Tag: Adebayo Adedeji

  • Adebayo Adedeji and  Africa’s development debate (1)

    It was a dramatic encounter. The forum was one of those Organization of African Unity (OAU) Heads of State summits during the regime of Nigeria’s military President, General Ibrahim Babangida, in the 1980s.  Exactly which one it was I cannot recollect now. That was a time when the hegemonic International Financial Institutions (IFIs) were imposing stringent Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAP) as a cure all for all ailing African economies as a precondition for foreign aid and loans. In attendance, as a member of the Nigerian government delegation was the eminent journalist, media administrator and lawyer, Chief Tony Momoh, who was Nigeria’s Minister of Information. Also a frontline participant at the event was the respected development economist, public administrator, international civil servant, academic and researcher, Professor Adebayo Adedeji, in his capacity as Under-Secretary General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).

    The Babangida regime had enthusiastically embraced the Structural Adjustment policies, which included massive currency devaluation, deregulation of the economy, reduction of the public sector workforce, comprehensive privatization of public enterprises, and removal of subsidies on critical social services among others. The regime’s officials, particularly the brilliant rationalist and Secretary to the Federal Government, Chief Olu Falae, articulately advocated the IMF and World Bank positions that there was no alternative to SAP as the only path out of Africa’s protracted crisis of underdevelopment. Professor Adedeji had at several fora vigorously canvassed an opposing view to the obvious discomfiture of his home government. He was of the firm belief that not only was most of the policy components of SAP inappropriate, but there were indeed viable alternatives to them. Chief Tony Momoh, spokesman of a pro-SAP government unconventionally put on his toga as a journalist at that event, got a tape recorder and sought an interview with the Professor, which the latter readily gave. The interesting exchange between the two men was later published in the Daily Times if my memory serves me right.

    It would appear to me as a layman that the defining essence of the life of Professor Adebayo Adedeji who passed on to eternity on 25th April, 2018, was the intellectual struggle to extricate African Development Strategy and Policy from the hegemonic stranglehold of external forces, particularly IFIs that may not necessarily mean well for the continent. For those of us who do not have the requisite grounding and expertise in economic as well as development theory and analysis to appreciate and apprehend his technical disquisitions, there are luckily a number of easily accessible publications on the life, times and works of Professor Adedeji. One of these, for instance, is a collection of essays in his honour when he clocked 65 titled ‘Issues in African Development’ and edited by Bade Onimode and Richard Synge. Published by Heinemann Educational Books (Nigeria) Plc in association with the African Centre for Development and Strategic Studies in 1995, the book is divided into four sections comprising 16 chapters and runs into 323 pages.

    The book’s contributors are some of the most illustrious scholars from diverse disciplines including economics, history, politics, public administration, development as well as experts in diverse spheres of international development administration. In the preface to the book by Stephen Lewis, we have a glimpse of what Professor Adedeji meant to those who worked with him at the ECA. In his words, “Collaborating with Adebayo Adedeji was an extraordinary experience. His whole persona comes alive when he speaks, feelingly, of Africa; it stimulates everyone around him; conviction and animation are unleashed in equal measure, and just when you feel the tensions perilously rising, his voluble laugh bursts forth in a catharsis of reconciliation. Adedeji’s great strength lies in his unswerving determination to resolve the African crisis. Nothing distracts him. As a result, his contribution to Africa gives meaning to internationalism”.

    The same impression is conveyed in a statement by the former Secretary General of the United Nations, Perez de Cuellar, to the 27th Assembly of the Heads of Government of the OAU, held in Abuja on 3rd June, 1991 in a fulsome tribute to Adedeji thus: “Professor Adedeji has been at the helm of ECA for more than half of its existence and has left an indelible mark on the work and objectives of the Commission. He has made significant contributions to successive initiatives to address and to improve Africa’s economic and social situation. I am pleased to have this opportunity to congratulate him, in his native land, for a job well done, and to wish him success in his future undertakings”.

