Conversation about "reimagining Nigeria" has become a familiar refrain in our national discourse, with an ambitious timeline of achieving developed nation status by 2050. Yet, for all the detailed policy papers, and comparative analyses with countries like South Korea, we continue to miss the fundamental point of what reimagination truly means. Our current approach to reimagining Nigeria is not just inadequate — it is counterproductive. Walk into any policy forum or development conference today, and you will hear the same diagnosis: weak ins
Conversation about "reimagining Nigeria" has become a familiar refrain in our national discourse, with an ambitious timeline of achieving developed nation status by 2050. Yet, for all the detailed policy papers, and comparative analyses with countries like South Korea, we continue to miss the fundamental point of what reimagination truly means. Our current approach to reimagining Nigeria is not just inadequate — it is counterproductive. Walk into any policy forum or development conference today, and you will hear the same diagnosis: weak ins