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Ayo Akinfe
[1] No matter how you look at it, large under-performing countries like Nigeria, Indonesia, Pakistan and Bangladesh are the hope for humanity going forward. It is these under-performing economies with huge potential that can take the human race to the next level
[2] When you look at Nigeria with a population of about 200m, making her the world’s seventh most populous nation in a planet made up of nearly 8bn people, it is crystal clear that we are an under-performing parasitic economy. A huge liability to the human race but sadly, that does not shame us
[3] We account for one fortieth of the global population, meaning one in every 40 human beings is Nigerian. It is only fair that we carry our fair share of humanity’s burden by accounting for one fortieth of global economic and industrial output
[4] Figures do not lie as the global economy is worth about $110trn and one fortieth of that is $2.75trn. This is the very minimum Nigeria’s gross domestic product (GDP) should be were we not leaches and parasites
[5] We shamelessly have a meagre GDP of about $400bn, less then a quarter of our fair share and it does not embarrass us. We then wonder why people disrespect us with all these racist insults, immigration restrictions and discriminatory practices
[6] Brazil has a population almost identical to that of Nigeria, yet her GDP is $2.03trn compared with Nigeria’s $400bn. If na to throw owambe, open church or mosque or spray money now, we go sabi pass dem
[7] When you look at other developing nations with similar large populations like us such as Indonesia, Brazil and Mexico, you will find out that they all have GDPs in excess or $1trn, at least thrice the size of ours but Nigerians own more houses than their citizens in Dubai, throw more parties around the world than them and own more private jets than their elite
[8] In a world where people believed in equity, Nigeria should not only account for one fortieth of global economic output but also produce at least one fortieth of all automobiles, washing machines, fridges, freezers, TV sets, laptop computers, mobile phones, etc. Now, that would be pulling our weight
[9] With a new global economic order pending, it will be up to emerging economies to fill the void. Mature industrialised economies do not have the capacity to grow beyond say 3% but in somewhere like Nigeria you can get 30% annual GDP growth
[10] What I love about the coronavirus crisis is that it exposed a lot of the impediments that stifled our economic growth such as the over-reliance on oil, the naive notion that the government is there to solve all our economic woes and the shameless reliance on imports to meet all our needs. Now is the time to build on this