet the debate persists.
Even advanced democracies remain trapped between these competing visions.
Nigeria merely experiences the conflict in more visible and brutal forms.
Even Tyrants Understood This
It is uncomfortable to admit, but even destructive regimes sometimes understood economic mechanics better than morally superior societies.
Adolf Hitler’s Autobahn projects helped absorb massive unemployment and restore economic momentum in post-World War I Germany.
This is not praise of tyranny.
It is acknowledgment of a principle:
large-scale public works can stabilize societies when designed to maximize participation.
Infrastructure is not merely engineering.
It is social architecture.
The Candor of Power
At times, truth escapes accidentally from within political circles themselves.
Former Nigerian Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi once remarked, in substance:
“If Nigerians knew what politicians do with their money, they would stone us.”
The statement shocked many precisely because it momentarily dissolved the polite theater surrounding governance.
And perhaps that is part of the problem.
Too much of governance has become theater.
Too little has remained moral responsibility.
Feed My Sheep
Christ’s instruction to Peter remains one of the simplest economic and spiritual principles ever articulated:
“Do you love me? Feed my sheep.”
The statement was spiritual.
But like many spiritual truths, it carries unavoidable material implications.
To elevate the spiritually poor:
provide spiritual nourishment.
To elevate the economically poor:
provide economic opportunity.
Civilizations often collapse under the weight of unnecessary complexity because simple truths are dismissed as unsophisticated.
Yet simplicity may indeed be the highest sophistication.
Simplicity and National Survival
The solution to mass poverty may not require genius.
It may simply require focus.
If, for even one decade, national policy became consciously organized around lifting the poorest millions into productive economic life:
education,
vocational absorption,
mass infrastructure employment,
local manufacturing,
housing,
sanitation,
energy access,
transportation,
agricultural processing,
the effects would ripple across every class.
Because poverty does not stay confined to the poor.
Eventually it taxes everyone:
through insecurity,
through instability,
through currency weakness,
through fear,
through declining trust,
through violence.
The Elephant and the Refrigerator
There is an old joke:
“How do you put an elephant into a refrigerator?”
Simple.
Open the refrigerator.
Put the elephant in.
Close the door.
“But the elephant will not fit.”
Fine.
Then build a bigger refrigerator.
Or abandon the objective entirely.
But solve the problem honestly.
That is civilization:
the capacity to confront reality directly instead of endlessly performing concern around it.
Epilogue: Poverty Eventually Collects Its Debt
No society can permanently ignore tens of millions of impoverished citizens and remain psychologically healthy.
Eventually poverty becomes atmospheric.
It enters language.
Architecture.
Politics.
Religion.
Driving.
Security.
Education.
Family life.
Even hope itself.
And when hope collapses, societies become dangerous.
Not because people are naturally evil,
but because prolonged exclusion distorts human behavior.
The tragedy is that much of this remains reversible.
The resources exist.
The manpower exists.
The intelligence exists.
What remains uncertain is whether the moral imagination exists.
Deep sigh.
Don Kenobi
#CultureNotStructure
#BigAgendaAfrica

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