Also published in Daily Trust
As Nigerians groan under the current excruciating economic
hardship, which is arguably the most severe ever experienced in the country, their
growing sense of disappointment in government is quite understandable,
considering their hitherto high expectations following decades of drift that
reached its worst during the previous administration of former President Goodluck
Jonathan.
Though many Nigerians weren’t being realistic in their
expectations, in the first place, many others had rightly expected President
Buhari to kick-start his administration at a swift yet measured tempo necessarily
needed to arrest the drift and effect reasonable and tangible economic development
achievable in light of the available resources. In other words, on President
Buhari’s assumption of office, many Nigerians rightly assumed that, within the
period between his election victory and his assumption of office, a substantive
and comprehensive action plan had already been prepared. Soon afterwards,
however, some clues indicating otherwise and instead indicating his
government’s inadequate readiness to immediately roll-out its promised economic
reform strategies, began to manifest themselves. It turned out that, even tasks
as relatively easy as shortlisting the names of the candidates for various
major political appointments simply hadn’t been done.