Skip to content
Calitown

Calitown

News, Here, Everytime!

  • Home
  • News
    • Cross River News
  • Features
  • Community
  • Inspirational
  • Toggle search form
  • Cross River Born Professor Of Internal Medicine Makes Bold Step To Head NMA In Nigeria News
  • 9,975 Jostle For 1,170 Police Constable Slots From Cross River State  News
  • Suspended Cross River Lawmaker Who Denied He Assaulted His Wife, Apologises Over Alleged Assault News
  • Gov Otu Celebrates Ndoma-Egba at 70, Describes Him As A Towering Jurist, Patriot News
  • Gov Otu Celebrates Prof. Ekanem Braide at 80, Hails Her Scientific Legacy News
  • Court Orders UniCal To Pay N55 Million Naira To Eight Students  News
  • See Full List Of Newly Elected CRS Working Committee Of The All Progressives Congress, APC  News
  • Ayade At 58: Otu Celebrates Ex-Governor’s Visionary Legacy News

EDITORIAL: Before Ayade Ceases To Be Governor

Posted on June 24, 2021 By Admin No Comments on EDITORIAL: Before Ayade Ceases To Be Governor
Ayade

Shortly after he was sworn in on Wednesday, May 29, 2019, for a second term in office, Cross River State governor, Ben Ayade, declared that, “I will no longer be the governor, my deputy will be acting governor while I will become the project manager of Cross River State…”

Ayade’s declaration, strange as it sounds, appears to be his own way of underlining his desire to complete a litany of projects, (conceived and still being conceived) dotting the length and breadth of the state. The expression of that desire was further deepened when he also stated at the occasion that, “I will make sure that my entire signature projects and others will be completed, so that Cross River becomes fully industrialised as every local government will have at least one industry.”

While we congratulate him on his swearing in and attendant statements, we are duty bound to draw the governor’s attention to a few things that appear to escape his attention.

Clearly, it is not in doubt that semantics have serially been employed to wall paper the deliberate acts and policy direction of his government in the first four years. But driven too far, several people, within and outside the state, have perceived this (seeming) religious employment of semantics as serial comedy. Where would anyone situate the “kinetic crystallization” or “qabalistic densification” of two Cross River State budget estimates? Painfully, the assessment and workability of these budget estimates have been at variance with the vain energy and power which christens them.

On the desire of his administration to build an industry in each of the local government areas in Cross River, we respectfully differ and believe too that contemporary economic reasoning does not birth this kind of entreprise.

Indeed, one of the clearest economic strategies adopted by successful Western and Asian nations to reduce unemployment, has been government encouragement of entrepreneurship and innovation. The pursuit by any government, like Cross River’s, to go into the direct establishment and government management of industries, will side step Ayade’s genuine desire to stimulate economic and job growth.

Again, most of what he desires to do with the setting up of these industries appear not to have been thoroughly set out, beyond the fickle orchestrated media buzz. What clear organizational set up is in place, for instance, to drive sustained growth at the Toothpick Factory in Ekori, Yakurr LGA? If there is a management team in place for this factory, was selection not based on political persuasions while capacity considerations were left behind? Is there a market, deliberately linked to receiving the products of this factory? There are several other questions that should ideally give our governor answers that will help him succeed, if he wants to.

“The Job Generation Process” an incisive report, widely published in 1979, emphasised that the application of entrepreneurship and innovation has become a common theme in government policy. A key finding from this work was that job creation in the United States, was clearly not coming from large companies, but small independently owned businesses. It recommended that government policy should target indirect rather than direct strategies with a greater focus on the role of small firms. But in CRS, small independently owned businesses are shutting down with relative ease because our direct and indirect strategies provide the alluvial plains for the application of our own brand of self serving multiple taxation. Even where the governor has announced tax exemptions, it doesn’t appear that this policy of his administration has been properly enabled by law. There is also a deliberate, planned and sustained effort by friends and agents of government, to make this pronouncement impossible to fly, so that a few committed individuals can build, sustain and profitably operate small businesses.

