The 2014 Ibrahim
Index of African Governance (IIAG) which was released on Monday. rated Nigeria
one of the worst governed countries in Africa. Nigeria is rated 45.8 per cent
lower than the African average (51.5 per cent) and ranked 37th out of 52 in the
overall governance scale.
IIAG is sponsored
by the Mo Ibrahim Foundation, MIF, a non-grant making organisation committed to
defining, assessing and enhancing governance and leadership in Africa.
It presents
annual assessments of the quality of governance in African countries. It also
provides the framework for citizens, governments, institutions and the private
sector to assess accurately the delivery of public goods and services, and
policy outcomes, across the continent.
Other countries
that made it to the top of the list included Botswana , rated the third best
governed country in the continent with 76.2 percent; South Africa which comes
fourth with 73.3 percent.Ghana is rated 7th; Rwanda 11th; Benin Republic 18th;
Egypt 26th; Mali 28th; Niger, 29th; Liberia; 31st; Cameroun 34th and Togo 36th;
all ahead of far more endowed Nigeria.
With a population
of 173.6 million and population growth rate pegged at 2.8 percent, Nigeria’s
Gross Domestic Product, GDP, is put at $3013.3 USD, while inflation and
unemployment rates stand at 8.5 percent and 13.7 percent, respectively.
Nigeria also
received appalling ratings in such categories such as safety and the rule of
law where it is rated 44th with 38.1 per cent, 32nd in the rule of law with
41.0 percent and 30th in accountability with 36.6 percent. Lowest rating in
personal safety, ranked 49th with 16.5 per cent and second lowest in national security,
ranked 48th with 58.2 per cent. Under participation and human rights, the
country is rated 26th with 46.9 per cent, 31th on sustainable economic
opportunity with 43.3 per cent and 34th in human development with 53.0 per
cent.
The Founder and
Chair, Mo Ibrahim Foundation, Mo Ibrahim said :“More than ever, these
discrepancies call for an Afro-realist approach, which tempers historical
Afro-pessimism and current Afro-optimism,” Mr. Ibrahim said.
To have a true
grasp of African realities, he argued that one must reject the
“one-size-fits-all” attitude, which he said, reduces the continent
geographically or governance conceptually, in favour of a more granular
approach.
Source: PREMIUM
TIMES
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