The Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dele Alake, has expressed his confidence in President Bola Tinubu’s capacity to transform Nigeria just like he did in Lagos State.
In a statement by his media assistant, Segun Tomori, Alake expressed the optimism that Nigeria would soon overcome its current economic hardship.
Alake said the hardship was because Nigeria is still going through what he described as a “gestation period” of economic restructuring and reforms.
Alake noted that President Bola Tinubu remains determined to revamp Nigeria’s economy and put it on a pedestal for sustainable growth through his Renewed Hope agenda.
According to him, the president has a track record of changing the economic tides of a region, just as he did when he was the governor of Lagos State.
“Going down memory lane to the experience in Lagos state, the then governor Tinubu in 1999, met a state that was almost insolvent, with a monthly Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of N600 million,” Alake said.
“And a wage bill of over N1.1 billion monthly, with little or no resources to cater to infrastructure and other sectors of the economy.
“President Tinubu took similar measures in Lagos as he is taking in Nigeria, to turn the tide and financially re-engineer the state. Today, the state is the fifth largest economy in Africa, bigger than most African countries.
“What we are going through is the gestation period of reforms and policies for economic restructuring and like the President will say, it is like throes of pregnancy, that a pregnant woman goes through. After delivery, she heaves a sigh of relief.”
The minister urged Nigerians to be patient with the government as the current economic situation would soon stabilise with positive results from ongoing reforms.
“For the first time, Nigeria has a president well-versed in public finance. I am confident in this administration’s capacity to diversify the economy, plug leakages, and redirect the economy to a path of sustainable growth,” he said.
“The future of this country is extremely very bright. What we need to do is to exude confidence in our ability and capacity to weather the storm of restructuring, economic and societal restructuring.
“As we restructure our economy, putting in physical infrastructure, we must also restructure our minds and mental capacity to be at par with physical development.
“ So that we can efficiently and judiciously enjoy the benefits of physical development. With the cooperation of Nigerians, the tide will turn very soon, and we all will be proud,” he added
Please, I want to know, did Lagos experience the hardship and suffering as case today? If not, this is a different context and what happened in Lagos may not happen in Nigeria. More so the country is bigger than a state. And we see every day is deterioration instead of improvement.
Stop talking about Lagos, Lagos is a slum