Daily Archives: January 27, 2020

Senator spent nearly $50,000 on software to ‘manage constituents’ – The Age

Posted: January 27, 2020 at 1:17 am

Senator Rex Patrick spent nearly $50,000 on software to "manage" his constituents last year, $40,000 more than any other MP.

Computer programs, known as constituent management software, help identify and act on voter concerns but they also collect personal data to track, profile and influence people during elections.

Most politicians bill taxpayers for these services under the label of "software reimbursement", which totalled $586,311 in 2018-19.

Many Liberal MPs claimed about $2590, Warringah independent MP Zali Steggall spent $4000, most Labor politicians used about $3130, the majority of Greens senators spent less than $1500 and Centre Alliance senator Rex Patrick from South Australia billed $49,739.

The Liberal Party was criticised for using a program called Feedback, provided by a Liberal-controlled entity called Parakeelia, which also donated money to the party. The Labor Party uses a similar program called Campaign Central. Both build on the electoral roll and log interactions between politicians and voters.

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Senator spent nearly $50,000 on software to 'manage constituents' - The Age

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Oscars, White Guys. Democratic Candidates, White Guys. And These Are the Liberal Organizations. – The Daily Beast

Posted: at 1:17 am

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 2020 slate of nominations for the Oscars was a sea of white men. The Democrats seventh debate also featured a profound lack of pigment and was pretty testosterone-heavy, though it did include two women.

For those who want equal representation, the sea of white maleness really sucked. How was this happening again? We had read countless think pieces on diversity, and yet the Oscars were as white as ever, and the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination is a white man in his 70s, trailed by another white man in his 70s?! We were told this was the year of womenno, wait, maybe that was last year. Has the year of the women expired?

In the incredibly lame Academys incredibly lame defense, theyve always sucked. Every year we collectively bemoan the whiteness and general cronyism of the Oscars. Every year it becomes slightly harder to not feel despondent about all these lame white guys getting participation trophies from their friends.

But you have to remember that the Oscars were started in the late 1920s by a lame white guy (Louis B. Mayer) as a way to give his friends participation trophies and to get around actors unionizing by making them part of an elite organization of academy members (otherwise known as fancy scabs) in the hopes of having more control over the actors.

So perhaps the Oscars are really the same as theyve always been. After all, these are the people who chose Crash over Brokeback Mountain and Shakespeare in Love over Saving Private Ryan and Green Book over anything else.

The 64 percent male Oscar voting base did not nominate any women in the best director category. Now this isnt new: In the 92 years of Oscars, there have only been five female directors nominated for an Oscar, and of those only one has ever won (quick: who was it?). But this year was even more annoying because there were a bunch of excellent movies directed by women, including Little Women (Greta Gerwig), The Farewell (Lulu Wang), Queen & Slim (Melina Matsoukas), and A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (Marielle Heller).

Also, there were a lot of movies directed by women. Women made up 10.6% of the directors of the top 100 grossing movies from 2019. The 84 percent white Oscar voting body seemed also to completely ignore people of color in the major categories, except for actress Cynthia Erivo (Harriet).

Its like the white men didnt see any movies that stared people of color, of which there were numerous excellent performances: Eddie Murphy, Lupita Nyongo, Jamie Foxx, and Jennifer Lopez, about whose royal screwing agreement is nearly universal. April Reign, who created the #oscarssowhite hashtag, pointed out that the pushback has often been, Well, there just werent enough diverse films to nominate. But that clearly was not the case in 2019, with films like Just Mercy, Us, Luce, Clemency, The Farewell, and so many others.

And what of the Democratic Party? We think the Democratic Party isnt run by white men. After all, the head of the DNC, Tom Perez, is the child of two Dominican immigrants, and his deputy was Keith Ellison, the first Muslim to get elected to Congress.

Old white guys have run things for the last 6,500 years and, you know, theyve done a pretty good job, besides the wealth inequality, the health care crisis, the Trump presidency, the coming climate apocalypse, and all the wars.

But since Sens. Kamala Harris and Cory Booker dropped out, the debate stage is a virtual cornucopia of white guy-ness, all of them arguing about who can appeal to women of color better, because if irony wasnt already dead, this would have killed it. Yes, the party that wins from the support of people of color has a debate stage that looks the celebratory dinner at the South Hampton Paddle Tennis Club.

But the DNC does not pick the candidate, contrary to what WikiLeaks would lead you to believe. Neither, really, do the voters. No, the donors pick the candidates by giving them moneyor at the very least, they aggressively screen the candidates for the voters. And those donors, whether they cop to it or not, like white guys. Yes, they went for a black candidateonce. But even Barack Obama was largely fueled by small donors in 2007, until he won Iowa and the large donors saw he could win. And they went with a white woman after that. But this time around, things are back to normal, and the big-dollar Democratic donors really like Mayor Pete and Joe Biden.

Its possible that the donors like them because they think theyre electable in a way Hillary Clinton wasnt. Instead of blaming her failure to visit Wisconsin enough or Clinton Ca$h, many Democrats have decided that Clintons loss is proof that a woman cant beat Trump. It doesnt matter what the thinking is, the reality is big money donors didnt pony up for Andrew Wang, Cory Booker, Bernie Sanders (old white guy but socialist), Elizabeth Warren, or Amy Klobuchar.

What if, and just bear with me here, white men win everything because everything from the Oscars to politics to most major corporations is run by old white men? From the C-suite to the gifting suite, white men are the bosses, and they tend to favor people who look like they do, people they feel comfortable standing next to on the approach to the 17th and giving an encouraging, Oh, nice chip!

Diversity begets diversity, and old white guys beget more old white guys. Old white guys have run things for the last 6,500 years and, you know, theyve done a pretty good job, besides the wealth inequality, the health care crisis, the Trump presidency, the coming climate apocalypse, and all the wars. OK, they havent. So maybe, just maybe, its time to give the rest a shot.

Oh, and that lone female to have won Best Director? Kathryn Bigelow for The Hurt Locker in 2010. After she won, Bret Easton Ellis deemed her overrated and said she won only because she was a very hot woman. Hard to imagine Bret saying that about a man, but then again, men win every year, so theres no need to explain a deviation to the norm.Maybe someday, when we have true gender parity and women win more directing Oscars than men, we can judge male directors on their cheekbones and hairlines.

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Oscars, White Guys. Democratic Candidates, White Guys. And These Are the Liberal Organizations. - The Daily Beast

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John Ivison: The lesson Trudeau hopes Liberal MPs have learned good government is boring government – National Post

Posted: at 1:17 am

You could tell the Liberal rookies after the 2015 election there was a kind of new car smell and puppy dog naivet about them.

One veteran MP shook his head as he recalled how the new government allowed its opponents to control the agenda.