    My favourite chapter in this book is titled ‘Africa’s Development Crisis in Historical Perspective’ by the late Professor J.F Ade-Ajayi; a chapter in which a scholar I had assumed to be essentially of a conservative cast traces the developmental travails of the continent to the legacy of foreign conquests such as the Arab and Atlantic slave trade, colonialism and neocolonialism. That chapter reminds one of the immortal Walter Rodney in his ‘How Europe Underdeveloped Africa’. Writing about the legacy of colonialism, for instance, Ajayi perspicaciously observes that “The interest of the European powers in Africa was to disrupt existing lines of intra-African trade, and channel all effort into the production of primary crops required for export, and encourage importation of European goods even if it meant destroying local manufactures, crafts and industries. Thus, it has been said, Africa learnt to produce what it did not consume and to consume what it did not produce”.

    Professor Ajayi points out that our inability to genuinely decolonize after independence meant a failure to confront the past and make genuine amends. Consequently this implies “a carry-over of the disabilities from the slave trade era to the colonial period, and from the colonial period into the period after independence. This often involved a loss of self-esteem, an undue willingness to substitute dependence on charity for self-confidence and self-reliance, an attitude sometimes referred to as evidence of “colonial mentality”.

    And when he turned 70, another collection of essays was published in Adedeji’s honour titled ‘African Development and Governance Strategies in the 21st Century’ again edited by Professor Bade Onimode. This 256 page book is made up of 16 seminal essays and an epilogue also written by some of the continent’s best and brightest minds. Tracing the impasse of development in Africa forty years after independence in this book’s preface, Professor Segun Odunuga  , makes the point that “Adedeji’s advocacy of holistic human development is based on the concept that society can only develop with the mobilization of the people; hence his statement that Africa would need to set in motion a process that puts the individual at the very centre of a development effort that is both human and humane…” Is this not a foretaste of the lesson Bill Gates came to teach our leaders 14 years after this book was written? But the definitive book on this great African is undoubtedly ‘African Development: Adebayo Adedeji’s Strategies’ written by Professor S. K. B. Asante and published in 1991, which we will examine in the second part of this piece.

  • Adebayo Adedeji and Africa’s development debate (2)

    When he turned 70, another collection of essays was published in Adedeji’s honour titled ‘African Development and Governance Strategies in the 21st Century’ again edited by Professor Bade Onimode. This 256 page book is made up of 16 essays and an epilogue also written by some of the continent’s best and brightest minds. Tracing the impasse of development forty years after independence in this book’s preface, Professor Segun Odunuga, makes the point that “Adedeji’s advocacy of holistic human development is based on the concept that society can only develop with the mobilization of the people; hence his statement that Africa would need to set in motion a process that puts the individual at the very centre of a development effort that is both human and humane…” Is this not a foretaste of the lesson Bill Gates came to teach our leaders here in Nigeria 14 years after this book was written? But the definitive book on this great African is undoubtedly ‘African Development: Adebayo Adedeji’s Strategies’ written by Professor S. K. B. Asante and published in 1991.

    Covering 228 pages, Professor Asante’s book on Adebayo Adedeji’s development strategies and policy alternatives for Africa is broken into nine chapters which look at various aspects of Adedeji’s landmark contributions to the conceptualization and evolution of African development strategy. These include elements of Adedeji’s development strategy, Adedeji’s role in the establishment and development of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), His participation in the search for an indigenous African Development strategy in the 1970s as well as his frontline role as an active intellectual combatant in the struggle for hegemony over African Development Strategy and the concluding chapter, which examines ‘Adedeji and the Future of African Development’ with the year 2000 in mind.

    Many scholars have pointed out the utter inadequacy, indeed sheer harmfulness at times, of received western social science scholarship on Africa’s quest for socio-economic and political liberation as well as development. For instance in his monumental and path breaking but inadequately acknowledged book, ‘The Challenge of Poverty in Africa’, Professor E. J. Nwosu, the eminent development economist notes that “We should now remind African economists and students of economics of the complacency and misdirection in the treatment of development issues which Western pseudo-intellectual propaganda consistently inflicts on them. They are urged, in the name of the ‘scientific’ approach, to treat economic growth and development issues like Mathematics and even like Physics, and hence with such inhuman coldness, ‘clever technical scaffolding’ and recourse to global or aggregated economic magnitudes that push human, especially class interests, needs, aspirations and sensibilities to the sidelines of economic thought and policy action, as mere incidental categories”.

