ABSTRACT
The
research explores the impact of leadership crisis on Nigeria national
development. It appraises leadership crisis in Nigeria fourth republic and its
impact on national development. The study projects the nature of leadership
instability in Nigeria’s fourth republic and the consequences of mismanagement
of the nation’s economic and financial resources.
INTRODUCTION
Nigeria is richly endowed by providence with human and
material resources critical for national development and advancement. However,
since gaining political independence, Nigeria has continued to meander the path
befitting failed, weak and “juvenile” states. A state that had very great
prospects at independence and was touted to lead Africa out of the backwoods of
underdevelopment and economic dependency, Nigeria is still stuck in the league
of very poor, corrupt, underdeveloped, infrastructurally decaying,
crisis-riven, morally bankrupt and leadership-deficient countries of the South.
Rather than become an exemplar for transformational leadership, modern
bureaucracy, national development, national integration and innovation, Nigeria
seems to be infamous for whatever is mediocre, corrupt, insanely violent and
morally untoward.
Thus, one cannot but agree with the position that Nigeria is
a victim of poor leadership and convoluted systemic corruption which has become
pervasive and cancerous in the country’s national life. This view has been held
strongly in literature by scholars and writers who have identified the
inexorable nexus between leadership crisis and corruption in the country as the
continued reason for Nigeria’s inglorious economic throes, political
convolutions and national underdevelopment. Current debates rest on the
conclusion that Nigerian leadership suffers from extreme moral depravity and
attitudinal debauchery (Agbor, 2011; Agbor, 2012; Ezirim, 2010; Ebegbulem,
2009; Ogbunwezeh, 2007). In fact, Agbor argues that the success or failure of
any society depends largely on the mannerism of its leadership. He adds that
the result of poor leadership in Nigeria is embodied as poor governance
manifested in consistent political crisis and insecurity, poverty of the
extreme order among the citizens, debilitating miasma of corruption and rising
unemployment indices. Tipping corruption as a dinosaur syndrome in Nigeria’s
national life (anon, 2010), Nigeria’s nationhood has been caught in the whirlpool
of a corrupt public sector that has remained a hotbed of all that is vice,
sleazy and retrogressive. While not exclusive to Nigeria, a report considers
corruption to be one of the most chronic macroeconomic problems confronting
most African countries today (ACBF, 2007). It is seen as the root cause of the
various economic and political crises that have plagued the African region, and
continues to aggravate not only the problem of underdevelopment of each
country, but also that of abject poverty of the citizenry. For example,
political corruption is the cause of sit-tight political leaders, especially in
Africa, with constitutional amendments making them eligible to contest
presidential elections as long as they wish. The ability to continue to control
state power enables them to allocate national resources as they wish. This
promotes wanton, suboptimal allocation of national resources, and the ensuing
macroeconomic mismanagement which result in persistent economic cataclysm.
Although
not a Nigerian phenomenon, the specter of corruption seems to haunt the nation
and has permeated the entire fabric of state. Aided by leadership crisis
bedeviling the nation
CHAPTER 1
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE
STUDY
Agbor (2012) writes on the list of high-profile corrupt
practices of some Nigerian leaders in the present fourth republic. He argued
that the notoriety of Nigeria’s corruption by its elected and appointed leaders
led to the country being ranked 143 out of 182 countries in Transparency
International’s 2011 Corruption Perception Index. Corrupt practices among
public officials have become a national pastime. He chronicles the high-profile
list of corruption in Nigeria to include the arraignment of a one-time governor
of Kogi State by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for
embezzling and defrauding the state to the tune of N4 billion. In September
2006, the EFCC had 31 of Nigeria’s 36 state governors under investigation for
corruption (BBC, 2006). A one-time female Senator from Ogun State was quizzed
by EFCC for receiving $100,000 stolen from the Ministry of Health as well as
the Health Minister and her deputy quizzed for stealing over N30 million from
the Ministry’s unspent funds from the previous year. The oil subsidy and the
police pension scam are the latest manifestations of wanton corruption
traceable to attitudinal recklessness of Nigerian leadership. Uwujaren’s (2012)
submission on this national embarrassment shows clearly a state suffering from
leadership crisis. So far the EFCC has docked 20 of those who defrauded the
federation through the fuel subsidy fund. Some of the cases revealed included
Ogunbambo, Theck and Fargo who swindled the federal government of over N976
million for fuel they did not supply. Taylor, Nasaman and Ali were involved in
N4.4billion fraud, and Alao was docked for N2.6 billion scam. Tukur, Ochonogo,
External Oil, collectively defrauded the state to the sum of N1.899 billion.
Nadabo, Peters and Abalaka and Pacific Silver stole the sum of N1.464billion
and Watgbasoma, Ugo-Ngadi, Ebenezer, Ejidele and Ontario Oil defrauded the
Federal Government of Nigeria to the tune of N1.959 billion (Uwujaren, 2012).