Once we got elected, people thought it would be just like the village council everybody would get together and make Canada a better country, he said.

It was all peace, love, unicorns and rainbows. Harper ran it like Robert Mugabe but we went to the other side. The first piece of business we undertook at the human resources committee was a study by Niki Ashton of the NDP to review Employment Insurance. So weve been out of power for 10 years and the first thing we see is a motion by the third party.

The Liberals chased a legislative agenda for much of their first four years, frustrated by the opposition in the House of Commons and the Senate.

By summer 2018, only 39 per cent of the legislation introduced in the House had been passed (excluding appropriation bills, which always sail through).

By the end of the 42nd Parliament, that number was a more typical 78 per cent but that conversion rate required the kind of iron-fisted power plays the Liberals used to decry.

Trudeau is banking on lessons having been learned during the first mandate otherwise the current parliamentary session is likely to be an historic exercise in futility.

Stephen Harpers majority government passed 77 per cent of the bills introduced into Parliament, but his two minorities were much less productive a 48 per cent conversion rate between April 2006 and September 2008 and just 44 per cent between November 2008 and April 2011.

Justin Trudeaus Liberals have already had a taste of minority government. The opposition parties combined to defeat the government in the very first vote held in the 43rd Parliament last month to create a special parliamentary committee to examine Canadas relationship with China.

You dont fix problems that you dont have to. You dont make decisions you dont have to

That committee met on Monday and spent an eternity debating sub-amendments to clauses governing a sub-committee.

At the best of times, parliamentary committees are cul-de-sacs, down which ideas, patience and the will to live are lured and lost. From the governments point of view, these are not the best of times.

At the Liberal cabinet retreat in Winnipeg, Trudeau offered some sense of his priorities legislation implementing the new NAFTA trade deal will be introduced immediately. A new bill on medically assisted dying will come next month to comply with a court ruling that invalidated much of the existing law last fall.

And the government will bring forward a new law to outlaw the sale of assault weapons.

Beyond that, the prime minister talked in vague terms about fulfilling election pledges. Aside from the pressures of getting legislation through parliament, Trudeau has to keep one eye on spending. The debt to GDP ratio that he promised would continue to decline, even in times of deficit, is set to rise this year and thats before most of the $57 billion in election promises are added.

Were just getting started, Trudeau told reporters in Winnipeg.

In reality, though, the level of ambition in this Parliament will be more aligned with the reality of minority government.

Trudeau is being judicious in his public statements, an apparent attempt to manage expectations in a way he did not in his first term.

As one of Jean Chrtiens closest aides told his biographer Lawrence Martin: You dont fix problems that you dont have to. You dont make decisions you dont have to. Nobody was sitting and saying: Christ, were just maintaining the status quo why dont we do something exciting?.

Doing nothing much for the past three months seems to be working for Trudeau. A new poll by Mainstreet Research has the Liberals in majority territory at 40 per cent support, a number that has likely been bolstered by the prime ministers adroit handling of the downing of Flight 752.

As Chrtien and Harper were quick to discover, good government is boring government.

With luck, Trudeau has realized belatedly that jumping on your horse, in Leacockian fashion, and riding off madly in all directions is not the best way to run a country like Canada.

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John Ivison: The lesson Trudeau hopes Liberal MPs have learned good government is boring government - National Post

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Liberal Democrat Anton Georgiou sweeps to victory in Alperton by-election as Labour hangs on to seats in Barnhill and Wembley Central – Kilburn Times

Posted: at 1:17 am

PUBLISHED: 15:28 24 January 2020

Nathalie Raffray

LibDem Mayor candidate Siobhan Benita with Anton Georgiou who won the Alperton by-election for the party.

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Alperton residents have voted for change by installing a Liberal Democrat back in to Brent's council chamber after the party's four-year absence.

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Anton Georgiou swept to victory in Thursday's by-election with 1,699 votes saying he's "flabbergasted" by the result.

Chetan Harpale, who has been suspended from the Labour Party came second with 1,304, and the Conservatives third with 373.

The seat was made vacant by the resignation and suspension from the Labour Party of James Allie.

It is the first time a Liberal Democrat has sat in the Labour-strong chamber since Helen Carr became an Independant in 2016.

Mr Georgiou said he was "grateful" to residents for "placing their trust in me" adding: "I'm absolutely so grateful and stunned by this victory.

"It's a great honour that I have been able to elected as the Libdem councillor for Alperton, it's crazy.

"I think people are genuinley so tired of way things are and wanted to see something different."

He was congratulated by the Liberal Democrat Mayor of London candidate Siobhan Benita who said: "What a stunning result for Anton in Alperton.

Such a massive swing to the LibDems and away from Labour shows that voters want change.

"It's a real boost to my campaign to be London's first LibDem mayor and for my vision of a safer, greener, kinder capital. "I'll end knife crime and rough sleeping, reopen police stations and boost community policing, make London plastic-free and end the commuting nightmare."

Anton, who lives in Dudden Hill, has long campaigned in the borough.

His record includes standing as a council candidate in Dudden Hill in 2014.

A bright light in his party he was selected as the GLA candidate for the Brent and Harrow constituency during the 2016 mayoral elections and again for the elections in May. "To be honest I haven't thought about it, I don't think I can do everything. I won the selection for the GLA in the summer of last year before Alperton ever came up."

He helped set up Brent Refugee Action Group for those fleeing violence in Syria and other war-torn countries, explaining at the time how his own family arrived in the UK after the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974.

He added: "I'm flabbergasted by it all. I worked so hard for so long. We have a Lib Dem back in Brent. I never expected it to be me but it is and I'll do as much as I can to make sure there's a strong Liberal voice in the chamber.

"I'll hold them to account but also work with other parties, Labour and Conservative where possible."

His priorities he said, are: "The neglect of the area, the rubbish, the flytipping, the general poor state of the area is something that was referred back to again and again.

"They live in a really dirty, messy area and it's time we found a way of tackling the flytipping and rubbish and cleaned it up.

"My tagline during the campaign was 'a vote for Anton and the Liberal Democrats is a vote for Alperton' and I'll keep that up."

The other by-election wards, which included two vacancies in Barnhill and one in Wembley Central, were all won by Labour candidates.

Mansoor Akram, the brother-in-law of Brent Council leader Muhammed Butt, received 1,194 votes while Gaynor Lloyd, wife of Northwick Park's Cllr Keith Perrin won 1,152.

They were closely followed by Conservatives Kanta Mistry with 1,082 votes and Stefan Voloseniuc with 1,018.

Sonia Shah won Wembley Central with 1,945 votes with the Conservative Sai Karthik Madabhushi in second place with 1,090.

