Another heavy knock has come on Nigerian government as the newest
rating on corruption indicates that the acclaimed giant of the Africa
is the second most corrupt nation in the world.
The rating according to a Gallup poll shows that the rate of corruption in the country is getting out of hand.
Gallup, in its first-ever report on “Global States of Mind: New
Metrics for World Leaders,” said 94 percent of Nigerians believe there
is prevalent corruption in government.
The poll reveals that in the world, only Kenyans believe their
government is more corrupt. About 96 percent of Kenyans said there is
widespread corruption in their government while only five percent of
Singaporeans said their government is corrupt.
Gallup said last year’s revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt where GDP
was rising, shows that world leaders need more than just GDP and other
traditional economic metrics to run their countries.
“Economic data are becoming less and less valuable because they tend
to be outdated by the time they are made available. More significantly,
GDP is less valuable because leaders now need to know much more than
what people are spending—they need to know what they are thinking; GDP
isn’t enough if you are watching for instability,” said Jim Clifton,
Gallup Chairman and CEO.
“All institutes worldwide knew GDP was rising in Tunisia and Egypt.
They knew what 11 million Tunisians and 80 million Egyptians were
buying and selling—but they didn’t know what they were thinking,”
Clifton added.
Clifton affirmed that GDP isn’t enough if leaders are trying to
figure out levels of hunger, hopelessness, or suffering, stressing that
the United Nations did not see those revolutions coming, neither did
the World Economic Forum (WEF), nor the World Bank.
“The U.S. spends tens of billions on intelligence—and it missed
those revolutions too,” Clifton said. Gallup’s World Poll spans more
than 150 countries, territories, and areas, annually capturing what
more than 98% of the world’s adult population is thinking on topics
from basic needs to job creation. Gallup’s World Poll data set now
includes more than 1 million interviews conducted since the research
initiative started in 2005. Respondents were asked questions on law and
order, food and shelter, institutions and infrastructure, good jobs,
wellbeing, brain drain and quality GDP growth.” He said
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