Osinbajo, Obi agreed on need for more investment on education
Posted 4 years ago
by prinzemhud
Vice
President of Nigeria, Prof Yemi Osinbajo and the Vice Presidential
Candidate of the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, in 2019 elections, Mr.
Peter Obi, have both spoken on the need for the government to pay
attention to education, saying that a nation’s development is directly
proportional to the level of educational investment in the nation.
Speaking at the TECHISD 2020 Online International Conference organized
by the Centre of Lion Gadgets and Technologies in partnership with the
Department of Electronic Engineering of the University of Nigeria,
Nsukka, Osinbajo and Obi agreed on the need to pay more attention to
education in the country by way of more government funding and
introduction of specialized technological educational trainings that
will enable Nigeria students and youths to fit into the emerging world
and compete favourably with their global counterparts in areas of
science and technology.
They both noted that the world is fast
changing technologically and anyone who does not catch up with the new
wave of technology would be left behind.
Obi also appreciated Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo for showing leadership by making out time to
share his knowledge with the participants, maintained that human capital
development via quality education remained the easiest way of fostering
development in a country.
He further said that the amount of
financial investment countries of comparative stand commit to education
showed far more seriousness than Nigeria. Using South Africa as an
example, he says: “Besides extra-budgetary funding for education, what
is our provision for education in our budgets? Between 2010 and 2016,
for instance, South Africa invested over 5%; Egypt more than 3.5%; and
Nigeria barely 1%” of their Gross Domestic Product [GDP] in Education.
From 2010 to 2014, Nigeria budgeted N1.860 trillion for the sector – or
US$11.1 billion at the exchange rate of N160 to the Dollar. In 2015 and
2016, the combined budgetary allocation was N761 billion – or US$2.1
billion at the rate of N360 to a Dollar.”
“Therefore, over a period of 7 years, 2010-2016, Nigeria, then with a population of about 190 million people, spent just US$13.2 billion on Education. Juxtapose this with South Africa, the second biggest economy in Africa which, with a population of 55 million invested over US$15 billion on that critical sector in 2015 alone; and Egypt, the third biggest economy with a population of 95 million people spending about US$12 billion in that same year only. Obviously, Nigeria is still in slumber as far as investment in education is concerned.”
Peter
Obi called on the government to prioritize education which he said
could give more returns on investment than oil. He argued that countries
like Venezuela had more oil than Nigeria and indeed many countries, but
Venezuela remains undeveloped, a proof that oil proceeds alone cannot
guarantee national development.
He said “our world today is more
technology and knowledge driven. All the countries ranking high in
sustainable development have all made serious investments in their
education sector. These developed countries have prioritized human
infrastructural development through education which is more important.
If our leaders can pay more critical attention to education in Nigeria,
the return on investments will be far better than the oil proceeds the
nation currently gets”.