Alperton had the greatest turnout with 33.99 pc, followed by Wembley Central with 27.57pc and Barnhill's 21.97pc.

Carolyn Downs, chief executive of the council and returning officer, said: "Thank you to everyone who came out to vote despite the cold weather.

"I would also like to thank all our polling station and count staff who have now run two back-to-back elections successfully.

"Congratulations to the councillors who have been newly elected - I look forward to working with them."

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Liberal Democrat Anton Georgiou sweeps to victory in Alperton by-election as Labour hangs on to seats in Barnhill and Wembley Central - Kilburn Times

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On thin ice: thawing permafrost dampens Russia’s economic growth prospects – World Finance

Posted: at 1:13 am

More than half of Russias entire territory is covered by permafrost ground with a temperature that remains at or below freezing point for more than two years 

Author: Charlotte Gifford

January 27, 2020

There are many reasons why one might decide against buying a house in the Siberian city of Norilsk: the Sun doesnt rise for three months each year; the name of the neighbouring town translates as either forbidden place or death valley; and its so cold that the bodies of the Gulag prisoners who built it are said to be perfectly preserved beneath a memorial at the foot of Mount Schmidtikha.

Its fair to say that its no place for the faint-hearted. At the very least, buying a house in such a dark, icy wasteland should be good value for money, but even this is no longer the case. The population of the city used to be 300,000, give or take, Nikolay Shiklomanov, Associate Professor of Geography and International Affairs at the George Washington University, told World Finance. Nowadays, its 180,000 so you would expect that the housing market should be pretty light that there should be lots of empty spaces but now theyre experiencing some acute housing shortages because so many of the buildings there are critically deformed.

Norilsk is the largest city in the world to be built on permafrost ground with a temperature that remains at or below freezing point for more than two years. Now, as the Earths climate warms, that permafrost is melting. In fact, approximately 60 percent of the citys buildings have been damaged by thaw and 10 percent have been abandoned. The foundations of Norilsk which was built in the 1930s during Russias push for industrialisation in the Siberian and Yakutia regions are sinking and eroding, causing walls to crack, roofs to crumble and pipes to burst. As Shiklomanov explained: The city was built cheaply and quickly. Obviously, nobody considered climatic changes.

While GDP and employment in petrostates such as Saudi Arabia revolve around oil and gas revenue, Russia has a relatively diversified economy

Warming to the ideaThe unenviable situation Norilsk finds itself in is not a unique one within Russia. More than half of Russias entire territory is covered by permafrost. As this ground thaws, its not just buildings that are in danger, but also pipelines and other oil and gas infrastructure vital to Russias economy.

Alexander Krutikov, Deputy Minister for the Development of the Russian Far East and Arctic, predicts that the economic loss resulting from the thawing of permafrost could be as high as RUB 150bn ($2.34bn) a year. Its difficult news to swallow for a nation with climate commitments deemed critically insufficient by the Climate Action Tracker, and whose leader has consistently denied the existence of global warming.

Until recently, President Vladimir Putin argued that global warming was good news for Russia. At the 2017 Arctic: Territory of Dialogue international forum, he claimed it would result in more favourable conditions for economic activity in the northernmost reaches of the country. This idea isnt as far-fetched as it might seem. In his bestselling book 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, historian and philosopher Yuval Noah Harari explained how Russia could stand to benefit from climate change: Whereas higher temperatures are likely to turn Chad into a desert, they might simultaneously turn Siberia into the breadbasket of the world.

But this year, the leader of the worlds fourth-largest greenhouse gas emitter changed his tune on climate change. Although Putin continues to insist the phenomenon cant be confidently attributed to human activity, he admitted in June 2019 that Russia was warming 2.5 times faster than the global average. This is a major challenge for us, he said. This is the reason for the floods and for permafrost thawing in the areas where we have fairly big cities. We must be able to understand how to react.

According to Shiklomanov, global warming could affect as much as a fifth of infrastructure across the permafrost area by 2050, costing Russia approximately $84bn, or 7.5 percent of its GDP. As the tundra melts, underground methane is released, causing gas pipelines to explode. At the same time, Russias shoreline is eroding by an estimated four metres annually, increasing the risk of damage to offshore infrastructure. All that coastal infrastructure is extremely important and exceedingly vulnerable, Shiklomanov told World Finance.

Russias coast currently witnesses an accident involving power stations, nuclear-powered icebreakers, chemical facilities or communications installations every three months. Needless to say, Putins new stance on global warming is a huge paradox: by curbing greenhouse gas emissions, he hopes to keep feeding and expanding an emissions-producing oil and gas industry. As the leader of the worlds second-largest oil exporter (see Fig 1), though, this position makes a certain amount of sense arguably, the sector is simply too important for Russia to lose.

Greasing the wheelsRussia is sometimes referred to as a petrostate, but as analysts like Michael Bradshaw a professor of global energy at Warwick Business School point out, this obscures the specific and complex role that oil plays in the Russian economy: Russia has a fairly substantial economy that is not resource-based. However, its increasingly clear that large sectors of the industrial economy are tied one way or another to the resource economy.

While GDP and employment in petrostates such as Saudi Arabia revolve around oil and gas revenue, Russia has a relatively diversified economy. For example, the services sector makes up a larger share of Russias GDP than oil and gas (see Fig 2). Nonetheless, oil and gas revenues are still crucially linked to the non-oil economy in Russia, accounting for 40 percent of government income, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA).

The wealth generated by oil and gas known as oil and gas rents is extracted by the state and channelled into strategically important sectors or the economy more broadly, either in the form of taxes paid to the government or as subsidies for other goods and services. This system, however, means Russia can only prosper so long as oil prices are high.

As such, its economy is extremely vulnerable to sudden changes in oil demand and supply. If you go back to the 1980s, one of the factors that led to the eventual collapse of the Soviet economy was the fall in oil and gas prices and the loss of substantial rent to the economy, Bradshaw told World Finance. That volatility, of course, continued through the 1990s and 2000s, at times supporting the Russian economy and at times punishing it.

One obvious way of reducing Russias exposure to oil shocks is through economic diversification, but such reform is made difficult by the fact that non-oil sectors are so heavily reliant on oil and gas rents. Moreover, beneficiaries of this system are reluctant to change the status quo. Russia has been spectacularly unsuccessful in seeking to diversify its economy, Bradshaw explained. Theres been an awful lot of rhetoric, particularly under [Dmitry] Medvedevs presidency, but very little change.

To maintain government income in the short term, Russia has to keep expanding oil and gas production. Currently, the need to do so is urgent. Russias main oil and gas fields are depleting: according to the Financial Times, West Siberia, a critical oil-and-gas-producing region, has seen a 10 percent decline in output over the past decade. Whats more, a 2016 report by the Wilson Centre showed that Russia is increasingly dependent on production from its more remote East Siberian and Arctic offshore fields. Covered almost entirely by permafrost, these are some of the most inhospitable regions on the planet.

