My social media handles are classrooms, and I like to engage as the questions come. Question: Why do you want the Nigerian government to subsidize or keep subsidizing postal service, petrol and education?
My Response: Let me begin by drawing cases from the United States (I can use any developed economy). I have lived in a red state (Alabama), blue states (MD and MA) and swing state (PA), and I have seen how cities advance. In the ranking of the top 20 American best universities, more than 80% are in blue democratic cities. Also, the largest American cities are also majorly blue cities. More so, in per capita income ranking, blue states will pick the top five while the red ones will pick the bottomn five. So, there is a statistical validation that blue states outperform economically.
So, what do blue American cities and states do? They build economic platforms faster, larger and better than their red counterparts. They have the best school systems, best transport networks, etc. With those infrastructural platforms, communities and opportunities emerge.
Education: there will not be a generation of knowledge workers if Nigeria does not subsidize education. For all the attacks on California, with its world-class university ecosystem, innovation happens therein and everyone comes there to build the next phase of technology. Nigeria’s most important infrastructure is education. More than 70% of people reading this will not have gone to universities in Nigeria without that subsidy. In FUTO, I won multiple university scholar awards and I experienced the beauty of an amazing Nigeria, helping my education through broad subsidies and scholarships. For me, Nigeria worked for me. Education subsidy is a catalytic infrastructure for a nation; do not remove it.
Postal service: Nigeria needs to link the urban and rural areas so that commerce can happen at scale. The postal system has a role. In the US, for the last 20 years, the US postal service has recorded losses and they’re fine with it. If Nigeria fixes corruption, we can build a functioning NIPOST that will lose $100 million but can power a new market of $50 billion which we can tax to make $1 billion.
Fuel: I have already explained my point here. You can add that as Europe subsidies renewable energy, and EV cars, they’re using subsidies to rebuild their economies. Nigeria’s problem is not subsidies but CORRUPTION in our subsidy execution. We must kill corruption to advance as a nation.
My Conclusion: Nigeria needs to do strategic subsidies, effectively and efficiently. We cannot be the “red states” of Africa in a time when Rwanda and South Africa are building modern platforms for their futures. America created one a few decades ago when it decided to subsidize ecommerce. Yes, when US senators voted to not burden online stores with collecting sales taxes, etc, it knew many Americans would move online, leaving physical stores which must continue to collect taxes, to fade.
That dishwasher is $1,000 and sales tax is 7%. If you buy on Amazon, you pay only $1,000 while if you go to a physical store, you pay $1,070. With free shipping, most moved online. Then, when the US government felt that those online stores had matured, they removed those subsidies, and now all stores collect the taxes! If Amazon had been left to battle the free market, it would not have succeeded! It got a lot of help along with many online stores because the US wanted to create a new sector!
Nigeria needs to create new sectors, and subsidies are vehicles which nations use to make such happen. Ford, Tesla, GM, etc are getting huge funds as the US races to build modern infrastructure for the electric vehicle future. Intel, AMD, ADI, etc are getting massive funds from the government to rebuild their semiconductor competitiveness.