    Throughout his intellectual and professional life, Professor Adedeji was at the forefront of the struggle to liberate African development policies and strategies from the tyranny of received paradigms. Key elements of his development strategies included self-reliance and self-sustainment linked to the concept of regional co-operation and integration. These elements featured prominently in major attempts by African countries to forge alternative development policies and strategies more suited to their autochthonous and rapid development all of which had the intellectual imprimatur of Adedeji at his vantage position at the head of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).

    Professor Adedeji was a key initiator and participant in such major efforts to forge an autonomous and original development path for Africa such as the ECA/OAU Lagos Plan of Action (LPA), adopted by OAU Heads of State in Lagos in 1980, OAU’s ‘Africa’s Priority Programme for Economic Recovery 1986-1990 (APPER) and the United Nations Programme of Action for African Economic Recovery and Development 1986-1980 (UN-PAAERD). On the LPA, for instance, Asante writes that “The adoption of the Lagos Plan of Action – an elaboration of the ‘Monrovia Declaration’ – as advocated by Adedeji and the ECA in collaboration with OAU, was an event of historic significance. For the first time in the history of the continent, African leaders were able to commit themselves, in unambiguous terms, to a unified strategy reflecting their own understanding of the causes of their problems and their own prescription for the collective salvation of their continent”. Unfortunately, the slavishness, venality and lack of the requisite political will by African leaders blunted the efficacy of these alternative policy offensives.

    In chapter eight of his book titled ‘The struggle for hegemony over African Development Strategy: Adedeji vs. the World Bank Mandarins’, Professor Asante vividly captures the heroic role played by Adedeji in confronting and containing the IFI’s attempt to sustain the foisting of neo-liberal, extremist free market policies on Africa through his headship of the ECA. In response to the insistence by the IFI’s that the SAPs were indeed working and positively addressing what they perceived as the roots of the African crisis, Adedeji spearheaded the publication of the African Alternative Framework-Structural Adjustment Programmes in Africa (AAF-SAP), which insisted that the crisis was indeed structural in nature and required radically different policy remedies.

    In the words of Professor Asante: “Despite the World Bank’s persistence that adjustment programmes should continue to evolve, the May 1989 Washington meeting, and especially the Bank’s November 1989 report, have gone a long way towards embracing the salient elements of Adedeji’s alternative development strategy: human-centered development, fostering self-reliance and, lately, the need for SAPs to go beyond stabilization to achieve a genuine transformation of production structures. This is indeed a consensus on which Adedeji has undoubtedly left his mark”. There can be no greater tribute to a patriotic African scholar although the political will to actualize his vision of a truly liberated and transformed Africa is still sadly lacking.

  • Adebayo Adedeji and Africa’s development debate (1)

    It was a dramatic encounter. The forum was one of those Organization of African Unity (OAU) Heads of State summits during the regime of Nigeria’s military President, General Ibrahim Babangida, in the 1980s.  Exactly which one it was I cannot recollect now. That was a time when the hegemonic International Financial Institutions (IFIs) were imposing stringent Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAP) as a cure all for all ailing African economies as a precondition for foreign aid and loans. In attendance, as a member of the Nigerian government delegation was the eminent journalist, media administrator and lawyer, Chief Tony Momoh, who was Nigeria’s Minister of Information. Also a frontline participant at the event was the respected development economist, public administrator, international civil servant, academic and researcher, Professor Adebayo Adedeji, in his capacity as Under-Secretary General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).

    The Babangida regime had enthusiastically embraced the Structural Adjustment policies, which included massive currency devaluation, deregulation of the economy, reduction of the public sector workforce, comprehensive privatization of public enterprises, and removal of subsidies on critical social services among others. The regime’s officials, particularly the brilliant rationalist and Secretary to the Federal Government, Chief Olu Falae, articulately advocated the IMF and World Bank positions that there was no alternative to SAP as the only path out of Africa’s protracted crisis of underdevelopment. Professor Adedeji had at several fora vigorously canvassed an opposing view to the obvious discomfiture of his home government. He was of the firm belief that not only was most of the policy components of SAP inappropriate, but there were indeed viable alternatives to them. Chief Tony Momoh, spokesman of a pro-SAP government unconventionally put on his toga as a journalist at that event, got a tape recorder and sought an interview with the Professor, which the latter readily gave. The interesting exchange between the two men was later published in the Daily Times if my memory serves me right.

