Friday, October 23, 2015

GUEST BLOG POST: The Energy And The Elegy: The Tragedy Of Nigerian Innovation — Nnamdi Awa-Kalu


If necessity is the mother of invention, why aren’t we creating much?

By Nmadi Awa-Kalu

There is a deafening buzz once you get into the town centre in Aba, most of it coming from the swarming ‘ina-aga’, the motorcycles which take Aba residents and visitors back and forth at a fraction of the cost of taxis. The rest of the buzz is the sound of the busy, the overwhelming music of enterprise which animates a city that was central to once favourable comparison between Nigeria’s South East and Japan, the beacon of technological progress in the Orient. Today, Aba is a symbol of the industrial underdevelopment which has slowed innovation in the non-oil sector of Nigeria. Where the city was famous for its strength in manufacturing, all that is left is the traders’ reputation for imitation. The term ‘Aba-made’ is a byword for fake or copied goods, which are low in quality and deemed inferior by the discerning buyer.

But the buzz remains. Everywhere there is the grist and the grind, along every street corner and in every market place. Whatever else is missing, few will doubt the intensity Nigerians put into everyday life which often, if not always, translates into enterprise. Take Lagos as a small-scale version of Nigeria and you must accept that there is enterprise blooming in the most unlikely spots of the country even around some unexpected products and services. It would not be inaccurate to say that the average Lagosian is an entrepreneur. Whether she is selling pepper at her mother’s stall or involved in multi-level marketing programmes, the Lagosian will find a way to trade. And that, in part, is the problem.

The same people who remark on rising Nigerian industriousness will be the first to note the fall in industrialization. Driving through Aba, it is easy to spot the abandoned buildings which once housed standardized operations for breweries and vehicle assembly lines. These days, the work is to be found in the market stalls and on the streets. All across town, creativity has been channelled into selling goods of all description, electronics and spare parts, and where there are products actually being made it is the endless stream of tailors and cobblers working with basic implements to stitch together clothes and shoes. Their goods are doomed to be sold for peanuts because people consider them counterfeit.

Nigeria is close to the bottom of the Global Innovation Index 2014 in 110th place out of a total of 143 countries. The index is an initiative of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), which aims to capture the multiple areas of consideration which make up innovation in order to recommend tools for long term growth and policy shaping. To put this ranking into context, Nigeria sits behind tiny Southern African country Botswana and even smaller West African neighbour Cape Verde. Rwanda, which still bears the scars of the horrific genocide of two decades ago, is also ranked higher than Nigeria. Add to this the Francophone nations of Burkina Faso and Senegal to which the average Nigerian would seldom consider a visit, and you can see what is wrong. Their verdict is plain: Nigeria is not innovating enough.

The question is why?

I was born in Aba, and, as a young boy, I used to visit often after we moved away. I recently returned there, a long while on from my last trip. Time seems to have stood stock still for two decades. The street where we lived -Omenazu road- looks even worse than I remember. That is to say, I probably took less notice of the gross maintenance failures then than I do now, with adult eyes. Factories which housed growing industrialisation in the post-independence years, remain a shell of their illustrious past, as they lie unattended in a deteriorating city. Aba now seems little more than a hive for worker bees doing the same thing they have been doing for many years without change.

Necessity is the mother of invention, or so the saying goes. What this usually means is that people will find a way out in the most trying of circumstances- some kind of device that will help solve the problem. But this is not how the story goes in Nigeria. People will and do find ingenious ways to get around some of the basic challenges of everyday life (just spend a day in the Lagos island slum of Makoko if you doubt that a people can survive on little and be happy) but there does not seem to be much desire to progress from mere survival to thriving. Whole townships can seem unevolved even after decades of technological advancement have passed by.

For when we talk of innovation, we speak of two things. First, there are the giant leaps that have been taken in Silicon Valley, where technology has become the biggest tool for social transformation in America, with such far reaching global consequences that the catchphrase for the near future began as nerd argot, the ‘internet of things’, a world where every object is connected by a remote controlled weblink. Amazon is already making same day deliveries by drone drop; Google is about to greenlight automated cars that do not require a human driver; Facebook has acquired powerful virtual reality technology that may one day allow you to visit anywhere in the world without ever leaving your living room. An elite class of these promising tech startups now known as ‘unicorns’ is raising record investment sums in venture capital and private equity funding to do things as varied as making disintegrating messages and mapping the human genome.

