Nigeria knows what to fix. It even wrote the blueprint. What it lacks is the political nerve to stop benefiting from dysfunction.
Kunle J. Adeboye
A country cannot modernize its economy while preserving a 1970s bureaucracy. Every nation pays for the quality of its governance. Some pay upfront through competitive compensation, performance systems and disciplined institutions. Others pay later through corruption, inefficiency and squandered national potential. Nigeria has chosen the latter for decades — and the bill is now crippling.
At the heart of Nigeria’s governance crisis lies a structural contradiction: the people who must approve reform are the primary beneficiaries of the dysfunction, while those expected to run the state are underpaid, under-protected and undermined. This is not merely a governance problem. It is a design flaw baked into the architecture of the Nigerian state.
A Political Class Rewarded for Weak Institutions
Relative to national income, Nigeria’s political elite enjoys one of the world’s most generous compensation ecosystems — a system built on opaque allowances, constituency project funds, discretionary perks and privileged access to state resources.
Meanwhile, the civil servants who actually implement policy — the people who process budgets, manage procurement, enforce regulations and deliver services — earn salaries that cannot sustain dignity, independence or professionalism.
The result is a two-tiered state:
• a political class insulated from economic reality, and
• a bureaucracy trapped in survival mode.
No country builds strong institutions on such an unequal foundation.
A Bureaucracy Underpaid into Corruption
Nigeria’s civil servants are not inherently corrupt. Too often, the system makes corruption a condition of survival.
When a director earns less than a mid-level private sector employee, and a junior officer earns less than a ride-hailing driver, the system is not merely unfair — it is structurally engineered to fail.
Underpaid bureaucrats face:
• pressure to inflate contracts,
• incentives to run contracts themselves,
• dependence on “facilitation fees,”
• vulnerability to political manipulation.
This is not just a moral failure. It is an economic one. Economists call this a “low equilibrium trap”: a system where everyone behaves badly, because behaving well is economically irrational.
Singapore Shows the Opposite Model
Singapore’s transformation rests on a simple principle: if you want integrity, eliminate the economic incentive for corruption.
It pays public servants, including ministers, competitive salaries benchmarked to the private sector. The result is a bureaucracy that attracts top talent, delivers with precision and ranks among the least corrupt globally.
Nigeria has done the opposite: it underpays those who handle public resources and overpays those who control political power. The outcome is predictable.
A Missing Link: Performance Measurement
Nigeria’s public service remains one of the few in the world where performance is neither measured nor rewarded. Productivity is not tracked. Excellence is not incentivized. Poor performance is rarely penalized.
A system that does not measure cannot improve.
Countries like South Korea, Japan and Norway built high performing bureaucracies by embedding basic disciplines: key performance indicators, service delivery benchmarks, transparent reporting and citizen feedback loops. Nigeria operates largely without these tools, producing a culture where effort is optional and outcomes are accidental.
A State Built to Consume, Not Produce
Nigeria’s dependence on FAAC allocations — the monthly distribution of oil revenue — has created a public sector with no hunger to innovate, no pressure to generate revenue and no incentive to be efficient. Most ministries and agencies exist as cost centers, not value creators.
Yet, there are exceptions that prove reform is possible.
FRSC: A Model of Self-Generated Sustainability
The Federal Road Safety Commission has shown that a Nigerian agency can generate revenue, operate with discipline and deliver measurable value. Its model, built on service fees, enforcement fines and operational efficiency, however, remains under-leveraged but instructive.
PenCom: A Regulator That Strengthens the State
The National Pension Commission is another example of aligned incentives: financially independent and professionally run. PenCom is not a burden on the treasury. It is a stabilizing force in Nigeria’s financial system.
These institutions demonstrate that public sector productivity is possible — when incentives are right.
The Oronsaye Report: A Blueprint Without a Builder
The Oronsaye Report remains the most comprehensive attempt at rationalizing Nigeria’s bureaucratic bloat with surgical clarity. It recommended:
• merging 102 agencies,
• scrapping 38,
• reclassifying 14,
• and strengthening 52.
The projected savings were substantial. The administrative benefits even greater.
Successive governments have praised the report. None has implemented it.
Why? Because the reforms would:
• cut political allowances,
• reduce patronage networks,
• shrink opportunities for rent seeking,
• strengthen bureaucratic autonomy,
• impose performance discipline.
In short: the Oronsaye Report threatens the very incentives that keep the political class comfortable. That is why it gathers dust.
Nigeria does not lack a roadmap. It lacks the political will to stop benefiting from dysfunction.
What Nigeria Must Do: A New Governance Framework
A credible reform agenda requires at least:
A. Competitive, transparent pay for civil servants – Benchmark salaries to private sector equivalents.
B. Performance based progression – Reward competence, not connections.
C. Consolidation of political allowances – Replace opacity with clear, taxable compensation.
D. Revenue generation mandates for ministries and agencies – Every agency must justify its existence.
E. Digitized procurement and payroll – Eliminate leakages and ghost workers.
F. Protection of civil servants from political interference – A secure bureaucracy is a productive one.
G. Citizen and diaspora oversight – Transparency grows when more eyes are watching.
The Cost of Reform vs. the Cost of Failure
Paying public servants fairly is expensive. But corruption, inefficiency and institutional decay are far more expensive. Nigeria is already paying the price in lost investment, poor service delivery, weakened national capacity and declining public trust.
Reform is not charity. It is strategy, and a prerequisite for nation building.
A New Social Contract
Nigeria cannot demand integrity from underpaid officials, while rewarding excess at the top. It cannot build strong institutions on weak incentives or modernize governance while neglecting the people who keep the state running. The Oronsaye Report is a case study in this dilemma. It shows that knowing what to fix is easy. Fixing it is hard. And fixing it when the system rewards dysfunction is harder still.
If Nigeria wants a future defined by capable government, public trust and national progress, it must begin by valuing and properly compensating the people who hold the machinery of the state together.
These reforms are not radical. They are basic governance hygiene.




