Search

Newsletter image

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Join 10k+ people to get notified about new posts, news and tips.

Do not worry we don't spam!

GDPR Compliance

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, Privacy Policy, and Terms of Service.

Nigeria needs real infrastructure, not political optics – Sam Amadi

Published on May 22, 2025 at 06:13 PM

Sam Amadi, a Harvard-trained governance expert, on Thursday said Nigerians need infrastructure such as feeder roads, power, education, among others, not flyovers built for political optics.

Amadi made the statement at the maiden public lecture of the Faculty of Social and Management Sciences of Benson Idahosa University (BIU), Benin City, Edo State.

The governance expert, who emphasized institutional capacity and infrastructure planning, lamented the chronic failure to address productivity, inequality, and multidimensional poverty.

“Development isn’t just about growth. It’s about enhancing people’s freedoms and capabilities.

“Nigeria keeps changing governments, but policies remain unimplemented or ill-conceived. We need infrastructure that matters, feeder roads, power, education not flyovers built for political optics,”;; he said.

DAILY POST reports that the lecture was themed “Rethinking Nigeria’s Economic Management Policies and the Way Forward.”;;

In his keynote address, Prof. Mustapha Sagagi, a seasoned economist and non-Executive Director at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), blamed systemic corruption, weak policy implementation, and fiscal recklessness for Nigeria’s ballooning debt and rising poverty.

Sagagi posited that macroeconomic policies, no matter how well-crafted, often faltered due to poor coordination among top decision-makers.

The non-Executive Director at CBN, who highlighted the damaging effects of past unbridled borrowing and money printing, stated that over N30 trillion was printed in seven years without corresponding economic output.

“Nigeria does not have a shortage of economists, engineers, or accountants. What we lack is a leadership and institutional system that allows good ideas to translate into action,”;; he said.

Sagagi, a lecturer at the Dangote Business School, Bayero University, Kano, however, acknowledged recent gains including inflation moderation, rising reserves, and improved forex transparency.

He attributed the CBN’s tightening stance and unified exchange rate system as stabilizing forces.

He said the country needed strategic reforms, citizen accountability, and evidence-based leadership to revive the ailing economy.

“If not for monetary tightening, the naira could have crashed to N3,000 per dollar. That would have been catastrophic.

“More needed to be done to translate macroeconomic reforms into better livelihoods,”;; he stated.

On his part, economist Ayo Teriba called for the holistic privatization of the power sector, rail, and gas, saying infrastructure was too important to be left to the government alone.

Teriba, CEO of Economic Associates, made the call at the maiden public lecture of the Faculty of Social and Management Sciences of BIU, Benin City, Edo State.

Teriba advocated replicating the telecom sector’s privatization success in power, rail, and gas, and also called for long-term planning and infrastructure investment.

While calling for placing the Ministry of Budget and National Planning at the center, he opined that without a functioning plan, fiscal and monetary policies are rudderless.

He also highlighted inefficiencies in agricultural distribution, adding that 60 percent of crops were lost post-harvest due to poor transport and storage systems.

According to him, agriculture is not failing; the support systems around it are.

Earlier, in his opening remarks, Prof. John Okhuoya, Vice-Chancellor of BIU, opined that universities had a duty to drive policy engagement and development solutions.

Okhuoya, who said Nigerians must move from analysis to action, added that the university is committed to being a hub for solution-driven conversations like this.

In his address, Prof. Mike Asekome, Chairman of the Local Organising Committee, said the experts were carefully selected to share their expertise and experience in reviewing, rethinking, and proffering solutions to the present economic trajectory.

Prev Article

The stunning English pleasure lake with abandoned diving boards… where swimming is banned

Next Article

I’m expecting more politicians to join APC – Tinubu reveals

Related to this topic:

Comments (0):

Be the first to write a comment.

Post Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


All the options except Custom will apply pre-configured parameters.