A pipe dreamAs the Arctic sea ice retreats, the Northern Sea Route becomes more navigable to the worlds superpowers. With a fifth of its territory inside the Arctic Circle, Russia has long envisioned itself as the gatekeeper of this sea lane. Although the Northern Sea Route will never be as integral to global trade as the Suez Canal, it could nonetheless become an important passageway between Europe and Asia, saving freight companies millions of dollars and weeks in travel time.

Russia is convinced that its economic future depends on Arctic exploration. As well as opening up a globally important shipping route, the melting sea ice makes it easier to access rich supplies of fossil fuels. The US Geological Survey estimates that the Arctic may be home to as much as 20 percent of the remaining oil and gas reserves on Earth. On the surface, Russia would seem to be making great progress towards seizing these resources: in late 2018, energy giant Novatek finished building Yamal LNG, a $27bn liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant. By 2030, Moscow expects it to produce 60 million tons of LNG each year.

But extracting oil and gas in such a hostile environment with limited infrastructure is far from easy. These are very capital-intensive areas where returns are not expected before 10 to 20 years of development, Pami Aalto, a Jean Monnet professor at the University of Tampere, told World Finance. Consequently, oil and gas companies have to make large investments up front to carry out production, meaning they are often dependent on both government subsidies and foreign technology.

In this regard, Russia has faced some major setbacks. EU and US sanctions imposed after Russias annexation of Crimea limit the countrys ability to secure funding for new oil projects and import the hi-tech equipment needed for Arctic exploration. As Aalto points out, this presents a significant hurdle to Russias Arctic oil ambitions: It is not feasible to explore, extract and develop much without international partners. In the Arctic, 80 to 90 percent of technology has been foreign, compared to 40 to 50 percent elsewhere in Russia before import substitution policies started big-time in 2014 Russian actors have been forced to [borrow] old equipment from Asia, and it is not in plentiful supply.

At the same time, Moscow is struggling to provide the necessary subsidies as a result of budgetary constraints. According to the Kremlin, Russia needs to invest over $200bn in Arctic infrastructure between now and 2050 to make its ambitions a reality; so far, it has stumped up just $14bn. The thawing permafrost will only add to the required expenditure, as companies are forced to adapt their infrastructure and account for soaring repair costs.

Frozen in timeEconomic activity in Russias Arctic territory accelerated under former Soviet Union General Secretary Joseph Stalin, who believed that Russia could achieve economic independence from the West by industrialising the resource-rich North. As these settlements grew, Siberia became the crowning glory of Soviet Russia the communist state had tamed the frozen wastelands, creating economic powerhouses in a region where free marketeers would never have dared venture.

Infrastructure can be adapted to help reduce thawing, but this is expensive, particularly when done at scale

Putin is eager not to see the regions economic prowess diminished. According to The Wilson Quarterly, Russias industrial base in the Arctic Circle currently accounts for up to 20 percent of the countrys GDP and nearly a quarter of its export revenues. And Putin is piling on the incentives to boost investment in the region: in addition to setting up the FPV, a special economic zone along its eastern coastline that offers tax and customs privileges, Russia awards 2.5 acres of free land in the Russian Far East to any citizen or foreigner willing to live there for at least five years.

However, the thawing permafrost raises questions over the viability of economic investment in the region. Infrastructure can be adapted to help reduce thawing, but this is expensive, particularly when done at scale. Moreover, it doesnt stop the permafrost from thawing. With this in mind, Putins attempt to relocate citizens to these areas is not dissimilar to Indonesia or the Philippines encouraging migration to their shrinking coastlines.

Nobody in their right mind in Russia will ever even consider building something like Norilsk again, Shiklomanov said. Now the question is, how do they maintain it? And should they maintain it or not? Some analysts would argue not. Over the past few decades, there has been a steady exodus of people from the Far North and Far East to the bright lights of Moscow and St Petersburg. The small mining town of Vorkuta in the Komi Republic, for example, has a dwindling population of about 60,000 residents, down from 217,000 in the late 1980s.

One of the most basic reasons people are shunning these Arctic cities is the severe conditions. The coldest temperature ever measured outside Antarctica was recorded in the Yakutia region of Siberia. The other problem is that these cities are extremely remote it takes 40 hours by train to get from Vorkuta to Moscow.

In their book The Siberian Curse: How Communist Planners Left Russia Out in the Cold, Fiona Hill and Clifford Gaddy argued that cities in the Far North and Far East are a hangover from the Soviet Union, and that Russia must abandon them for the sake of economic progress: People and factories languish in places communist planners put them not where market forces would have attracted them. Russia cannot build a competitive market economy and a normal democratic society on this basis.

In many ways, these cities are frozen in time snapshots of a Soviet past. Few people moved there by choice; most were driven there by fear and ideology. Under Stalin, hundreds of thousands of people many of whom came from Baltic countries were deported to this remote and hostile territory. As Gulag prisoners, they built Norilsk and other cities like it. Repopulating these areas feels like a step into the past one last desperate attempt to relive the days of Soviet industrialisation.

The cold, hard factsIf Russias ambition to repopulate the Far North and Far East is backwards-looking, then so is its drive to exploit the fossil fuel resources there. Over the past decade, the cost of renewable energy has fallen drastically; assuming this trend continues and nations remain committed to decarbonisation, then its highly probable that the world will soon phase out fossil fuels. Consequently, the reserves of oil and gas that Russia is so desperately trying to retrieve from beneath the permafrost will decline in value.

We are looking at a future of constrained demand and continuing supply, Bradshaw told World Finance. In that world, where oil prices are lower new production in Russia outside of the established regions be it in East Siberia or offshore could be more expensive. In other words, youre ploughing a lot of money into supporting an oil and gas industry thats delivering less and less income.

In 2017, Royal Dutch Shell CEO Ben van Beurden predicted that oil prices would peak in the late 2020s or early 2030s, after which point the industry should expect oil prices to be lower forever. In this future, the nations still economically dependent on oil and gas rents could see their power and influence on the geopolitical map wane. In its 2019 report, A New World: the Geopolitics of the Energy Transformation, IRENA described how the transition could profoundly destabilise countries that have not prepared their economies sufficiently for the consequences.

While Saudi Arabia is trying to curb its dependence on oil through its diversification plan, Vision 2030, Russia has no such strategy. In fact, Russia doesnt seem to even acknowledge the importance of relinquishing fossil fuels. They are, in true ostrich fashion, burying their heads in the ground or firmly in the permafrost as it melts, Bradshaw said. To demonstrate this, Bradshaw points to a case in 2014, when low oil prices as well as US and EU sanctions compelled Russia to develop its shipbuilding sector as a means of economic diversification. Even then, its diversification plan still benefitted the oil and gas sector, with ships being built to facilitate offshore production.

