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These Are Reasons Why Young People Deserve Opportunities During Hiring

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I have never doubted the value of experience, and I am not hoping to do so anytime soon. They say it’s the best teacher. I learnt not to put my hands in fire because I got burnt the first time I tried to do so. Infact,  many of the things we do today was learnt after we must have tried so many times, just like walking for instance. So experience is good, but still…

There are many economic and age related issues, making it more difficult for  younger workers to break into the current job market. Many think they lack the needed depth and professionalism needed to deal with work related issues. In reality it isn’t exactly clear black and white terms. Zlatan ibrahimovic is almost 40, yet he outperforms many footballers in their teens and twenties.

In another instance, the brilliance of the golden boy Mario Gotze was able to outshine the experience of the veteran German Striker Miroslav Klose in the World Cup final between Argentina and Germany in 2014. It took a moment of brilliance from the young player Gotze to score the winning goal in extra time, after being brought in to replace the German Legend who just couldn’t find his pace in that particular game.

The debate can go on for as long as you want to,  but here I will try to give some reasons why you may want to hire someone younger the next time you’re thinking of hiring someone. Though this depends on what whoever is hiring is looking for.

1.New Perspective

Young employees tend to bring fresh ideas and a different way of thinking to your business. They are more willing to learn and build their experience along the line. This drive and excitement is good for every team. If the organization is also aimed at reaching out to a younger audience,  young people are more likely going to relate better with these group of people. 

2 .Technology Adaptation

Most young people, say millennials, grew up with technology. As a result, they are more likely to adapt to technology quicker than the older generations in the workforce. Especially in the use of software technology, young people adapt more readily to the rapidly changing and dynamic digital space.

3.Affordability

Young people are more likely to receive lower wages for doing a particular job than older workers. Yes, generally they get paid less than the average big portfolio man. 

4. Energy and Affordability

Generally younger workers are more energetic and adapt better to changes in the economic and political spheres. They are more likely to relocate also. 

5. Health

Younger workers are less likely to complain about failing eye-sight, waist pain, indigestion and high blood pressure. This doesn’t mean that all older workers have to deal with these, but you know, you never can tell.

This article  isn’t trying to underestimate the value of experience in anyway. Experience is valuable and cannot be thrown aside. Whoever does so is doing it solely at his own risk. The article is only trying to give you reasons why you may have to carefully weigh your options to know exactly what you need as the case may be.

The AfCFTA and the Nigerian Closed Borders

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AU

After months of partial experimental closure of Nigerian land borders, the Nigerian Government has decided to close them totally. The decision to shut the borders completely came after the Nigerian Custom Services claimed it is generating more revenue from the seaports as a result of the closure.

In a recent meeting with the National Assembly’s Committee on Finance and National Planning, the Comptroller General of the Nigerian Custom Service, Hammed Ali, praised the initiative. He said that it has opened an unexpected economic door to Nigeria.

“There was a day in September that we collected N9.2 billion… it has never happened before.” He said.

The Minister of State Petroleum Resources, Timipre Sylva, also indicated that there has been a significant drop of eight million liters in fuel consumption. An evidence of immense smuggling of petroleum products aided by Nigerian security personnel.

The entry of rice, cars, chicken products and so many other goods and services that originate from neighboring African countries have also reduced drastically.

It is based on these developments that the Nigerian Government has vowed to keep the borders closed until the neighbors get their acts together: Mainly, quelling the lax that has enabled smuggling of contraband goods into Nigeria and petroleum products out of Nigeria.

To keep the momentum that has yielded such a result, the Federal Government of Nigeria has commissioned a joint task force comprising customs, immigration, police and the military to keep unrelenting check on the borders.

However, the decision of the Nigerian Government to shut the borders has come against Ecowas rules of integration and the free movement of goods and services within the region. And the implication goes beyond breaking the rules to hurt the export of local products of Nigerian origin.

Scrap copper, tanned goat hides, cocoa butter, rubber etc. Most of these goods produced in the North, East and Western Nigeria make their way to other African countries through land borders – each contributing a huge sum to the GDP.

According to the Nigerian Government, the exports have to be done through the waters until further notice. It’s a development that the local producers of these goods are not accustomed to or ready to take on now. Because the cost is far higher and will result in increment of the export products which will negatively impact the trade.

The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), signed by Nigeria in July has also been totally breached. The integration and free trade agreement have been jeopardized by the border closure. It has also instigated retaliatory responses from neighboring African countries with Niger Republic threatening to shut her doors against Nigerian goods.

While Nigerian Government is celebrating it as a win, experts are decrying the impacts and the precedent that it is setting: “It is a clear violation of international trade policy that will bring economic woes than remedy.” They said.

The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) just announced an increment in inflation; from 11.02% to 11.24%, a development that experts attributed to the border closure. There has been a notable hike in the price of food items; the  Nigerian people will have to add to their existing struggle with hunger.

The brute spikes are likely going to hit with more severity since the government is more interested in the increased revenue generation emanating from the border closure. There is also concern that the increased Nigerian Custom revenue will become a bait that will lure Nigeria back to recession.

