@Fiona intetesting. There is no moral in the literal sense of what to do and what not to do. But I believe the story shows that corruption is highly convoluted and there are folks that ask for bribe from a moral entitlement stand point. Thanks for coming by.
Any links ma'am. Did not hear about them till today.
@ Ult....I would send you a list. Thanks for stopping by.
I guess a robust debate is bound to open up avenues for actions now. Just like it is done in the
west
Interesting, I was looking around for the source of the table but could not find one.
I am fine. How is Germany treating you.
That is true and I often wonder how this planners manage to skirt the infrastructure question. How do they sleep at night?
Thanks solomonsydelle for stopping by. Your comment points out something missing in my post above. The overall argument was not in favor of the abandonment of the goal to make Nigeria a financial hub. My point was that, this goal was devised at the height of humongous valuations of the global financial sector as a whole. That level of valuation no longer holds. It only makes sense for us to review our our goals and get with the program. If at the end of the review the initial size and scope of the projects still hold, then it makes to keep doing what we have been doing. However if new data shows that the projects have to be altered in scale and framework (which I suspect, a la Citigroup, the world seem to be moving towards, small and nimble ) we'd be saving ourselves a lot of cash which we seem to need so badly these days. So it isn't a case of for-or-against, but that of what type and how much of our hopes should we hang on the financial hub model. How you dey now?
Partly. I read the story on Reuters and I sort of shook my head. Oshiomole is on it, I guess that was the high point. Multi party that is. Yup we were told we were immune by Soludo, hmmm but we'd have to forgive him cos even the Americans did not know how deep this thing would run. Thanks for coming by.