The management of the police pension scheme has recently revealed a leadership
that is grossly insensitive. It becomes very appalling to hear that over
N200million (two hundred million naira) would be spent to verify less than
twenty police pensioners overseas. The question is what then would be the total
pension of those retired officers when over two hundred million is spent to verify
them. Some of the state officials involved in this scam have come under
prosecution by the EFCC. EsaiDangaba, AtikuKigo, Ahmed Inuwa Wada, John Yusufu,
Veronica Ulonma, and ZaniZira are being prosecuted for defrauding the police
pension scheme in the sum of N32.8billion (Uwujaren, 2012).
According to Ike (2010), it is estimated that by
1999 past Nigerian leaders had stolen or misused $407 billion or 225 billion
pounds. This amount is equal to all western aid given to the continent of
Africa. He also mentioned that the immediate former Chairman of Nigeria
Economic, and Financial Crimes Commission disclosed that 220 billion pounds was
squandered between independence from Britain in 1960 and the return to
democracy in 1999. This stolen fortune tallies exactly with the 220 billion
pounds of Western Aid given to Africa between 1960-1997. This amounted to six
times the American help given to post-war Europe under the Marshall Plan for
the Reconstruction of Europe. Ike also cited the World Bank’s list of Nigeria’s
fund by depositors in four Western countries in 1999 and submitted to the then
President of Nigeria. From that list, five of the depositors alone were
responsible for much of the stolen funds in the World Bank list of 21 heavy
looters. The total of amount deposited in western banks by the heaviest 21
looters is the equivalent of 150 billion dollars. He concluded that on balance,
the leaders of the first and second republics were relatively not corrupt as
evidence in the third and fourth republics has gradually shown the byzantine
kleptomania and “lootocracy” by those supposedly entrusted with the national
leadership. Thus corruption in Nigeria has both entangled the entire public and
private sector matrix and deepened its vice-like grip on the society. The
research therefore shall investigate the impact of leadership crisis on Nigeria
national development of fourth republic
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
The problem confronting this research is to appraise the impact of
leadership crisis on Nigeria national development of the fourth republic
1.3
RESEARCH QUESTION
2
What is the nature of leadership crisis in Nigeria’s fourth republic
3
What is the impact of leadership crisis on Nigeria’s national development
1.4
OBJECTIVE OF THE RESEARCH
1 To appraise the nature of leadership crisis
in nigerias fourth republic
2
To determine the impact of leadership crisis in nigerias national development
1.5 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
The study shall project the damaging consequences of
leadership crisis on the country’s national development with a view to
determining measures of mitigating and eliminating the menace in the nations leadership.
1.6 STATEMENT OF HYPOTHESIS
1 H0 The level of national development is low
H1 The
level of national development is high
2
H0 Leadership crisis in fourth republic Nigeria
is high
H1 Leadership crisis in fourth republic
Nigeria is low
3 H0 The impact of leadership crisis in
Nigeria is low
H1 The impact of leadership crisis in Nigeria is high
1.7 SCOPE OF THE STUDY
The study is focused on appraising the
impact of leadership crisis on Nigeria national development of fourth republic.
1.1
DEFINITION
OF TERMS
LEADERSHIP
Cole
(1997, p. 54) posits: Leadership is a dynamic process at work in a group
whereby one individual over a particular period of time, and in a particular organizational
context, influences the other group members to commit themselves freely to the
achievement of group tasks or goals
CORRUPTION
In
defining corruption, Amuwo (2005) and Obayelu (2007) consider it as the
exploitation of public position, resources and power for private gain. Fieldstad
& Isaksen (2008, p. 3) and Ogundiya (2009, p. 5) define corruption as “the
betrayal of public trust for individual or sectional gain.” Obayelu went further
to identify corruption as “efforts to secure wealth or power through illegal
means for private gain at public expense; or a misuse of power for private
benefit.” Corruption covers a broad spectrum of activities ranging from fraud
(theft through misrepresentation), embezzlement (misappropriation of corporate
or public funds) to bribery (payments made in order to gain an advantage or to
avoid a disadvantage). From a political point of view, Aiyede (2006, p. 5)
views corruption as “the abuse or misuse of public or governmental power for
illegitimate private advantages.” His view corroborates the position of Lipset
and Lenz (2000) that corruption is an effort to secure wealth or power through
illegal means for private benefit at public expense. Tanzi (1998) adds that
such abuse of public power may not necessarily be for one’s private benefit but
for the benefit of one’s party, class, tribe, or family. Although corruption is
global in scope, it is more pronounced in developing societies because of their
weak institutions. It is minimal in developed nations because of existing
institutional control mechanisms which are more developed and effective.
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
According to Imhonopi & Urim (2010), national development is the
ability of a country or countries to improve the social welfare of the people,
namely, by providing social amenities like good education, power, housing,
pipe-borne water and others. The components of national development include
economic development, socio-cultural empowerment and development and how these
impact on human development.