    It would appear to me as a layman that the defining essence of the life of Professor Adebayo Adedeji who passed on to eternity on 25th April, 2018, was the intellectual struggle to extricate African Development Strategy and Policy from the hegemonic stranglehold of external forces, particularly IFIs that may not necessarily mean well for the continent. For those of us who do not have the requisite grounding and expertise in economic as well as development theory and analysis to appreciate and apprehend his technical disquisitions, there are luckily a number of easily accessible publications on the life, times and works of Professor Adedeji. One of these, for instance, is a collection of essays in his honour when he clocked 65 titled ‘Issues in African Development’ and edited by Bade Onimode and Richard Synge. Published by Heinemann Educational Books (Nigeria) Plc in association with the African Centre for Development and Strategic Studies in 1995, the book is divided into four sections comprising 16 chapters and runs into 323 pages.

    The book’s contributors are some of the most illustrious scholars from diverse disciplines including economics, history, politics, public administration, development as well as experts in diverse spheres of international development administration. In the preface to the book by Stephen Lewis, we have a glimpse of what Professor Adedeji meant to those who worked with him at the ECA. In his words, “Collaborating with Adebayo Adedeji was an extraordinary experience. His whole persona comes alive when he speaks, feelingly, of Africa; it stimulates everyone around him; conviction and animation are unleashed in equal measure, and just when you feel the tensions perilously rising, his voluble laugh bursts forth in a catharsis of reconciliation. Adedeji’s great strength lies in his unswerving determination to resolve the African crisis. Nothing distracts him. As a result, his contribution to Africa gives meaning to internationalism”.

    The same impression is conveyed in a statement by the former Secretary General of the United Nations, Perez de Cuellar, to the 27th Assembly of the Heads of Government of the OAU, held in Abuja on 3rd June, 1991 in a fulsome tribute to Adedeji thus: “Professor Adedeji has been at the helm of ECA for more than half of its existence and has left an indelible mark on the work and objectives of the Commission. He has made significant contributions to successive initiatives to address and to improve Africa’s economic and social situation. I am pleased to have this opportunity to congratulate him, in his native land, for a job well done, and to wish him success in his future undertakings”.

    My favourite chapter in this book is titled ‘Africa’s Development Crisis in Historical Perspective’ by the late Professor J.F Ade-Ajayi; a chapter in which a scholar I had assumed to be essentially of a conservative cast traces the developmental travails of the continent to the legacy of foreign conquests such as the Arab and Atlantic slave trade, colonialism and neocolonialism. That chapter reminds one of the immortal Walter Rodney in his ‘How Europe Underdeveloped Africa’. Writing about the legacy of colonialism, for instance, Ajayi perspicaciously observes that “The interest of the European powers in Africa was to disrupt existing lines of intra-African trade, and channel all effort into the production of primary crops required for export, and encourage importation of European goods even if it meant destroying local manufactures, crafts and industries.

    • Continued online www.staging.thenationonlineng.net
  • Adebayo Adedeji (1930 – 2018)

    His development project, the African Centre for Development and Strategic Studies (ACDESS), a think-tank NGO based in his hometown, Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, is a statement on his orientation. His death on April 25 at the age of 87 highlighted the subject of development, which is particularly relevant at this time as the country prepares for another general election next year. There is an undeniable nexus between leadership and development, and any serious discussion of development must bring up the leadership question. This explains the centre’s enduring relevance and the significance of Prof Adebayo Adedeji who was its director.

    It is sad that an observer said of Adedeji and the centre’s development in an article: “He must have been grieved that the ambitious African Centre for Development and Strategic Studies into which he ploughed his resources did not flourish. The funding he was expecting did not materialise. “

    Adedeji was well equipped to play the role of policy formulator.  After earning BSc. and PhD in Economics at London School of Economics and an MPA from Harvard University, Adedeji joined the University of Ife, (now Obafemi Awolowo University) where he became a professor of economics at the age of 36. Adedeji was Nigeria’s Federal Commissioner for Economic Development and Reconstruction from 1971 to 1975, a position that made him responsible for the economic development and reconstruction of post-civil war Nigeria.