Russia has chosen to continue its resource dependence at the expense of long-term economic growth opportunities. Its plans to push industrialisation in its most inhospitable regions indicate that the country is yet to move beyond its Soviet past and set its sights on becoming a knowledge economy, rather than a resource-based one. In a world where oil and gas are no longer the arbitrators of global economic power, Russia could find itself falling further behind nations that prioritise alternative energy resources and technological progress.

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On thin ice: thawing permafrost dampens Russia's economic growth prospects - World Finance

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Meijer Taps Into the Gig Economy – Progressive Grocer

Posted: at 1:13 am

Meijer Inc. is deploying the Hyer platform/app across its 246-store footprint and its Serv-U-Successdistribution operation to link gig workers with identified tasks on demand.

Using the app, Grand Rapids, Mich.-based Meijer aims to support its workforce needs in real time, ensuring that it can meet consumer demand. The Hyer platform was designed to provide organizations and individuals with a unified, simple way to locate, engage and manage independent work.

Hyer is the first integrated, scalable ecosystem for labor on demand in the gig economy, notedDave Dempsey, CEO of Rye, N.Y.-based Hyer. While there are several labor on-demand apps in todays marketplace, Hyers robust app enables Meijer to manage multiple tasks in a single mobile application.

According to a recent report from Troy, Mich.-based staffing services companyKelly Services, nearly one-third of the worldwide workforce is employed by the gig economy.

Customer experience is always top of mind at Meijer, because asFred Meijeronce said, Our customers dont need us, we need them, saidMike Graham, the companys SVP of supply chain and manufacturing. There are many responsibilities at the store level that can be fulfilled quickly and easily by individuals looking for flexible work arrangements. Hyer allows us to secure labor on demand through a large, independent workforce that is ready and qualified.

Since implementing the Hyer platform, Meijer said that it has been better able to manage the volatility of demand by having the right number of resources to match its needs.

Across the system, the user experience is fast and simplifies the overall resource management at store level, saving us time and increasing efficiency, while simultaneously improving the customer experience, observedTodd Weer, Meijers SVP of stores. Were excited to fully put this app to work for us.

Meijeroperates more than 240supercenters and grocery stores throughout Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky and Wisconsin. The companyis No. 7 onPG's 2019 Super 50 list of thetop grocers in the United States.

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Here’s Why We Don’t Have to Worry About Middle East Wars Anymore – The National Interest Online

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We cant just drill our way out of the problem.

That was theoft-repeated phrase of President Barack Obama, whothroughout his presidencyargued that the key to beating higher gasoline prices was to subsidize alternative energies, such as solar and wind.

It was a common sentiment from those who fretted that the world had reached peak oil, and that America was simply doomed to become increasingly reliant on a few big international oil producers for a rapidly dwindling resource.

It also played well into the narrative that fossil fuels were inherently evil, destroying the planet by escalating climate change.

But the doomsayers were wrong.

Thanks in large part to American ingenuity and technological innovation, the script has been flippedand the dividends have been enormous.

Recent events in the Middle East underscore the dramatic change thats occurred.

Its been remarkable that following the September attacks on Saudi Arabian oil facilities and the recent U.S. strikeon Iranian Gen. Qassim Suleimani, oil prices have remained more or less stable.

This is a huge departure from what has transpired after major incidents in the Middle East in the past. As Foreign Policys C.K. Hickeynoted:

The August 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait led to a surge in the price of oil from $15 a barrel that month to $40 by October ($65.68 adjusted for inflation as of 2019). In February 2003, the lead-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq once again led to a spike in prices to nearly $40 a barrel, or around $55 in todays dollars, a level that hadnt been seen since the Gulf War.

This time was different.

Why?

U.S. oil production has boomed in the past decade, thanks largely to innovation in the use of fracking, which has allowed the U.S. to tap into not only enormous amounts of shale oil, but also natural gas and other petroleum resources.

In fact, U.S. production has ramped up so much that in 2018, the U.S.became a net exporterof oil for the first time in nearly 75 years.

Perhaps even more incredibly, for a brief time at the end of 2019,the U.S. surpassed Saudi Arabia to become the worlds top oil exporter.

That, of course, produced jobs and aboon to the American economy, but it also created the conditions for a global oil market more resistant to supply and price shockswhich were sometimes created by OPEC nations. Many of the latter are in the Middle East or generally hostile to the U.S.

But now, a world suddenly deprived of, say, Iranian oil, can rely increasingly on U.S. oil.

As political scientist Walter Russell Meadwrotefor The Wall Street Journal, the Middle East is now a region being fundamentally reshaped by drillers in Texas, Pennsylvania, North Dakota, and elsewhere.

As my colleague Nick Loris, an expert on energy and environmental policy, has noted, the huge increase in domestic oil productiondoesnt mean that the U.S. is truly energy independent. We are still very much affected by the global supply and the actions of countries abroad.

Nevertheless, the surge in production has transformed the American economy and given the U.S. an invaluable tool in foreign relations.

That has transpired in spite of efforts by the Obama administration and the left to strangle an industry they fundamentally dislike, an effort that would be stepped up massively if the so-called Green New Deal became law.

The Green New Deal,a badly disguised Trojan Horse for socialismand ofdubious environmental benefit,would end and reverse the oil production advances that have been such a broad-based benefit for the U.S. economy.

Hopefully, the strong economy and stable oil markets amid turmoil in the Middle East will serve as a reminder that reversing the incredible advances in oil drilling of the past decade would be a huge mistake.

Jarrett Stepman is a contributor to The Daily Signal and co-host ofThe Right Side of Historypodcast.Send an email to Jarrett. He is also the author of the new book,"The War on History: The Conspiracy to Rewrite America's Past."His article first appeared at The Daily Signal on January 22, 2020.

Image: Richard Masoner via Flickr.

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Lake County commissioners to increase funding for Grand River Valley wine region – News-Herald.com

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The Grand River Valley, the wine grape-growing and destination region comprising portions of Lake, Ashtabula and Geauga counties, recently received support to the tune of $75,000 from the Lake County commissioners and the Lake County Clerk of Courts.

Thanks to excess title funds, the seed money, according to the county, will facilitate marketing initiatives and outreach efforts in promotion of the area. Commissioners John Hamercheck, Jerry Cirino and Ron Young presented Remarkable Lake County, OH Executive Director Neil Stein with the funds at the Ohio Wine Producers Associations Fire and Ice dinner on Jan. 24.

