2024: When Pleasure Peaks and Pain Plateaus
Turn by turn, every 60 minutes, 24 times in the day, the people of all lands within each 15-degree longitude of the earth’s globe will celebrate the coming of a new year together.
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Turn by turn, every 60 minutes, 24 times in the day, the people of all lands within each 15-degree longitude of the earth’s globe will celebrate the coming of a new year together.
Six months into his government now from Abuja, some of those who believed in him are beginning to doubt his capacity to demonstrate his development craft at the national level.
While both predecessor and successor marked their 100 days out and in the number one office in Nigeria, highlighting what they considered their laudable achievements, it appears that none of them has met the true needs of Nigerians.
The research utilized open-source intelligence tools to scrape social media conversations related to President Tinubu’s policies in his first 60 days.
“We will not allow coup after coup in the West African sub-region. We will take this up seriously with the African Union, European Union, America, and Britain,” he said.
Nigerian women have faced obstacles, including poverty, financial inclusion, finishing school, land ownership, internet access, and corporate representation.
From the analysis of Nigeria’s GDP growth historical data, Sub-Saharan African countries, and lower-middle-income economies’ GDP growth rate data, it appears that the 10% proposed growth rate by Tinubu may not be attainable.
Tinubu comes by more as a music critic than a performer. His musical taste unveils a man with a deeply reflective cultural core. Even when he dances, he listens more than he moves – his pulse and pauses, the emotive response to a griot’s lyrical invocations.
Nigeria’s corporate businesses performed best in 15 years in Tinubu’s 3 weeks old presidency, but the inflation rate hit hardest in 17 years during his first week.
Currently, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu ranks among the 45 oldest presidents among 187 presidents of countries in the United Nations, going by the recent Pew research.
If the Tinubu government then decides to retain it for the first four years of its administration, subsidy payment is estimated to gulp 14.01 trillion.
However, the key question is, can the incoming President, Mr Bola Tinubu, resolve these age-long issues that have set the education sector backwards and give the people the type of education they need?
According to the data available, over 1,000 election petitions were filed by different aggrieved candidates and political parties that participated in the 2023 general election.
Nigeria’s revenue-to-GDP ratio is nine percent, as against Ghana’s 13 per cent, Kenya’s 17 percent and Angola’s 21 percent. So, for Tinubu, borrowing in the short term may be inevitable, but he must now do so with tact, experts say.
The infrastructure gaps in Nigeria manifest in lack of good roads and railway network; poor power generation, transmission and distribution systems; poor water, health, housing, and education facilities, among others. Their poor supply or non-availability has limited the country’s development.