The Nigerian Government has been urged to reconsider its stand since it admitted that the prevalence of smuggling has been mostly as a result of corrupt Nigerian Custom Service. Some have suggested that Nigeria should pull out of AfCFTA before her actions and inactions immobilize the collective efforts of other African countries.

How Toll Gates Can Help Road Maintenance in Nigeria

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The Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission believes that  Nigeria has about 195,000 km of road network. About 32,000 km out of these are federal roads, and 31,000 km are state roads. In total, we have  about 60,000 km paved and the remaining 135,000 km are untarred. Most of which are in a state of disrepair.

When two cities in two different states of the country are linked up by a road, that road is considered to be a Federal Road. This is a very broad definition that could get things complicated along the line.

When I see a long  expressway where vehicles run for hours, leading to another state,  it’s easy for anyone to say that the road is a federal road ; what makes it complicated then is when this road twists and bends into streets in a particular state. Under that situation, should the twists and bends within a state, used mostly by people in the state be also a part of what belongs to the Federal Government?

A typical example is the Portharcourt road Aba in Abia State,  which joins the Enugu/Portharcourt Expressway. Most of the commuters using the road are in Aba, the streets are in Aba, the small shops and businesses there are in Aba, in fact almost everything about the road is in Abia State for instance,  and yet the road is considered a Federal Road . This dilemma has left most roads in shambles for years leaving them in deep mess as these roads are not visible enough for the Federal Government since they are hidden in the streets within a particular state.

Another example is the Lekki/Epe Expressway. Located in Lagos, leads to different places in Lagos, and used mostly by Lagosians travelling to other parts of Lagos State. Yet, the apparent reason for it’s neglected state is the fact that it is considered the property of the Federal Government.

The States think the roads should be built by the ‘owners’ ,the Federal Government thinks they are close enough to the states to be one of their own. In this state of confusion, the roads suffer neglect and the citizens get the pain. 

In many developed countries around the world,  road projects are executed using monies and revenue generated from tax. If a particularly road was built using taxpayers money,  the road users are expected to use for free. Otherwise, toll gates are introduced. I know what heavy vehicles do to roads, and anyone who thinks that vehicles should not contribute to repairing the wear and tear they contributed on the road based on how heavy they are should kindly reconsider.

I have seen a newly constructed road get ripped apart by a low bed truck carrying an excavator, I have also  seen a newly constructed drain get wrecked by a fully loaded tipper truck parking just next to it. Though this may have more to do with the quality of execution than prolonged wear and tear still; it reminds us that vehicles deteriorate roads.

Hence, the reintroduction of toll gates on roads should be seen as a need to restore efficiency and the culture of sustainable development. In some countries private companies build roads and then introduce toll gates which helps in keeping the roads maintained.  Also roads built with loans collected from banks are also serviced by the revenue generated from toll gates.

What We Can Do

So then, as the nation contemplates on the big picture restructuring, whether or not the ownership of resources within a state should belong to the Federal Government or the State Government, they have to restructure the ownership of roads. State Governments should own, maintain and generate revenue from all roads within their topological boundaries with assistance from the Federal Government in critical cases. Also,  the members of the National Assembly should as a matter of urgency to try to do the needful. Then, there should be a total, I repeat! total expulsion of touts who neither build nor maintain roads from all government owned roads.

No government would be taken seriously by anyone if there are as many touts as there are potholes and gullies in their major roads.

I Have Accepted to Speak in Turkey’s Uludag Economy Summit, March 2020

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I will be speaking in Turkey’s leading and most influential economic summit – the Uludag Economy Summit (UES) in March 2020. I accepted the invitation this week. You can learn more from MIT Media Lab here

A week after, it would be Amsterdam but for a closed gathering, hosted by a global microelectronics company. We will be talking hard technical things on circuits and systems, not economics and markets. 

Uludag Economy Summit, the most important business and economics meeting of Turkey, has been organized by Capital, Economist, and Start Up magazines since 2012. Every year, the Summit hosts substantial speakers and business people from Turkey and all around the world.

Steps that should be taken to sustain competitiveness and increase efficiency in various industries from commerce to manufacturing, retail sales to finance and education have been addressed in the Summit, which has been followed with great interest by 1,800 people from Turkey and all around the world in 2018.

In 2019, the 8th Uludag Economy Summit, in which global and local issues will be discussed, will be held on March 22-23.

A Call for Nigerian Government-Owned Hospitals to Go Digital

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I went to ESUTH University Teaching Hospital, Park-Lane, Enugu (popularly known as Park-Lane) recently. I got to the hospital shortly before 10 am and went straight to their NHIS records office so I can get my folders and go to the General Out-Patient (GOP) Unit to seek a doctor. When I got there (the Park-Lane NHIS records office), the crowd I saw that were waiting to be attended to was much. I felt discouraged. I was given a sheet of paper to write my name and wait for my turn, which will be according to my serial number on the ‘attendance sheet’. No problem; I wrote my name against number 69 (in attendance sheet C since A and B have been taken into the office) and sat down knowing that I’ll spend the whole day there.