Importantly, Governor Ben Ayade in his first four years, did little to enhance the operation of state owned educational institutions like CRUTECH and the College of Education, as entrepreneurial ecosystems, stimulating economic growth and job creation. It is not in doubt that today, science and technological advances have been formatted around breakthrough research carried out in institutions like the ones mentioned above. Deliberately, venture financiers hover around these kind of institutions, identifying and financing innovations that have in turn advanced science and technology. With time, these institutions then become centres of high-tech entrepreneurial activity, in the mould of California’s Silicon Valley. This is the path that gave the world technology entrepreneurs like Steve Jobs of Apple, Larry Page and Sergey Brin of Google, Bill Gates of Microsoft, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, among others.

Our governor cannot continue to look the other way while these institutions become poorly funded and ill motivated. He and his team must think up and implement carefully planned strategic approaches that will stimulate and re-engineer creative thinking that can be appropriately marketed; we are not asking for too much.

We believe that whether he mass moves to even the obscurest political party, it will count for nothing if work on the ground remains only on paper. Beyond the time consuming razzmatazz of this political movement, sincerely, the average Cross Riverian yearns for good governance that is delivered beyond our sour ‘food on the table’ governance model.

Finally, Governor Ben Ayade, stands commended for his deep vision; even if it is not visible, and we pray that the attendant claps will turn into an ovation. Equally, let it be said too that he has a date with history; one that is two-sided. He must decide if his administrative policies can sustain his name and vision, long after he has gone or if they will leave the state crawling on all fours. If the latter becomes the case, our remembrance of him will be hateful…God forbid.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get the latest news, articles, and updates delivered straight to your inbox.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Share this post:

Share on X (Twitter) Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on Email Share on WhatsApp Share on Telegram
Editorial, News Tags:Ben Ayade

Post navigation

Previous Post: “Sometimes We Need To Say Good Bye To Get Good Luck”: DC Enamhe To Ekpungu, New EFCC Secretary
Next Post: I Refused To Join Gov. Ayade In The APC On Grounds Of Principle – Asu Okang

Related Posts

  • Pictures From The Fire Incident In Calabar Cross River News
  • Gunmen Return, Shut Down Parts Of Ikom/Calabar Highway Again Cross River News
  • Lack Of Funds Threaten Ayade’s Policies, Projects Cross River News
  • Our Expectations For The Next Governor Of CRS News
  • Ugbo Arrives Calabar Today, Opens Campaign Office Cross River News
  • Former Yakurr LG Council Boss Kidnapped News

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent Comments

  • Chibuzo Ebi on Suspended Cross River Lawmaker Who Denied He Assaulted His Wife, Apologises Over Alleged Assault
  • Maurice Eneji on Owan Enoh Mourns Brother, Burial Fixed For March 3, 2026!
  • Ata-okongo Akwa Ibom on Greed, Avarice and Mendacity: The Portrait Of Obong Victor Attah As Amnesiac, Opportunist
  • Eno Ekpenyoung on Gov Otu Hails Chief Okoi Obono-Obla At 56, Describes Him As A Beacon Of Justice

ADVERT: Click to Watch!

https://calitown.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/VID-20170928-WA0003.mp4
  • Jarigbe Dumps PDP For APC … Says He Is Teaming Up With Pres. Tinubu! News
  • Ayade Set To Reshuffle Cabinet Cross River News
  • OPEN LETTER TO THE HONOURABLE COMMISSIONER FOR YOUTH AND SPORTS, COMR. ASU OKAN ON THE N13 MILLION AND THREE BUSES PROMISED BY GOV. BEN AYADE AND SEN. GODSWILL AKPABIO Cross River News
  • SCOLOMBO…Welcome To Calabar’s Latest Menace! Features
  • What To Eat This Season And Beyond News
  • “More Than 70 Agencies In CRS Are Not Empowered To Collect Revenue” – CR Lawmaker Cross River News
  • Are We Losing Calabar ? Features
  • No Medical School For CRUTECH – Oyo-Ita Cross River News

CALITOWN
...News, Here, Everytime

Quick Menu

  • Home
  • News
    • Cross River News
  • Features
  • Community
  • Inspirational

Copyright © 2021 calitown
172 Greenwood Avenue , Hull. East Yorkshire. HU6 9NY

Powered by PressBook News WordPress theme