Lake and Ashtabula counties, and the Grand River Valley which runs through both, has for too long been one of the best kept secrets in the nation, Young said. Over the last 30 years, other wine regions such as Napa Valley, Willamette Valley (Oregon) and the Finger Lakes have gained great notoriety and profited as tourism destinations. This funding will allow our visitors bureaus to expand their mission to make Grand River Valley a premier attraction.

The goal is to draw new visitors from outside our immediate area," he added. "As more people discover the wonders that our valley holds, the more the area will develop. Of course, with development comes economic growth, jobs and opportunities to enjoy a better quality of life for all our citizens.

Stein recently noted that the Lake County Visitors Bureau rebranded as Remarkable Lake County, OH plans to work collaboratively with the Ashtabula County Visitors Bureau to increase economic impact through a unified, regional tourism brand.

This work will build upon the 2016 Grand River Branding Initiative, a private-public partnership with Lake and Ashtabula counties, to develop and help brand a shared identity for the Grand River Valley based on natural, social and economic development variables that exist in the region.

Hamercheck said today's tourists are not concerned with political boundaries when choosing where to visit and spend their time and money.

"Tourism and economic development go hand in hand, he added. Our goal is to increase activity in the region as a whole. This collaboration between Lake and Ashtabula counties is a model of how to leverage public and private resources for the continued growth of the Grand River Valley.

Stretching from Madison Township along the Grand River corridor through western Ashtabula County, the Grand River Valley is home to a plethora of wineries, distilleries, micro-brewers and fine dining opportunities. These destinations compliment the growing number of hotels, bed and breakfasts and cottages developing in the region.

"Our commercial winery businesses are a critical part of the Lake County economy, Cirino said. We are pleased to support their efforts to bring more visitors to our county to appreciate the many fine establishments. This is true economic development.

Last month, the commissioners partnered with the clerk of courts and the Certificate of Title Fund and County General Fund to support this regional marketing initiative.

Since the excess funds were generated from fees for motor vehicle, motorcycle and watercraft titles, I think it is apropos a portion be dedicated to the promotion of the Grand River Valley, said Clerk of Courts Maureen Kelly. I am proud to be able to contribute to the branding of this resource and support all it offers to both residents and visitors to our area.

The funds will be used to brand the region for not only the local market, but for regional and national audiences in order to increase overall travel to the region and drive foot traffic to local businesses, according to a news release.

While the wineries may beregarded as the anchor tenant, attractions such as the Lake Erie shoreline, covered bridges and local park systems will be incorporated into the long-term vision as well.

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Marcia Ballinger embraces LCCC’s role as an economic driver for the region – Smart Business Network

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As Marcia Ballinger, Ph.D., strolls the campus of Lorain County Community College, its hard to miss her smile.

It could be the joy she feels on another unseasonably warm, sunny January day in Northeast Ohio. More likely, its her sense of pride at all the talented, creative minds that have found their way to LCCC the college has seen a 94 percent increase in the number of people earning degrees since 2011, and 61 percent of Lorain County high graduates start their college experience there. These numbers no doubt contributed to the institution being named the top community college in the country for Excellence in Student Success by the American Association of Community Colleges in 2018.

I view us as the portal of opportunity, says Ballinger, LCCCs president. Every students dream matters. So every day, we have to make sure that not only do we keep that dream alive for the students of today and tomorrow, but also for future generations.

This effort has evolved to include a closer partnership with the regional business community.

Were expected to be flexible, agile and nimble partners with those employers, whether thats advanced manufacturing, health care, biomedical whatever the industry sector is, Ballinger says. We need to not only meet them where they are to help create that talent pipeline and solutions for what they need, but also work with them on future development.

Community colleges have been instrumental in providing new programs and curriculum that establish a baseline of skill sets related to advanced technologies being implemented in the workforce, says Matt Hlavin, CEO at Thogus, a plastic injection molding company based in Avon Lake.

There has been a gap for years between the business community and educational institutions, Hlavin says. It is very taxing for employers, particularly small businesses, to have to retrain new employees upon hiring. LCCC is a forward-thinking educational institution that listens to our needs and has been a critical resource for preparing students to enter the workforce with the skill sets we need.

No one knows how the future will unfold, and new technologies, as of now still confined to the imagination of the next great innovator or entrepreneur, await. The goal at LCCC is to create an environment where students can become those innovators and succeed in the workplace.

One of LCCCs signature programs is the University Partnership, which allows students to earn bachelors and masters degree from four-year universities from LCCCs campus. Ballinger helped develop the program, then enrolled to earn her MBA from Kent State University.

Its a program that was desperately needed, Ballinger says.

We were the largest county in the state of Ohio without public access to a four-year university, Ballinger says. Our educational attainment at the bachelors degree level was the lowest among the counties in Northeast Ohio. So we created this concept, passed a tax levy in 1995 and started offering the program in 1998.

After earning their bachelors degree, students can remain in Lorain County while earning more advanced degrees.

We provide the first two or three years, then the universities provide the final courses, all on this campus, says Ballinger. I had the great opportunity to be in one of the first classes. That gave me a sense of the adult student experience, something that Ive held very close to me.

It was a significant step in strengthening the colleges role as an economic engine in Northeast Ohio.

Another pivotal moment occurred in 2001 when the Patsie C. Campana Sr. Engineering and Development Center today the Campana Center for Ideation and Invention opened. The facility recently underwent a 10,000-square-foot expansion.

In the past three months since the CCII grand opening, we have had more than 12 companies, both publicly and privately owned, tour and/or enter into discussions with LCCC and CCII seeking support, ideas, consultation, or simply wanting to understand what LCCC has to offer, says Bob Campana, CEO at Campana Capital and son of Patsie. As Northeast Ohio companies become aware of the capabilities and competencies at LCCC and CCII, we can support them by providing prototyping and parts manufacturing using digital and conventional manufacturing techniques such as additive manufacturing (3D printing), subtractive manufacturing (CNC machining), welding, laser cutting and water jet cutting, to name a few.

LCCC has also partnered with local industry to launch an Applied Science in Digital Fabrication Technologies degree that prepares students for these and other related fields, and teaches tasks such as prototyping, proof-of-concept exploration and rapid tooling.

Ballinger says the Campana family has truly epitomized entrepreneurship and innovation in its effort to support the college and its role in the community.

Theyve been stalwart supporters of the college, she says. The center really takes it to new heights and new levels. Its a launchpad for students in the community to explore, experiment and find a fit for their talents.

Just as businesses often work with customers to keep up with their changing needs, LCCC is carrying on a continuous dialogue with the business community to achieve similar goals.

Weve had to flip our own paradigms in terms of how we educate by having employers at the table designing with us, versus the old models, which weve done now for six decades, Ballinger says. It was a very intensive, community-based process to look at what the preferred future is for what were trying to create. We used a process called VUCA, where you look at volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity.

