Friday, 29th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
News  

Why past govt policies failed, by Osinbajo

By Mohammed Abubakar Abuja
20 August 2015   |   1:55 am
VICE PRESIDENT Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, has observed that some of the past polices and planning including budgeting of government did not reflect the needs and the conditions of the majority of the people in Nigeria who have become disempowered in the process.
Osinbajo

Osinbajo

• NIPPS alumni urge FG to jail looters

VICE PRESIDENT Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, has observed that some of the past polices and planning including budgeting of government did not reflect the needs and the conditions of the majority of the people in Nigeria who have become disempowered in the process.

Addressing members of the Alumni Association of the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPPS), at the State House, Abuja, who paid him a courtesy visit, the Vice President said the important thing now is how policies could address the need of the people. “This is the main challenge,” he noted.

President of the Alumni Association, Major-General Lawrence Onoja, rtd, who applauded President Muhammadu Buhari over his determination to fight corruption and reposition the economy, pledged the support of the Association for the actualization of what he called the three-point agenda on security, corruption and economy.

Onoja however, urged the administration not to only conduct a forensic audit of the government agencies but should jail all those found guilty of looting the country and seize the looted assets as well.

In a statement by his spokesman, Laolu Akande, the Vice President said, “Governments have not been accountable to the people, otherwise policies should have roots in the real conditions of the people,” adding that some past planning, policy formulation and budgets were not accountable to the people, stressing that in the past there have been “policies that don’t seem to have solutions that truly reflect the understanding of the question of poverty in Nigeria.”

He challenged the notion that a country can be described as rich when about two-thirds of its people are extremely poor.

While expressing concern about extreme poverty in the country, Osinbajo restated that records have shown that we have 110 million poor people, representing two third of the Nigerian population, who he said have become disempowered based on the kind of policy formulation that has been going on in the past.

He regretted that “when you look at the economic and social policies, and you look at the level of illiteracy in parts of the country, some are extremely bad and some with cases of about 80% or 90% of children out of school, and other cases of unimaginable decayed infrastructure.”

Osinbajo further stated that one of the challenges of policy formulation is how to speak to the people and how to address their plight, adding that the people are concerned about “how do I get a meal, how do I get healthcare and how to send children to school.” However, he said when you look at the budgets it does not often address the needs of the people.

The Vice President challenged members of the Alumni Association to discuss how policy formulation ought to have root in the conditions of the people. “I want the Institute to think about this,” the VP said.

Osinbajo welcomed the idea of a Policy Roundtable proposed to him by members of the Alumni Association, noting that what has been lacking in government is a time to think, reflect and consider policy while still working at a fast pace day by day.

0 Comments