On the other hand, innovation need not be these original inventions which Silicon Valley has become known for. Malcolm Gladwell once wrote a profile in the New Yorker magazine on Steve Jobs’ stint as the iconic boss of Apple, the most valuable company in the world. In his opinion, ‘The Tweaker’ was a man whose ‘sensibility was editorial not inventive’. Unknown to many, what Jobs remains famous for is his talent for taking other people’s ideas and refining them. This ability to innovate in small measures led to Gladwell’s parallels between Jobs’ style and the industrial revolution of the Victorian era. That period in history was dominated by Britain because of its ‘resourceful and creative’ skilled population, engineers and artisans who focused on achieving efficiency by making incremental changes to every little process. In the same way, Apple is the predominant technology brand in today’s world, not because it makes original products but because it makes stuff a good deal better than its competitors. The iPod was not the first of its kind. Still it became the benchmark for mp3 players when Jobs honed its design until it was irresistible. Along the same lines, the iPad is cooler and more desirable than every other tablet owing to this tweaker mentality, a philosophy of constant improvement, of kaizen and reincarnation. Besides coming from a stronger design ethic, these products are functional and accessible to people who would not otherwise be open to new technology. Consider that my father, who spent many a year running from the computer, now replies emails speedily on his iPad. That is the measure of good innovation.

Transplant this concept to Nigeria, a nation of creative thinkers and dreamers, and one would imagine that tweaking, if not inventiveness, would prosper. Our markets heave with imports from the staple food we consume right down to the humble toothpick. Even without original inventions, what needs doing is to take what is coming in and enhance it with tweaks here and there. There is no reason, for instance, why the expertise which courses through Computer Village cannot be channelled into locally-made electronics adapted to withstand the extremes of heat and water damage that affect many homes and shops. This know-how, properly directed, can also be applied to make antennae, in radios and satellites, better able to draw signals even when network service is bad.

Look around and you will find that Nigeria is Africa’s largest mobile phone market but despite nearly 150 million subscribers to the Global System for Mobile telecommunications (GSM) (65 million of whom boast data service subscriptions to surf the world wide web), the pace of innovation in Nigeria lags behind other African countries. Take Kenya, where the M-PESA service processes 25% of the country’s GDP through a mobile money platform and M-KOPA provides customers with cheap loans to buy solar power. Even more worrying, a recent article in the Economist titled ‘The Pioneering Continent’ took a look at impressive innovative advances in Africa without once referring to Nigeria. All of which makes our claims to be Africa’s foremost economy suspect. Granted, I have not surveyed the happenings in the closets of Yabacon Valley, as the tech cluster in the Lagos suburb of Yaba has come to be known, so it would be difficult to say for certain if that small corridor of Lagos disproves this theory, but Yaba is a small strip of Lagos and elsewhere I have hardly come across forward-looking innovation geared towards solving basic Nigerian problems. Think how much a company like DSTV would invest in the potential to prevent disruptions that accompany heavy rain. Just think about it. Since it appears that no one else is.

The innovation deficit is tied to the unbearable truth that there is no power in the majority of Nigerian homes a lot of the time. Generating under 4000MW of electricity to serve its 168 million people, the electric power sector cannot support the creative habit. In South Africa, with less than half of that population, power output is greater than ten times that figure. But when the lights go out in Nigeria, people do not break a stride. Candles and lanterns appear at a moment’s notice in the ghettos and the countryside. In the teeming urban centres where expensive refrigerators and air conditioners must run, thousands of groaning generators ring through the night. Having learnt to deal with the difficulties of power, there is little support for this excuse; blaming the entire culture of stagnation on power failure is a red herring.

Of course, let us not forget that some innovation flows from the restiveness that the lack of electric power causes. 419. In Western depictions of Nigeria, the fraudster caricature dominates the larger narrative of a corrupt state held back by its own greed. Some Nigerians have found the will to profit from the innocent and from the state, through internet-based scams and every other form of cheating. Even when this corruption is not online, it is ever present. All signs point to a ruling class that is happier to get fat on the public purse than to spend on development. The reasoning seems to be that there is no harm in budgeting inflated amounts on infrastructure while spending a fraction of that on actual projects. So, vast millions are skimmed off and put in offshore accounts while the work is eventually carried out with money that is not enough, if it is done at all. In that small but crucial way, Made in Nigeria has emerged as a byword for shoddy design and poor execution, to be avoided wherever possible. Which makes it all the more ironic that the newly-elected government swept into power using the traditional broom, that most backward of implements, as its symbol of change.

Even ‘Made in Nigeria’ students, the homegrown and locally-trained, are considered second rate in the job market. No surprise then that kids learn from an early age that to get the best value you have to go abroad. These kids also face a system of education focused on passing examinations rather than problem solving. What is the relevance of solving puzzles and doing crosswords, when there are books to be read, Nigerians might ask? Read your books! Read your books! This is the Nigerian teachers’ chorus- all learning is to be found in books. Finish school and you can do whatever you like, is the way Nigerian parents tell it to their kids, forcing child prodigies in music and drama, in visual or applied arts to sit through book-based study sessions when they would rather be sweating at some instrument, getting creative. Any social media user is likely to have come across memes for ‘Why didn’t you come first? Did the person that came first have two heads?’ Academic excellence, then, is accounted for by sole reference to examination grades. When those grades are awarded for the ability to ‘cram and pour’ everything in the exact way that it is delivered in textbooks, there is little attention paid to the unusual forms of intelligence which are the hallmarks of the creative and the innovative. Brighter children with a world of possibility at their feet are guided towards the favoured professional disciplines of medicine, engineering, law and accountancy when some of them might be better off as lithographers, sound technicians and archaeologists. For a people who make a big noise about the value of education, what is being taught is limited.

