Lagos Was Described By The Economist As A City Characterized By "Corruption & Motionless Traffic"

Date: 08-07-2015 12:32 pm (8 years ago) | Author: CLARA JANCITA
- at 8-07-2015 12:32 PM (8 years ago)
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The Economist has some interesting things to say about Nigeria’s “Center of Excellence,” Lagos.
In an article titled Learning from Lagos, the publication highlights the city’s purported bad aspects, and lauds it for improvements being made.
Here are excerpts from the article:
The bad/ugly

Quote
FOR a city that dubs itself the “center of excellence”, Lagos has a lousy reputation. The mere mention of Nigeria’s commercial center conjures images of crime, corruption and motionless traffic. The bodies of people run over in car accidents can be left on the street for hours and commuters in even the poshest parts of town are sometimes caught in shoot-outs between robbers and policemen. Little wonder then that in a ranking of the “livability” of 140 cities by the Economist Intelligence Unit, a sister company of this paper, it sits in the bottom five. The besieged Libyan capital Tripoli scores higher, and war-threatened Damascus only fractionally worse. Its citizens are also an unruly lot: men urinate on the don’t urinate signs, people hawk by the don’t hawk signs and loiter by the no loitering signs…


The good
Quote
Yet the city is a lot better now than it was two decades ago. Bola Tinubu, who became the governor of Lagos State when civilian rule was restored in 1999, remembers taking over a “slum”. “The traffic was chaotic. The infrastructure was disintegrating. There were mountains of refuse all over,” he recalls. “People were being murdered. Armed robbery was rampant. Dead bodies were picked on the street on average 10-15 times every week. There was no control of any kind.”

Mr Tinubu and his successor as governor, Babatunde Fashola, both say their efforts to reform were often frustrated by the PDP-led federal government. It failed to upgrade the main roads in the city that were under federal control, including one leading to West Africa’s biggest port. It delayed approval for an important train line that the state government was willing to pay for. “I don’t want to be understood as recriminating,” Mr Fashola says, “but I know things could have been better.”

Instead of relying on Abuja for funds, Lagos learned to generate its own. It created passable systems to monitor its own spending and squeeze taxes out of citizens not known for their eager compliance with such things. Internally generated revenue has risen to 23 billion naira ($115m) per month, from almost nothing a few years ago. That still amounts to only a few tax dollars per person. But the state has been able to borrow against that income to finance projects such as a much-needed bridge linking the upmarket areas of Ikoyi and Lekki. Moreover, its reliance on local tax collection has forced it to improve its services in order to attract businesses.

And in this regard it has done well. The state produces about $90 billion a year in goods and services, making its economy bigger than that of most African countries, including Ghana and Kenya. Much of Nigeria’s industry, which once thrived in the north, can now be found in the suburban manufacturing estate of Agbara. Cranes hang over the city and land is being reclaimed from the sea as developers rush to satisfy the vast appetite for property…


Posted: at 8-07-2015 12:32 PM (8 years ago) | Hero
- royalty2008 at 8-07-2015 01:09 PM (8 years ago)
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ok
Posted: at 8-07-2015 01:09 PM (8 years ago) | Upcoming
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- edpete at 8-07-2015 01:12 PM (8 years ago)
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Some iota of truth in ur report tho
Posted: at 8-07-2015 01:12 PM (8 years ago) | Upcoming
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- ngfineface at 8-07-2015 02:38 PM (8 years ago)
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Which Economist? The Economist no get name? Rubbish!
Posted: at 8-07-2015 02:38 PM (8 years ago) | Hero
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- Wysetots at 8-07-2015 04:17 PM (8 years ago)
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Even nameless people talk trash of Nigeria.

*Shaking My Head* 
Posted: at 8-07-2015 04:17 PM (8 years ago) | Hero
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- kelemann at 8-07-2015 05:14 PM (8 years ago)
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They are right. Let's face it, what they said is totally true. Truth is bitter especially told by an outsider.
Posted: at 8-07-2015 05:14 PM (8 years ago) | Upcoming
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- echeeche at 8-07-2015 05:28 PM (8 years ago)
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ok
Posted: at 8-07-2015 05:28 PM (8 years ago) | Hero
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- beneno at 8-07-2015 09:17 PM (8 years ago)
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oooooooooh
Posted: at 8-07-2015 09:17 PM (8 years ago) | Addicted Hero
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- PoliticxGuru at 9-07-2015 06:50 AM (8 years ago)
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wasted generation
Posted: at 9-07-2015 06:50 AM (8 years ago) | Hero
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- tina26 at 9-07-2015 10:52 AM (8 years ago)
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THE TRUTH AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH...
Posted: at 9-07-2015 10:52 AM (8 years ago) | Newbie
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- elchymo at 14-08-2015 06:58 PM (8 years ago)
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Eko oni gbaje
Posted: at 14-08-2015 06:58 PM (8 years ago) | Hero
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