    He was the second Executive Secretary to the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), serving between 1975 and 1978, after which he was appointed the UN Under-Secretary-General. He remained in the ECA post until 1991, after which he founded ACDESS.

    His involvement in policy making and institution building at various levels showed his faith in the power of development organisations. He believed in regional integration and played an influential role towards the establishment of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). Adedeji supported the creation of other regional groupings, including the Preferential Trade Agreement (PTA), which later became the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA). He notably delivered an address on “The History and Prospects for Regional Integration in Africa.”  He also backed the formation of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) in 1973 and became the pioneer chairman.

    Adedeji brought intellectual power to the search for economic direction, and emphasised the power of knowledge. His efforts demonstrated that the answer to development challenges will be produced by development thinking. President Muhammadu Buhari’s tribute, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, gave an insight into Adedeji’s patriotic intervention at a critical juncture. The president praised his intellectual strength and courage to challenge the damaging Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAP) imposed on the continent by conceiving the African Alternative Framework for Structural Adjustment Programmes (AAF-SAP).  The statement said: “It is noteworthy that Prof. Adedeji was one of the first people to realise, as far back as the early 1980s, that environment, gender, and governance, which have now become common place in development discourse, were important for sustainable development in Africa.”

    It takes a thinker to reimagine what is given. Adedeji’s anti-SAP role is a timeless picture of the value of knowledge-based rethinking and the exploration of possibilities. Prof Ayo Olukotun, Secretary General of the International Relations Society of Nigeria, noted: “His contribution to alternative to Structural Adjustment Programme cannot be forgotten. His effort led to adoption of the alternatives by many African countries.”

    His national honour, Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic (CFR), and his status in his Ijebu-Ode community where he was the Asiwaju of Ijebu land (leader) and Bobajiro of the Awujale (chief adviser to the monarch), reflected the respect he enjoyed.

     

  • Court adjourns Ikuforiji’s case till Jan 7

    Court adjourns Ikuforiji’s case till Jan 7

    The Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday adjourned till January 7 next year for continuation of hearing in the case filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) against the state’s House of Assembly Speaker, Adeyemi Ikuforiji.

    The Speaker and his Personal Assistant, Oyebode Atoyebi were charged before Justice Ibrahim Buba.

    Their lawyer, Mr Tayo Oyetibo (SAN), prayed the court to order the prosecution to identify the documents it intends to tender during the trial so as to save time.

    The judge directed the prosecution lawyer to sort out vital documents which he considers useful for the trial.

    EFCC accused Ikuforiji and his assistant of accepting cash payments meant for the Assemble without going through a financial institution.

    During the hearing yesterday, EFCC’s witness Adebayo Adedeji, led in evidence by Mr Godwin Obla (SAN), told the court that Atoyebi’s job schedule included running errands for the Speaker and collecting cash from the accounts department for the Assembly’s use.

    The witness added that on each occasion Atoyebi collected money, he acknowledged it by appending his signature.

    “On August 2, 2011, the second accused signed and collected about N4 million on behalf of the first accused, with the heading: ‘National Council for State Legislators Conference, United States.’

    “In the cash register, it was also discovered that on August 3, 2011, the second accused collected the sum of N10 million on behalf of the Speaker, and the payment was tagged: ‘Ramadan’. It was signed and dated August 4, 2011.

    “On August 23, 2011, the sum of N1.2 million was also collected by the second accused, on behalf of the Speaker, and the transaction was tagged: ‘Money for Orderly to the Wife of Speaker’. This transaction was signed and dated Aug. 29, 2011,” he said.

     

    At this stage, the court and lawyers agreed that Obla should isolate the transactions he intends to highlight from the voluminous cash book to save time.

    Oyetibo told reporters that the prosecution had not tendered anything incriminating against the Speaker.

    The number of witnesses to be called by the defence would depend on the “strength and character” of the testimonies of the prosecution’s witnesses, he said.