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Planning to Develop: The Role of Monitoring and Evaluation

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Against the background of the recently adopted Sustainable Development Goals, it is evident that there is a global will to make a success of the development process across countries. However, individual countries need a will to prepare for sustainable development. This speaks to the inevitable role of national development planning in the development process. While embracing market liberalization strategies and other popular policy propositions of international financial institutions, for instance, governments must keep in mind that the market does not have all the answers. Particularly so in developing countries of Africa where living standards are low, institutional frameworks are weak, income inequality is high and in-country spatial inequality is widespread. Zambia is one African country among several which has experienced woes associated with a blind adoption of ‘Invisible Hand’ policy options. Its fourth development plan was aborted at a point when it felt the time was

A New Dawn: SDGs, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development

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Beginning today Friday 25 th through Sunday 27 th September 2015, Heads of State and Government and High representatives will meet at the 70 th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York to ratify the blue print of the post-2015 Development Agenda – Sustainable Development Goals. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development focuses on transforming the world with a focus on 5 Ps – People, Planet, Prosperity, Peace and Partnership. The blueprint is indeed a product of conscientious consultations involving various stakeholders deliberating and debating various thematic and sub-thematic issues. The Task Force improved on the consultative processes that birthed the MDGs. Consequently, the SDGs are a product of wider and more inclusive consultations on elements essential to creating the World We Want by 2030. Also, in many ways the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development seeks to build on the Millennium Development Goals and complete what it could no

Two Sides of a Coin: FDI and Nigeria’s Service-Led Structural Transformation

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By the 2014 rebasing of its GDP, Nigeria became Africa’s largest economy trumping its long time contender, South Africa. Amongst several things, the significant growth implies changes in the sectoral contribution of domestic output and employment. Conventionally, for a developing country context it is expected that international trade, foreign direct investment, industrial policy and global price fluctuations would have contributed to the shifts in the distribution of factors of production and final output. Given the uninclusive nature of the impressive surge in output, it is important to investigate what sectors accounted for the structural change. Using historical data on the Nigerian economy, Oyebanke and I examined (in a forthcoming paper) the contribution of foreign direct investment to structural transformation. Specifically, in the paper we provided answers to the following questions: What are the sources, nature and characteristics of the structural change

Notes from AAI’s State of Education in Africa Conference 2015

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At first, when I was contacted to be a panelist at AAI’s State of Education in Africa Conference I was very hesitant. However, I accepted the offer after wide consultations, also because you could not convene a conference on the State of Education in Africa without a special reference to Covenant University – a leading Christian Mission University in Africa’s biggest economy. The Conference attracted other thought leaders and visionaries including Professor Pat Utomi, Ndidi Nwuneli, Professor Dorayi Aminu, Devang Vussonji, Professor Julie Ibiam, Iyinoluwa Aboyeji of Andela amongst others. Panel discussions addressed issues on: ‘Teacher Training’, ‘Reforming Science and Technology Education in Africa’, ‘Spotlight on Vocational and Technical Training and Higher Education’, ‘Early Childhood Education’ and ‘Global Best Practices in Education’.  I participated in the panel on ‘Teacher Training: Equipping new educators with the tools they need for success’, which was moder

Towards an Inclusive Rental Code for Nigeria

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Inclusive growth is one of the recent concepts in development parlance. A drive for inclusive growth focuses on creating productive opportunities while ensuring there is equal access by all to those opportunities. Therefore, if growth is to be inclusive, it must consider the participation of every segment of society particularly the marginalized and vulnerable. Nigeria’s real estate sector has continued to grow at an impressive rate within the past decade. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, the value of Nigeria’s real estate market has grown from N 1.4 trillion in 2011 to N 6.5 trillion in 2015. Notably, the residential real estate sub-sector’s contribution to GDP increased from 7.7 per cent in 2012 to 11.1 per cent in 2014. With over 80 per cent of Nigeria’s adult population living in rented accommodations, the sub-sector hold tremendous potential for growth. The Managing Director of The Infrastructure Bank (TIB) alludes to this in a report that projects the

Economic Development Effects of Church Revivals in Africa

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Often times when development experts propose solutions to the problems of underdevelopment and poverty, the solutions are tilted towards addressing the effects of underdevelopment such as high unemployment, hunger, low literacy rate, prevalence of communicable diseases, and other low quality of life parameters. There are fewer empirical investigations into the causes of underdevelopment and poverty across developing countries. For instance, there is a need to intricately decipher the role that traditions, cultural values, norms, beliefs, and religious inclinations play in development. This is because non-economic factors could be either great contributors to or deterrents of development. Within the Weberian framework of economic development, religious affiliations to  Protestantism  and Protestant ethics were observed to be stimulants of the entrepreneurial spirit. In turn, the entrepreneurial spirit significantly contributed to industrial development. Notably, most r

Illustrated: The Difference between Esusu and Ajo

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In popular parlance, it is common to term esusu as ajo. In a forthcoming Encyclopaedia entry we distinguish between Esusu and Ajo. Esusu Ajo The discussion continues...

Policy Campaign: Making NYSC Orientation Meaningful

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Without doubt Nigerian National Youth Service Corps ( NYSC ) deployments have been useful in filling manpower gaps across the country, especially disparities in the availability and quality of subject teachers.  For instance, during my National Youth Service year, I was deployed to teach Mathematics at a government junior secondary school in Goepaal , Shendam Local Government Area of Plateau State. There I taught the entire arm of junior secondary school One (JSS 1) students. Some other Youth Corps members within the Local Government Area were the pioneer teachers of some science subjects in the schools to which they were deployed. By and large, when given primary teaching assignments,Youth Corps members are assigned to teach at educational institutions, based on the assumption that they know enough (about classroom management, lesson plan preparation, student learning styles, teaching effectiveness etc)  to function effectively at those assignments. As they say, assumption i

Campaign Against Littering in Nigeria, CALi Nigeria

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Today, I launch a change initiative, C ampaign A gainst L ittering i n Nigeria (CALi Nigeria). I have a dream to see a litter-free Nigeria where everyone young and old, male and female sees littering as an unacceptable and evil behaviour.  The objective of the Campaign is to create awareness on the environmental hazards associated with littering behaviour in Nigerians and the Nigerian environment. Very important is changing the perspective that littering is an acceptable behaviour.  Simply defined, littering is making places messy by strewing garbage around; it is making places or areas untidy with rubbish or objects left lying about.  I am just tired of getting angry every time I see littered environments and people walking past litters without a thought to pick them up to dispose them off properly. So I thought to do something about it.  I had even begun to conduct a research investigation into the phenomenon. However, since littering is first a thought

Articulating a Vision on Sustainable Energy for All

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The experience of countries around the world indicates the relationship that subsists between industrial development and economic growth on one hand and with environmental degradation on the other hand.  Given the myriad challenges of environmental degradation and climate change, current policy advocacy centre on strengthening legal, regulatory and political institutions that guide domestic and international investment activities. i Further, discussions on a Post-2015 development agenda brought to fore issues of economic, social and environmental sustainability.  For instance, with respect to international capital movements, in as much as foreign direct investment (FDI) holds the promise of positive externalities, there is also the tendency that FDI may induce negative externalities (pollution, natural resource degradation, inadequate protection of worker health and safety, and complicity in the violation of human rights all of which confound the tenets of sustainable development