By doing so, Ballinger is confident the college is creating a bright future for itself and for its students.

But getting there while navigating constant change will require a flexible approach, Ballinger said at the CCII grand opening. We are living in a VUCA world. Thats why we approached our visioning process with strategic foresight, knowing the century that were in now is best described as the age of uncertainty, a century where rapid change has become the norm.

LCCC is talking to businesses about things like automation, artificial intelligence, augmented reality and blockchain, and exploring how to work these new technologies into its curriculum.

Four years ago, we werent talking about blockchain or about big data or about the Industrial Internet of Things, Ballinger says. We have degree programs in all of those areas now, again with employers at the table driving their development.

When it comes to automation, the college is seeking to create a sense of opportunity rather than fear. Instead of worrying about being replaced by a robot, Ballinger wants students to be excited about the chance to build new robot machinery.

How do we continue to teach individuals to be able to work for themselves? Ballinger says. We have been laser focused on more individualized services to ensure that we are getting students to more meaningful credentials and degrees in shorter amounts of time. We want them employed in more meaningful careers, where they are earning greater salaries for both themselves and their families.

LCCC values its position as a launching pad into the workforce for students of all ages across Northeast Ohio. In addition to the University Partnership and the Campana Center, programs such as the Great Lakes Innovation and Development Enterprise (GLIDE), Innovation Fund Northeast Ohio and NEO LaunchNET aim to spawn more creative, innovative minds. And the colleges Fab Lab, a 5,000-square-foot makerspace where people can make just about anything was the first Fab Lab outside of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the U.S. when it opened in 2005.

The college is counting on voters to approve an operating levy renewal on the March 17 ballot that would sustain support from the existing 1.8 mills and add 0.5 mills, an additional investment of less than $1.50 per month per $100,000 in property value.

Its critically important for Northeast Ohio to have a talent pipeline for our employers that is aligned, Ballinger says. We need to continue to envision and explore what the future can be and not be bound by building off of the past. We need to stay focused on what we can be and what we need to be.

Robert Lando, CEO of AgriNomix, says his company has hired several graduates of LCCCs Automation Engineering Technologies program who were trained in the skills his company a supplier to the North American horticulture industry based in Oberlin needs.

Those students have grown with us, and they made an enormous contribution to our company, says Lando. LCCC has invested in very knowledgeable faculty and paired them with cutting-edge motor control centers and todays sophisticated robots in order to provide students with valuable and applicable training.There are high-paying jobs waiting for grads from LCCCs programs we need more student to take advantage of these amazing programs.

Thoguss Hlavin says substantial progress is already being made.

The role community colleges are playing in evolving the future workforce to prepare them is already having a positive impact, he says. Long term, this will enable companies to remain competitive, as well as prepare their students to make more money and build a stronger economy.

NAME:Marcia Ballinger, Ph.D.

TITLE:President

COMPANY:Lorain County Community College

Education: Bachelors degree, journalism, Indiana University of Pennsylvania; MBA, Kent State University (LCCC University Partnership); doctorate in education community college leadership, Walden University.

Who are some of your mentors?I would say that certainly, having been here for 28 years, I have had mentors here including my predecessor, Roy Church, as well as a number of community college leaders. My dad was an educator and my mother instilled in me that hard work ethic. Ive been very fortunate to have worked within an organization for almost three decades and to have been partnered with so many incredible, amazing people who inspire me every day. But at the end of the day, its our students and graduates who truly have been my inspiration.

Local success stories:Our two new mayors of our largest cities in Lorain County, Elyria Mayor Frank Whitfield and Lorain Mayor Jack Bradley, as well as State Rep. Joe Miller, are alumni of Lorain County Community College.

Pivotal dates in LCCC history:

1966 LCCC moves to its current location, making it the first community college in Ohio with a permanent campus.The campus opened with three buildings: Engineering Technologies, Mechanical Services, and Physical and Social Sciences.

2004 LCCC enrollment tops the 10,000 mark in the fall semester for the first time in the colleges history. That year it was named one of the states fastest-growing colleges.

2011 President Barack Obama endorses the start of LCCCs Innovation Fund America, a program in concert with the American Association of Community Colleges Virtual Incubator Network that is intended to equip other community colleges with the tools and support to implement this program to stimulate high-tech entrepreneurship in their communities.

2016 LCCC Community Learning Center opens at Lorain High School.

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The imperatives for national rebirth in NigeriaOpinion – Guardian

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On Tuesday, the 17th of December, 2019, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy (ISGPP) and its Governing Council Chair, Prof. Akin Mabogunje, played host to a galaxy of Nigerias great minds, academics and professionals from all walks of life at a seminar which set out with an extremely rich and competent lead paper presented by the COO andSenior Fellow, the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), Dr. Tayo Aduloju and titled Building a Great Nation: Reformed Public Institutions as Imperative. In attendance were, HRH Oba Dokun Bolarin, Odia Ofeimun, Amb. (Dr.) Yemi Farounbi, Dr. Kunle Olajide, Dr. Olu Agunloye, Wordsmith Ray Ekpu, Dr. Kolade Mosuro; Chief Bayo Oyero, Chineye Ogwo, Otunba Deji Osibogun, Profs. Bolanle Awe, Biola Odejide, Gabriel Ogunmola, Siyan Malomo, Olabode Lucas, Alaba Ogunsanwo, Babajide Owoeye, Jide Osuntokun, Mike Adeyeye, Sola Ogunniyi, Fola Faponle and Drs. Festus Adedayo, Ademola Adegbile, Tunji Bolade, Sina Adekanbi, Tunde Oseni, Akeem Amodu, Kemi Okowa, Taofeek Ademola Bello, Engrs. Korede Segun, Deji Faponle and John Ayodele, Mr. Lanre Ogunmoyela, Mrs. Edem Ossai, to name just a few. I also like to appreciate Prof, Tunde Adeniran and Mr. Stephen Oronsaye, for the role they play to enrich my story at 60.

It is only to be expected that a conversation to which this assemblage contributed will be rich, nuanced and most enlightening. What I am doing therefore with this piece is to share my reflection from the take away from this remarkable seminar organised as part of events to mark my 60th birthday.

