Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has said the problem of extreme poverty in Nigeria was keeping him awake every night.
This is as United Nations has stated that 69 million people are poor in Nigeria.
Osinbajo stated this at a dinner and interactive session with Faculty Members, Harvard Business School (HBS) on Tuesday in Lagos.
The vice president featured alongside Srikant Datar, Professor of Business Administration (HBS), and Bayo Ogunlesi, a Nigerian investment banker at a question and answer session moderated by Hakeem Bello-Osagie, Chairman of Metis Capital Partners.
Osinbajo said: “I think what keeps me up at night has to do with extreme poverty; the issue is that the largest number of those who vote for us are the very poor.
“The promises that government makes to them is that their lives will be better and obviously they are looking at their lives being better in the shortest possible time.
“I will like to see Nigeria being an industrialised nation in the next 10 years; a very strong middle class and most people living above poverty line.’’
Osinbajo said a lot of government policies were taking into account people at the bottom of the pyramid with focus on agriculture and getting credit facilities to farmers in order to achieve self sufficiency.
He said many farmers in the country had been lifted out of poverty by this administration.
According to him, a lot of attention had also been given to the Social Intervention Programmes, SIPs, which factored the provision of cheap credit to petty traders at the bottom of the pyramid.
The vice president told the HBS that Nigeria was open to business with its various potentials and urged Nigerian investors abroad to look homewards.
“If you are going to do business anywhere in Africa, it has to be Nigeria. This is where you have the energy; you have the drive.
“We are already seeing that kind of activity; business people will always be driven by profit. Talent will always go in the direction where it is best rewarded; one can’t afford to be sentimental about that.
“As people see that the environment is getting better for business, they will come back; the opportunities for making huge profits are here.
“Practically everything we are doing in to ensure that there is environment for business to thrive. People are leaving but people are coming back,” he said.
Osinbajo said the Federal Government, through the Special Economic Zones, SEZ, was encouraging manufacturers, adding that the government was looking at natural economic clusters and had set up shared facilities and power.
He said a lot was going on in the agro-allied sector and, of course, resolution of the power challenge.
“In the next few months, we will unveil a plan that deals with most of the critical issues in the power sector,’’ he said.
On climate change, Osinbajo said the momentum was in favour of renewable energy and that Nigeria was doing a lot of investment in renewable energy; solar power and opening up opportunities.
On his part, Datar said he was particularly proud of Osinbajo as an academic in governance, adding that academics provide enabling environment for good governance.
He pledged HBS’s support in providing needed support for human capital development in Nigeria and proffering solutions to tackling Nigeria’s infrastructure challenges.
Speaking, Ogunlesi said that the era of depending on government for infrastructure was gone, adding that the Federal Government had no business running infrastructure in Nigeria, especially the airports.
In a vote of thanks, Emir of Kano, Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi 11, called for urgent action to address the high poverty rate in Nigeria especially in the North West.
He also advocated for a committee on girl-child education to boost enrolment in schools and uplift their living standards.
The event also attracted Lagos State Governor, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, US Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Stuart Symington, immediate past Minister of Trade and Investment, Mr Okechukwu Enelamah, immediate past Minister of Budget and National Planning, Sen. Udoma Udo Udoma, among others.