Perhaps the fact that kids are supposed to be seen and not heard in Nigeria contributes even more to underdevelopment than limited education. In this way, many youngsters across the country drink up whatever it is their teachers and elders might be telling them without being given the opportunity to question and test its veracity. Nigerian parents would much rather accuse the questioning child of disrespect or of talking too much when they could be reading their books. Social hierarchies of this kind hold back out-of-the-box thinking that stimulates innovation. They convince growing children that the sole goal of education is to follow orders. As such, trying to change things becomes taboo.

There are other cultural matters so deep in the national DNA that they programme Nigerians against innovation. Superstition is one such matter. Anyone who has read ‘Things Fall Apart’ will recall how the Umofia villagers held the evil forest in fear. When the missionaries came and built their church in the centre of this vile place where demons were supposed to convene, it was an eye opener. Still too many of these myths are alive in the diverse cultures of Nigeria. Myths which dictate what vocations different genders are called to and flawed ideas which prevent people from exploring certain corners of the map that should be better researched. The paradox is that formal education for the sake of it has acquired some mythical standing as well. Almost as if when the missionaries built their church in the evil forest to explode the superstitions surrounding it, they cultivated a new superstition in its stead, which later germinated into a hard and fast rule about brilliance- read your books!

Tuface and Wizkid and Davido are wildly successful, well beyond their wildest dreams. Far removed from humble beginnings, at least in the case of the first two, what they have in common is that the establishment sees them as rebels. That they skipped school to play music which the educated elite thinks of as tasteless means they are not the role models presented in schools. Their success is chalked up to ‘yeye’ behaviour, in the lingo. Some of this is their own fault. When you scroll through music on your iPhone, it is grouped into genres- soul, rock, jazz, blues, folk, electro, disco, house, dance- while the entire kaleidoscope of sounds of modern Nigerian popular music is under the broad heading of ‘Afrobeat’. In the first place, this is a slight to Fela who invented the style, and on the other hand, it undersells the variety between ‘African Queen’, ‘Ojuelegba’, and ‘Dami Duro’, respectively hit songs by each of these artistes.

Among other things (including Western ignorance) this is down to a bandwagon attitude which is the biggest threat to innovation. Someone once said that if you want your music in Alaba market, where most records catch fire in Nigeria, what you need is a party beat, an addictive hook and some nonsensical made up word that people can repeat. ‘Sawale’, ‘Gobe’, ‘Akpako’, ‘Yahooze’ are the titles of club bangers even though the words may not have existed before those records. For the reason that this formula is followed relentlessly, a one hour radio programme playing back to back Nigerian songs can sound like different versions of the same jam on rotation. Because musicians are not taking the time to particularise their own unique method, too much of the music in the charts sounds just like everything else. Although, to their credit, the production gets better and better every year, the music itself is not as evolved as it ought to be.

As someone put it, the vision is to blow- the Nigerian dream is to get lucky and hammer, that is, to make money so help us God. So the thought of striving for the singularity of an idea alone rather than for selling out of units of a product is almost, in a sense, laughable. Nigeria’s patent system is lifeless and one is better off going to other countries where the Nigerian government has reciprocal treaty agreements to register inventions. As a result, everyone is happy to do things just as they have always been done. A system which does not innovate remains in flux, resisting the rule that the only constant is change, so that rot and disaster become inevitable.

Here we are then, at the conclusion to things. Even in Aba, where markets are such a strong element of local history, many people prefer to do their shopping online. Of all the business solutions that the internet age has birthed, Nigerians have latched on quickest to the e-commerce phenomenon. Online malls are everywhere and out of control. Jumia, Konga and Mall for Africa are examples of one-time start-ups who have gone on to raise vast millions of American dollars from technology investors for ambitious expansion. All that money is being pumped into ventures dedicated exclusively to selling in a country that is struggling with an innovation deficit? It is a known fact of development that an economy and a people must move beyond the business of service provision to manufacturing which serves as the platform for true progress and a measure of lasting wealth. Online shops are service-driven businesses unlikely to expand beyond a certain point unless the growing economy is supported by a strong manufacturing engine. Manufacturing is fueled by innovation and, in turn, drives creativity.

Tim De Lisle writes in the September/October edition of Intelligent Life that ‘wealth, even obscene wealth, aspires to more than itself. It aspires to intelligence, style and culture.’ In Nigeria, where there is wealth and there is obscene wealth, this is not the case, most of the time. We can only draw hope from looking back on the highly developed cultures of the bygone Nok and the Bini, Igbo Ukwu and Ife, and looking now to the clutch of Nigerians winning awards in diverse parts of the world for forward thinking in science and the arts, in philosophy and the law, in policy and in politics. I say to them, bring innovation back and bring it home.

Originally published in VenturesAfrica

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