Most Nigerians agree that Nigeria is a good and potentially great country. It is easy to examine statistics and demographics that point at the potential greatness of this state. Indeed, most regret that Nigeria is not able to achieve her fullest national stature because of the bad stroke of luck concerning leadership. It is therefore still possible to find a large horde of optimists all over the country who are incurably certain that Nigeria will still one day, and very soon, overcome her ailing debilitation to redeem her mandate to her citizens, and her responsibility to the West African region, the African continent and the global comity of nations. I consider myself one of these hordes of incurable optimists. And I am more privileged than most because all my life, I have had the singular opportunity of familiarising myself with Nigeria at the point of her institutional and decisional frameworks. My optimism is therefore not just a wooly hopefulness. It is grounded in the institutional and leadership possibilities that I have encountered in my reform advocacy and administrative activities over the years. The history of Nigeria, indeed the history of her administrative evolution, tells many stories that should be outlined as critical landmines by which the Nigerian government could orient its present projections and future expectations. Nigeria is where she is today because we have often failed to seriously consider the crucial administrative insights delineated by the evolution of Nigeria from independence to date.

Nigerias status in so many significant indicesfrom misery to human developmentis not good. The Nigerian state stands as a classic representation of the resource cursethe paradox of lack in the midst of plenty. From the 1960s, Nigerias development strategies have often been beautifully rendered in several development planning documents. The most recent of the development planning document is the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP2017-2020). The time lag for this document makes this year a significant one for a comprehensive evaluation and reflection on how far Nigeria has gone and what needs to be done to push her father. 2020 has remained a critical year in Nigerias visioneering effort. The Vision 20:2020 projects that by the year 2020, Nigeria will be among the 20 largest economies in the world. The ERGP later emerged as a companion midterm plan to increase productivity, improve efficiency in the public and private sectors, achieve sustainable diversification of production and grow the economy.

We have finally arrived the year 2020, and the prognosis and diagnosis are not good. Statistical analysis of the Vision 2020 and the ERGP demonstrates that Nigerias economy is eminently underperforming. In the 2016 scorecard, only 3% of the objectives were achieved; 34% were exceeded, and 63% not achieved. For 2017, 32% were exceeded and 68% were not achieved. The 2018 scorecard is even worse: 29% exceeded, 71% not achieved. Essentially, the anxiety is not that Nigeria has stagnated for a long time, but that there is an ever present danger that she is getting near state failure.

The failure of development planning in Nigeria has become too obvious for us not to have learnt the lesson. From the 60s, it was already clear that Nigerias planning framework lacked the requisite discipline and statistical underpinnings to make it succeed. Projections and planning are more than mere rhetoric or arbitrary exercises in optimism. On the contrary, they are informed and carefully fabricated documents that considered feasible scenarios, their consequences and the measurable parameters that will make them achievable. Planning discipline is not only a function of administrative perspicacity but also political will. The tragedy of politicising development agenda in Nigeria is that these planning lacked the crucial element of administrative continuitythey die before they are ever consolidated. Added to this is the lackluster attention that the political leadership pays to these documents. This is often because development agendas are too long-term for the short-term political gains politicians are looking for. When short-term expectations do not square with long-term agenda, there is a lack of political ownership of the development and reform agenda. This is a critical learning we need to urgently learn in evaluating 2020, and in all post-2020 planning.

The fundamental objective of development projections is fore-grounded on the capacity readiness of the public service. And this readiness is also a feature of the institutional readiness factored into the development planning. This is an institutional reform symbiosis that ensures that the public service system becomes capacity ready to deliver on development objectives because one of the development objectives is to facilitate the reform of the public service. The public service system is made up of critical ministries, departments and agencies. Two of these are the National Population Commission (NPC) and the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). The reason why should be obviousknowing the population of Nigeria, as well as other critical demographic and governance statistics.

Nigerias population figures have always been mired in deep political intrigues. If we are not sure of how many we are, or of the figures relating to poverty, unemployment, births and deaths, schooling and education, and many other matters, then how could we ever hope to plan scientifically?

All these are a function of the availability of a governance framework that adroitly weaves administrative dynamics into governance matters. In Nigeria, a key objective of national development is achieving a productivity paradigm that instigates economic growth. Here, the governance issue of unemployment merges seamlessly into the administrative issue of a functional public service to focus the necessity of an inter-generational consideration into the reform of the public service. The government remains the largest employer of labor in Nigeria. But the sad fact is that the public service is not attracting the best that the tertiary institutions can produce. Those who manage to get employed preferred the private sector. And when the youths eventually get into the public sector, it becomes a stepping stone into some other nongovernmental responsibilities that undermine productivity in the public sector. This implies that in reforming the public service, the reform energy must be on injecting, attracting and injecting the youths and their knowledge, competences and generational enthusiasm into the workforce in a way that transforms the workforce and drives the Nigerian public service system into the 21st century.

For the discerning reader, articulating an inter-generational framework for reforming the public service immediately raises the issue of a viable educational objective. For: how do we inject the youths into the productivity dynamics of the public service, and ultimately into the development objectives of the country, if the educational system is not grounded in a significant human capital development policy?

The second dimension of reforming the public service system involves articulating a framework and dynamics of attitudinal and culture change. The public service in Nigeria has become bureaucratic and less productive because its rules and regulations have congealed into a behavioral conformism that saps the managerial capacity of the public servant. The ultimate challenge is to then transform the public service into a performance-oriented, technology-based, productivity-minded, and entrepreneurial organisation that learns from its administrative mistakes in order to meet future challenges.

This attitudinal change goes to the very idea of who a public servant is and what public service entails. It demands, urgently, putting in place an actionable programme that is rooted in the framework of an integrity system which defines the ethical boundaries of a conscientious public servant.

The second part of revitalising national reformation programme in Nigeria involves the idea of civic engagement as a double-edged factor that injects the citizens into the development project through civic participation which allows the people to be actively involved in their own empowerment. In the final analysis, the citizenry is the focal point of development planning and the national rebirth and reformation of the state. And therefore, it stands illogical that the citizens are just made the end users of development outcomes rather than being intimately involved with and owning the development paradigm and its consequences. Citizen development cuts to the very core of the democratic idea. The will of the people is the foundation on which any democratic experiment is founded. And the leadership is supposed to be the steward of that collective will. Part of the expression of the political will of the leadership, therefore, is the enthusiasm to implicate the Nigerian Storyin all its black, white and graysin the outline of a civic education strategy that can bring Nigerians closer to the love of country. And so, again, we arrive at the significance of a proactive educational system that not only churns out graduates but also those who will be willing to put their skills and competences on the line for the transformation and the rebirth of the Nigerian nation.

Let me end this reflection with a fundamental quote from the former prime minister of Britain, Mr Tony Blair: We know the problem, and we know the solution: sustainable development. The issue is the political will. This quote speaks with intensity to the Nigerian condition, and the crucial element that stands between the Nigerian state and her potential greatness. The will of the political leadership is significant because it is on its wings that the will of the Nigerian people rides in the affirmation of the greatness of the Nigerian state.

Prof. Olaopa, a retired Federal Permanent Secretary is the Executive Vice-Chairman, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy (ISGPP), Bodija, Ibadan.

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