Weekly Summary:
This week’s YSOT articles converged around a powerful idea: societies do not succeed merely because they adopt new policies or technologies; they succeed because they build institutions capable of sustaining progress. Whether examining agriculture, education, trade, technology, governance or sport, the contributors consistently argued that Nigeria’s and Africa’s greatest challenge is not the absence of ideas but the weakness of the systems that translate those ideas into lasting outcomes. Across every sector, institutional quality emerged as the decisive factor separating temporary gains from enduring development.
The discussions also challenged readers to look beneath the surface of familiar debates. Rather than treating food inflation as simply an agricultural problem, school re-entry as merely an education policy, football as only entertainment, or export growth as an end in itself, the articles revealed the deeper structural issues shaping these realities. They questioned why public institutions so often respond after crises have emerged instead of anticipating change, preserving institutional memory and investing in long-term capacity.
Together, the week’s contributions offered a compelling vision of development rooted in foresight, accountability and resilience. They argued that Africa’s future will depend less on reacting to Today’s headlines than on building institutions that can recognise emerging opportunities, retain knowledge, nurture innovation and protect public trust. Ultimately, the collection was a timely reminder that sustainable national progress is achieved not through isolated reforms, but through institutions that consistently learn, adapt and endure.
Common Thread:
From “How Nigeria’s Other Sachetification is Underdeveloping Agriculture” to “Nigeria’s School Re-entry Policy Must Deliver True Second Chances for Young Mothers”, from “The Billion-Dollar Cost of Nigeria’s Failure to Qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup” to “The Rise of Charlatans as Patriots in African Populism”, and from “Africa’s Export Growth Still Lacks Real Value Addition” through “Africa Needs Institutions That Build Technology, Not Dependence” to “The Institutional Amnesia Cycle and Erosion of National Stability in Nigeria”, this week’s essays arrived at a common conclusion: Africa’s greatest challenge is not a shortage of resources, talent or ideas, but the persistent failure to build institutions that anticipate change, preserve knowledge, create value and place long-term national development above short-term convenience. Whether discussing agriculture, education, sport, trade, technology, governance or public policy, every article ultimately returned to the same question: can African institutions evolve quickly enough to shape the future instead of continually reacting to it?
Weekly Article Review:
Monday, July 13: How Nigeria’s Other Sachetification is Underdeveloping Agriculture – By Oyinkan Teriba
Oyinkan Teriba offers one of the week’s most original economic analyses by extending the concept of “sachetification” beyond consumer packaging to describe how weak infrastructure has reshaped Nigeria’s agricultural economy. Rather than focusing on declining farm productivity, he demonstrates how unreliable electricity, poor transport networks and inadequate cold-chain infrastructure have forced producers to redesign food itself around survival instead of value creation. The article successfully shifts attention from production to logistics, arguing that the country’s greatest agricultural losses often occur after harvest rather than on the farm.
Perhaps the article’s strongest contribution is its insistence that agricultural transformation should be measured by the country’s ability to move perishable produce efficiently rather than merely increasing harvest volumes. By advocating targeted investment in perishable corridors instead of grand infrastructure announcements, Teriba offers a practical framework for reducing food waste, improving farmer incomes and strengthening food security. It is an insightful reminder that economic competitiveness is often determined by invisible systems rather than visible outputs.
Monday, July 13: Nigeria’s School Re-entry Policy Must Deliver True Second Chances for Young Mothers – By Edem Dorothy Ossai
Edem Dorothy Ossai examines Nigeria’s school re-entry policy with a welcome emphasis on outcomes rather than intentions. While acknowledging the importance of the National Guidelines for the Facilitation of Re-entry of Pregnant and Married Adolescent Girls into Schools, she argues convincingly that allowing girls back into classrooms is only the beginning. The real measure of success lies in whether they remain in school, complete their education and achieve meaningful economic independence.
The article broadens the discussion beyond education policy by highlighting the interconnected roles of healthcare, childcare, counselling, social protection and community support. Rather than presenting adolescent mothers as beneficiaries of charity, Ossai frames educational reintegration as an investment in national human capital. The result is a thoughtful argument that challenges policymakers to replace symbolic policy victories with measurable improvements in educational and social outcomes.
Tuesday, July 14: The Billion-Dollar Cost of Nigeria’s Failure to Qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup – By Ogie Eboigbe
Ogie Eboigbe reframes one of Nigeria’s greatest recent sporting disappointments as an overlooked economic issue. Moving beyond football itself, he demonstrates how World Cup qualification stimulates commercial activity across hospitality, tourism, broadcasting, telecommunications, merchandising, advertising and travel. By quantifying the economic opportunities forfeited through Nigeria’s absence, the article encourages readers to view sport as an increasingly important component of national economic strategy.