When I looked around me, I realised I shouldn’t even complain because there were people that really needed immediate medical attention waiting on the line with me. Funny to say that what we were even waiting for was folders that we will take and then start the rigorous processes involved in seeing a doctor. We were not even sure we will succeed in seeing any doctor that day – as if I know already.

People were called in based on their serial numbers in the ‘attendance sheet’. Each set of people that go in to ‘prepare’ and pick their folders spend nothing less than 20 minutes before coming out and then giving chance for another set to go in. My turn came a few minutes to 12 noon and I walked out with my folder when it was some minutes to 1 in the afternoon. I got to the GOP Unit and there found another story to tell.

The nurses there refused to collect my folder and allow me to see a doctor because it was already late. It is not like the doctors have gone home (after all it was just 1pm), but the crowd there was so much that the nurses knew that all of them may not be able to see the doctors till it’s very late in the evening. Well, I didn’t argue; I didn’t even want to argue because what I saw there spoke for itself. Honestly, I was a bit relieved when the nurses asked me to come back the following day because I don’t think I would have wanted to sit down there wondering when a doctor will see me. But my small mind didn’t remind me that I may still come ‘late’ the following day.

I had this experience at Park-Lane, Enugu, but I know it is the same thing with most government-owned hospitals. To be honest with you, our health sector needs total overhauling. A lot of work needs to be done.

The essence of writing this article is to call the attention of those concerned to some of my observations, which may need to be addressed soon.

MY OBSERVATIONS
1. Wrong handling of confidential materials: This is not seen as something wrong in government owned hospitals, but I believe it is wrong for non-staff members to handle patients’ folders and files. When I said something about it at the hospital, a fellow patient told me that it is not the same thing with all sections. According to this person, this act is more prevalent in NHIS office, where the NHIS beneficiaries are expected to move their folders to and from the consultation areas (because they don’t pay much). But I believe it doesn’t happen only in NHIS records office because I saw other people moving around with theirs. I think hospitals need to look into this.

2. Delays and Waste of Time: I spent over two hours just to get my folder. The staff members in the office are actually doing their best, but then their best wasn’t enough. It is quite unfortunate that someone that is not healthy will be made to spend so much time waiting to be attended to. This is quite unfair.

3. Inability to See Doctors Easily: In as much as I was relieved that I didn’t have to stay any longer in the hospital (even if it means seeing a doctor), I still think the system made it hard for people to see doctors there. What then is the essence of someone going to a hospital if not to see a doctor (and to see him as soon as possible)?

I brought up this issue in the hospital and one of the patients there told me that if I don’t want to waste time seeing a doctor (that is if I will succeed in seeing one that day), I should go to the Emergency Unit and someone will definitely attend to me. But that I should be ready to pay heavily for the services. Anyway, I didn’t confirm that; but I hope it’s not true.

4. Large Number of Patients: Government owned hospitals have good doctors, and they are cheaper than private ones. For that, a lot of patients troop to their hospitals. But these hospitals find it difficult to manage this large number of patients. The waiting areas are always rowdy and filled to the brim, with some people standing, or sitting on make-shift seats. Sometimes I couldn’t help wondering if doctors actually have enough time to attend to all these patients very well.

Kindly note that I’m not against many people going to government owned hospitals (I use them too, you know); my own is that these hospitals should make provisions for the comfort of these patients, and ensure that they are well attended to.

5. Shortage of Staff: I think Nigerian health sector is understaffed. The workers I met in Park-Lane are really good, but they were over-stretched. One of the nurses at the GOP Unit was already antsy when I went there. She was yelling at patients, especially those that didn’t do as she instructed. I know that her approach was unethical but I didn’t blame her: she had more than she could chew and she didn’t know how to manage them.

THE WAY OUT
It is not enough to just observe the problems at our hospitals without finding out their causes and possible solutions. Well here are a few suggestions I can make based on what I’ve been seeing in most hospitals, especially government-owned:

1. Embracing ICT: I wasn’t impressed with the way patients folders were packed at shelves and on the floor at the NHIS record office. The worst is that when you want to collect your folder, they have to search through the shelves to bring it out, and then perform other ‘rituals’ involved in setting up a folder before a doctor is consulted. If someone’s folder mistakenly gets misplaced, or a paper falls out of it, a lot of records and information will get misplaced too. Besides, searching for folders the way they do wastes time.

But if these hospitals decide to store patients’ records and histories in their digital database, to be pulled up whenever they (the patients) visit, a lot of troubles will be saved. Someone needs to tell these Medical Directors about that.

2. Recruiting More Workers: There is no debating this: government hospitals should recruit more staff. These staff should be placed on shift-duties. I mean, I can’t come to the hospital for an urgent attention in the evening only to be told that NHIS office has closed for the day. And it is wrong to be told that the GOP Unit will no longer ‘accept’ patients because many are waiting to see doctors. Let the hospital management team do something about staffing in the hospital.