Forward To A Permanent Revolution In Osun
In
the two years of Aregbesola administration, much has been achieved in respect
of restoration of order, high moral values and responsible governance. The
positive impact of probity and democratic accounting is being felt by the
electorates who were hitherto victims of the corrupt and greedy
administrators,. The revolutionary mission of the government is enunciated in
the six-point programs of banishing poverty, hunger, and unemployement,
restoring quality life, promoting functional education and communal peace. The
prudent management of public resources is exemplified in the three fold
increase in internal generated revenue from about N200m to N600m in two years.
Yet
the annual budget of N150billion is inadequate to support the gigantic
transformation envisage in the six point integral agenda. for Osun to qualify
as an emerging democracy, the state must enter the phase of what Marxists call
permanent revolution. This was a slogan created during the high tide of
anti-imperialist revolt on the scale; it refer to the imperative need to
initiate and sustain the tempo of qualitative leap in science and technology to
meet social-economic needs of a liberated people. I am invoking this notion to
undergo the urgent to provide material basis for the political and ideological
changes being implemented in the State. I will conclude by saying the
highlighted of this economic agenda and how it has been attempted in countries
like China, Iran and Brazil.
The
first priority is to rapidly expand the economic base through
industrialization, education and agriculture. The structure of the national
economy from colonial times made Lagos
and its hinterland the center of gravity. Due to import-dependent character of
the economy, Osun and other State are the backwaters of Lagos. This situation is potential harmful to
the sustenance of the democratic gains made so far. Even if Osun were to become
a minerals’ rich State, this may not alter is periphery position in Lagos because, as the
experience of oil and gas in the Niger Delta has proved, endowment in
extractive minerals makes an area more vulnerable to plunder and exploitation
by so-called international investors.
To
industrialize and prosper, Osun should design a self-reliance economic master to
become a major hub of technological production and invention in the areas of
comparative advantage. The plan should identify the areas and plan to exploit
them in next one decade and beyond. A good model of what to do is offered by
the experience in China
which as ingeniously combined the thoughts of socialism and private ownership
to create the second largest economy in the world. The economic has been the
fastest growing in the past 30 years and it is dominated by 160 gigantic
State-owned enterprises that account for 50% of production of goods and
services and employment of labour. To maximize the advantage of its link to Lagos, Osun should
prepare packages of incentive for investors to see it as a preferred
destination. As China,
Indian and other Asian countries have done, the investors to be targeted should
include the Osun Diaspora in Lagos
and foreign countries. They have the financial resources and global network to
attract the right volume of capital and technical inflow.
The
design of the industrial master plan can be patterned after what Chief Awolowo
did in the 1950s. it is reported that his team of experts met every Sunday for
two years without fail to produce the plans for industrial estates in Ikeja,
Ilupeju and Apapa. The experts included the brightest and the best in education
and ideology at the time. The secretary of the meetings was the Late Chief
Simeon Adebo. The Awolowo initiative in Lagos was
the first of its kind in Africa at the time
and the legacies have remained in spite of the massive damage done to the
Nigerian economic by irresponsible military rulers and their cohorts. Osun
should reinvent this heritage of revolutionary and action by appointing a
think-thank to work out how the State can become an economic entreport.
Transport
infrastructure is at the core of this proposal. The governments of the
southwest States should invest in a railway network to link the hinterland to Lagos and other maritime
state. This rail track must be different from the antiquated one that runs from
Lagos to the north of Nigeria. Rather, the rail should
connect Lagos to Ogun, Osun, Ondo,and Ekiti with
future link to Abuja via Kog State.
Let us recall that about 120 years ago Osun entrepreneurs based in Lagos planned to invest
in a Lagos-Ilesha rail system. The consortium of indigenous investors was led
by one DaSilva, an Ilesha-Brazilian business man. The British colonial regime
frustrated the plan because it was to compete with their economic interest.
Governor Aregbesola may wish to reinvest the dream of these pioneer
industrialists and nationalists.
In
view of the location of Osun, a revolutionary transformation of agriculture is
inevitable. The system in practice Is too primitive to support economic
prosperity. Mechanization is inescapable and the State can not afford the
volume of investment. The economic blue print suggested above should make agro
industries the focus of change. Farm produce must be processed with value
added. Cocoa
from Osun should not be exported in unprocessed form. Cassava, yam and other
tubers will do well as raw materials for industrial products. Cassava for
example, has potential to generate a sustainable economic system. The model to
examine is that of Brazil
where the production of ethanol and fuel from cassava and sugarcane will soon
displace the reliance on oil and fossil energy.
Not
much progress can be made in the fields indicate above without a strong
knowledge economy of science and inventions. Osun is a favoured host of
tertiary institutions. Dozen more are needed to facilitate the exacting work of
original research for industry and promotion of comfortable living. The State is
not expected to establish the institutions required; what it can and must do is
to international linkages. This arrangement is to struck with investor and
producers of services. For example, osun need to generate surplus electricity
to power industries and sell to other users. The osogbo control center is an
asset in this regard. The government can engage the Obafemi Awolowo
University and others to
specialize in renewable energy sources which can attract industrialists to the
State.
The
government tertiary institutions will be entitled to subvention only if they
are involved in research and inventions that are relevant to the economic
priorities of the State. This is one of the surest ways of stimulate the
knowledge economy. The Islamic Republic of Iran is an inspiring example of this
approach to economic self-sufficiency. In 2011, Iran ranked the first in the world
in scientific growth and fourth in the science production. The country has
about 80% literacy rate and less than three percent of the population lives on
about $2 a day. In the, over 50% of the people are below the poverty line. This
is the desperate situation that the State of Osun is working hard to free itself from.
Osun will attain liberation from neocolonial capitalism by embarking on a permanent
revolution in all areas of development.
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