Equally significant is the article’s broader argument that sustained football success depends on institutions rather than occasional sporting brilliance. From youth development and transparent football administration to diaspora engagement and long-term planning, Eboigbe argues that competitive success cannot be separated from governance. In doing so, he reminds readers that investment in sport can generate returns that extend far beyond the playing field.
Wednesday, July 15: The Rise of Charlatans as Patriots in African Populism – By Dr Richard Ikiebe
Richard Ikiebe offers a timely reflection on the growing appeal of populist politics across Africa. Drawing on recent developments in South Africa and Ghana, he distinguishes genuine patriotism from political opportunism, arguing that economic insecurity, weak institutions and declining public trust have created fertile ground for leaders who substitute scapegoating for meaningful reform. The article wisely cautions against confusing loud nationalism with genuine commitment to national development.
Its greatest strength lies in refusing simplistic explanations. Rather than dismissing public frustrations, Ikiebe acknowledges legitimate concerns surrounding migration while demonstrating that foreigners are often blamed for structural failures they did not create. The article ultimately argues that strong institutions, accountable governance and inclusive citizenship provide far more durable foundations for national unity than fear or exclusion.
https://premium.businessday.ng/article/ysot/The-rise-of-charlatans-as-patriots-in-Africa-populism
Wednesday, July 15: Africa’s Export Growth Still Lacks Real Value Addition – By Faith Omoboye
Faith Omoboye challenges one of Africa’s most celebrated economic narratives by asking whether rising export volumes actually translate into industrial development. While acknowledging improvements in trade performance, she demonstrates that much of Africa continues to export raw commodities while importing higher-value manufactured products. This imbalance, she argues, limits employment creation, technological learning and long-term economic resilience.
The article effectively positions the African Continental Free Trade Area as more than a trade agreement. Instead, it presents AfCFTA as an opportunity to build regional manufacturing ecosystems capable of increasing domestic value addition. By shifting the conversation from export quantity to export quality, Omoboye contributes an important perspective to debates about Africa’s industrial future.
https://premium.businessday.ng/article/ysot/Africas-export-growth-still-lacks-real-value-addition
Thursday, July 16: Africa Needs Institutions That Build Technology, Not Dependence – By Oluwafemi Mayowa Olusola
Oluwafemi Mayowa Olusola argues that Africa’s AI challenge extends far beyond technology adoption. The real issue, he contends, is whether African countries will develop the institutional capacity to govern, produce and improve artificial intelligence on their own terms. Drawing on global and continental evidence, the article warns that dependence on externally developed digital infrastructure could gradually weaken technological sovereignty.
The article is particularly persuasive in emphasising institutions over hardware. Instead of advocating another wave of technology procurement, it calls for investment in research, teacher preparation, data governance, regulatory capacity and African-language AI systems. The result is a balanced and forward-looking argument that positions institutional development as the foundation of meaningful technological progress.
Friday, July 17: The institutional amnesia cycle and erosion of national stability in Nigeria – By Isedehi Aigbogun
Isedehi Aigbogun explores one of Nigeria’s least discussed governance problems: the persistent loss of institutional memory. Through examples ranging from flood management to public administration, he illustrates how inadequate documentation, poor knowledge transfer and frequent political transitions repeatedly force government agencies to relearn lessons that should already have been institutionalised. The article introduces “institutional amnesia” as a useful framework for understanding recurring policy failures.
Its recommendations are practical and timely. By advocating stronger archival systems, digital knowledge management, comprehensive handover processes and improved civil service practices, Aigbogun shifts the debate from personalities to systems. The article concludes that national resilience depends not only on capable institutions but also on institutions that remember, learn and improve over time.
Closing Reflection:
This week’s collection challenged readers to think beyond immediate events and examine the institutional foundations that shape national progress. Whether discussing agriculture, education, football, trade, technology or governance, the contributors consistently demonstrated that sustainable development depends less on isolated policies than on the strength, continuity and foresight of the institutions responsible for implementing them.
That insight carries an important lesson for Nigeria and Africa. Crises will continue to emerge, technologies will evolve and economies will transform. The societies that succeed will not necessarily be those with the loudest ambitions or the most abundant resources, but those that build institutions capable of learning, adapting and anticipating change. In the end, development is not simply about solving Today’s problems. It is about creating systems that are prepared for Tomorrow’s opportunities.
Thank you for reading this week’s Yaba School of Thought. We look forward to welcoming you again next week as we continue to explore the ideas shaping Nigeria, Africa and the world.
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