Nigeria is not being misgoverned; it is being slowly looted, as overpaid elites feast while darkness, hunger, and fear spread—until one spark triggers a collapse no one will be ready for.
In Nigeria today, while ordinary citizens struggle to
survive blackouts, hunger, and daily fear, a tiny political elite is quietly
bleeding the nation dry, turning public offices into private vaults and pushing
the country toward a sudden, unstoppable collapse no one will see coming until
it explodes. This is not a slogan. It is a pattern, repeated so often that it
has begun to feel normal. And normal, in a failing state, is the most dangerous
lie of all.
This is not mismanagement anymore. Mismanagement sounds
clumsy, like a dropped plate. What is happening now is deliberate extraction.
The kind that wears a suit, smiles for cameras, and signs budgets with steady
hands. Nigeria’s lawmakers sit at the center of this storm. On paper, their
salaries look harmless. A senator’s basic annual salary has long been
officially placed at roughly 13.5 million naira. That figure is waved around
whenever critics raise their voices. But everyone knows the paper salary is a
decoy. The real money lives elsewhere.
Allowances are where the vault opens. Housing, furniture,
vehicle loans, constituency projects, travel, hardship claims, and running
costs stack on top of one another like bricks in a private fortress. Over the
years, civil society groups, budget analysts, and investigative journalists
have repeatedly estimated that when all allowances are added, the annual cost
of a single senator to the Nigerian state runs well above 200 million naira.
Multiply that by 109 senators, then add 360
members of the House of Representatives, each with their own river of perks,
and the picture stops being abstract. It becomes grotesque. When the bucket
is gold, the well dries faster.
All this happens in a country where the minimum wage
struggles to keep pace with inflation and where a large share of the population
survives on the edge. Recent poverty assessments have placed more than 60
percent of Nigerians below the poverty line. That is not a typo. More than half
the country wakes up every day calculating how to eat, how to move, how to stay
alive. Food inflation has surged. Rice, bread, cooking oil, and fuel prices
jump so often that salaries feel like rumors. Yet the political class remains
insulated, sealed off by convoys, security details, and allowances that rise
even when the economy falls.
Electricity tells the story better than speeches ever
could. Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and one of its largest economies,
still struggles to generate more than 4000 to 5000 megawatts of power for over 200
million people. Blackouts are not emergencies; they are routines. Businesses
burn diesel to survive. Hospitals ration power. Students read by phone light.
The cost of private generators drains households and companies alike, acting as
an invisible tax on survival. Meanwhile, legislative budgets remain bloated,
defended as the price of democracy. When the lights go out, excuses glow
brighter.
Security is no better. Kidnapping for ransom has spread
from remote highways into villages and city streets. Armed groups roam rural
areas, forcing farmers off their land. Food insecurity deepens not only because
of climate pressure or global shocks but because people are afraid to plant and
transport what they grow. Official figures and independent tallies over the
past few years have shown thousands of kidnapping cases annually, with ransoms
running into billions of naira. Communities pay because the state cannot
protect them. Yet lawmakers’ security votes and personal protection never seem
to shrink. Fear is privatized. Safety is reserved.
History does not whisper here; it shouts. Nigeria has
seen this movie before. In the years leading up to past political ruptures and
military takeovers, the same signals flashed red. A ruling elite grew richer.
Institutions weakened. Public trust collapsed. Ordinary people adapted by
lowering expectations, then by lowering hope. When the break came, it felt
sudden only because denial had been loud. A crack ignored becomes a collapse
remembered.
The psychology of this moment is as dangerous as the
economics. Overpaid lawmakers do not just drain resources; they drain empathy.
When leaders no longer experience darkness, hunger, or fear, they begin to
treat suffering as background noise. Policy becomes theater. Accountability
becomes a joke told in private. Citizens, watching from the outside, begin to
see the state as something that happens to them, not something that belongs to
them. That is when loyalty dies quietly.
Fuel policy offers a sharp example. The removal of fuel
subsidies in 2023 sent petrol prices skyrocketing, doubling or worse in many
areas almost overnight. Transport costs exploded. Food prices followed.
Ordinary Nigerians were told to endure the pain for long-term reform. Some
reforms are necessary. But pain without shared sacrifice is poison. Lawmakers
did not slash their allowances. Convoys did not shrink. The message was clear
even without words. Endure means you. Adjust means you. When belts tighten,
only the poor feel the pinch.
Corruption scandals deepen the rot. Constituency projects
are approved, funded, and then abandoned. Schools exist only on paper. Clinics
have signboards but no staff. Each uncompleted project is a small betrayal, but
together they form a pattern of contempt. Investigations come and go.
Prosecutions stall. The cycle repeats. People stop asking when things will
improve and start asking how to escape. Emigration becomes a dream. Survival
becomes a plan.
What makes this moment explosive is the youth factor.
Nigeria is young, restless, and online. Millions of young people face
unemployment or jobs that barely pay. They see the numbers. They see the
luxury. Social media does the accounting in public. Every allowance, every
convoy, every careless statement is screenshotted and shared. Anger travels
faster than reform. When patience dies young, rage grows fast.
States rarely collapse with fireworks and warnings. They
collapse like a chair with termites, holding steady until the moment it
doesn’t. Nigeria risks that kind of fall. A disputed election. A sudden spike
in prices. A major security failure. Any spark could ignite a system already
soaked in resentment. When that happens, no legislative privilege will buy
immunity.
This is why the image of lawmakers feasting while the
lights go out is not exaggeration. It is diagnosis. A country where
representation becomes extraction cannot stand forever. Numbers do not lie,
even when politicians do. You can drain a nation quietly for only so long
before the silence breaks. And when it does, the collapse will feel sudden only
to those who refused to count.
On a different but
equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the
titles in my “Brief Book Series” worth exploring.
You can also read the books here
on Google Play: BriefBook Series.






