The best college American football program is the Crimson Tide of Alabama. That is the Harvard of American football. Joining are Ohio State Buckeyes, Clemson, LSU, Notre Dame. and Sooners. When it comes to basketball, you begin to see Kentucky Wildcats, Baylor, Gonzaga, Blue Devils of Duke, and Kansas Jayhawks. If we can add Lacrosse, Johns Hopkins BlueJays and Syracuse are there.
But for 100m athletics, visit one school in Jamaica which keeps producing champions. That school was named after a Nigerian city called Calabar. So, if you want to become the next Usain Bolt or Elaine Thompson-Herah , you have an idea – Calabar High School in Jamaica.
It is so strange that the Caribbean has many Nigerian names but Nigeria does not seem to have deepened relationships with these island nations.
Senator Warren, the data is wrong: 32% of Nigerians do NOT own Bitcoin. It is absolute fake data they made up. Do not put any power on the open letter because the premise is invalidated by the fake data. Get me right, I am not against Bitcoin or cryptocurrency but I am against a fact-free economics. Look at this:
Nigeria has a population of 210 million. The 32% will give you 67.2 million people.
To have Bitcoin, you need to have a bank account, most of the time, since you need to fund the purchase via an electronic means (cash transactions with exchanges or peers are rare). Functional bank accounts in Nigeria using bank verification numbers are less than 40 million. Because Bitcoin’s total user base is a subset of this number, it is impossible for more than 40 million to own Bitcoin in Nigeria.
Nigeria has about 104 million internet users. If we have to believe the quote, the implication is that for every 2 online users in Nigeria, at least one has Bitcoin. That is totally nonsense. More so, I do not concede that Nigeria has 104 internet users even though I will concede that Nigeria has SIMs with internet enabled capabilities. Many here continue to use their phones to talk!
Exchanges are running bad statistics; they over extrapolate. If in 10 young men in Lagos state, three have Bitcoin, it then means 30% of Nigerians have Bitcoin! Simply visit Bayelsa, Zamfara, Ebonyi, and Osun, you will see that the extrapolation is nebulous.
Yet, Nigerian young people are promising. America can invest $1 billion via USAID to support startups including blockchain and crypto ones, along with education, logistics, healthcare, etc. But the premise must be built on reliable data.
Wow: “32 percent of Nigerians own Bitcoin, the highest percentage in the world.” ??
From that letter, he pulled the 32%: “As the Nigerian naira plummets in value, Bitcoin has become a necessity. 32 percent of Nigerians own Bitcoin, the highest percentage in the world. Furthermore, remittances into Nigeria exceeded $17 billion in 2020, and a substantial proportion of this value is conveyed in Bitcoin. Lastly, Nigeria has one of the youngest populations in the world, and, on a globe basis, this progressive cohort increasingly embraces Bitcoin.”
The University has trained and prepared these students. Our little contribution in Tekedia is to deepen their understanding of the mechanics of market systems. Together, the champions will become better to go into the markets and fix frictions, transforming our communities with innovations, and advancing the wealth of nations.
McPherson University champions, welcome to the Institute. I will be formally welcoming all during the CollegeBoost Hour. People, join me to welcome these students; we see innovators and project champions among them, to lead on the opportunities of the future. Champions for the world.
The former Central Bank of Nigeria governor, Muhammadu Sanusi ll, has dropped those lines that usually put high voltage verbal attack on his person: Nigeria has wasted 40 years, and all the gains during President Goodluck Jonathan have been reversed.
According to the ex-emir and ex-banker, all indices show that the purchasing power of Nigerians has plummeted, and income has fallen to 40 year low. He noted that Nigeria rose to the mountaintop in 2014 when it recorded the highest per capita income on record. But since then, gravity has been pulling the number down. In his model, by 2023, we will be back to 1980 numbers! Tufiakwa.
He dropped these lines in Kaduna at a colloquium to mark his 60th birthday:
“In 1980, Nigeria’s GDP per capita on purchasing power parity basis was $2,180. In 2014, it appreciated by 50 per cent to $3,099. According to the World Bank, where were we in 2019? $2,229. At this rate in the next two years in terms of purchasing power parity, the average income of a Nigerian would have gone back to what it was in 1980 under Shehu Shagari. That means, in 40 years, no progress, we made zero progress. 40 years wasted,” he said.
What is the solution?
Option A: Vote the same people who have been running the show for ages because they belong to your tribe.
Option B: Try a new generation of leaders who can fix Nigeria irrespective of ancestral affinity. For instance, under my leadership, I will formalize land assets, putting velocity on them, and within 18 months of taking power, I will double per capita income in rural Nigeria. I will deploy two business models: aggregation model (aggregating the land) and marketplace (to deepen orchestration of demand-supply framework). How he wishes? Malaria dream for the village boy!
The aggregation will deploy startups at ward level to map the assets and afterwards, they will put them in land registry and marketplaces, which the owners will activate to make it easier for buying and selling to happen faster, and at scale. Watch this video to get the idea.
In a plot, this is what the former Central Bank of Nigeria governor, Muhammadu Sanusi ll, was talking about. He extrapolated that by 2023, the number will hit 1980 level. We hope that will not come to pass as that would mean mass poverty, unconstrained. But irrespective of your political affinity, Nigeria has a REAL question to answer now, and that question is this: can doing the same thing again, and again, produce different results, and if we answer NO, then what next?
If the Taliban takes over Afghanistan despite all the military capabilities and preparations the Afghan soldiers have received for years, what could be the conclusion here? Increasingly in most parts of the “fragile world”, we are seeing a scenario where untrained and unprepared militants (in the formal sense of it), are unloading trained military.
As these things happen, it may be time to examine the whole nexus that democracy can work everywhere. Democracy works because good people make civilians the commander- in-chief on the belief that the military will hold the nation. But when that is not the case, does that make sense?
Yes, after the death of the Chadian president this year in a battle, the world kingmakers unanimously supported a military man (the president’s son) to take over instead of the second in command who happened to be a civilian. Specifically, the French government made the point that the circumstances on the ground did not support following the democratic tenet. Largely, the world is moving into a new dimension of conflict where pockets of crises are here and there, and terrorists and militants seem to be overwhelming formal armies in “fragile states”.
Sure, the Afghan is different (unlike say Libya and Iraq) but the emerging result is palpable: Taliban is largely back to power. Nigeria – you need to study these cases very well!
And before I close, our wishes to the good people (innocent civilians) of Afghanistan; they are now on their own!
Update: Afghanistan falls flat
UPDATE: Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has left Afghanistan for Tajikistan, a senior interior ministry official told Reuters news agency.