• Latest
  • Trending

The Tinubu Enigma: Power, Strategy and the Nigerian StatePart 7: The Economics of Power — Money, Resources and Political Sustainability—Lanre Ogundipe

April 19, 2026

Emo Ti Wo Ilu: Why South West Governors Must Act and Act Fast—Kayode Ogunjobi

May 20, 2026

Singer Niniola announces husband’s death

May 20, 2026

Lagos Commissioner Hospitalised After Bloody APC Primary Clash

May 20, 2026

Oyo Police Probe Video of Abducted Teacher’s Beheading

May 20, 2026

TRAGEDY: Afro-House Star Niniola Loses Husband, Michael Ndika

May 20, 2026

Congolese Man Dies After Being Restrained by Department Store Security

May 20, 2026

Ojude Oba Will Hold Despite Awujale’s Death, Organisers Clarify

May 20, 2026

Trucker Jailed Over $8.4M Cocaine Stash Hidden in Kim Kardashian’s Skims Cargo

May 19, 2026

Police Smash Transnational Trafficking Ring in Nasarawa, Rescue 30 Malians

May 19, 2026

Woman Dies After Falling Into Open Midtown Manhole

May 19, 2026

DEADLY FUEL PROTESTS PARALYZE KENYA

May 19, 2026

Togo Announces Visa-Free Entry for All African Citizens

May 19, 2026

2027: Jonathan Has Obtained PDP Presidential Form, Says Party Chieftain

May 19, 2026

Mango Heir Arrested in Homicide Probe

May 19, 2026

Police Neutralise Kidnap Kingpin, Recover AK-47, ₦2m in Ogun Forest Raid

May 19, 2026

Ex-Power Minister Saleh Mamman Arrested in Kaduna After 75-Year Jail Sentence

May 19, 2026

2027: Peter Obi Emerges as NDC’s Sole Presidential Aspirant

May 19, 2026

The Tinubu Enigma: Power, Strategy and the Nigerian State, Part 11: Power, Legacy and the Loneliness of Leadership— Lanre Ogundipe

May 19, 2026

Ondo Orders Closure of Schools Ahead APC Assembly Election

May 19, 2026

Six Dead in Maldives Sea Cave Diving Tragedy

May 19, 2026

Finland Proposes Tougher Rules for International Students

May 19, 2026

Court Forfeits Aircraft Linked to N114m Maiduguri Project Fraud

May 19, 2026

Saka Celebrates Title-Crucial Win with Grandmother Afterfrom Kwara!

May 19, 2026

APC Consensus Aspirant Yayi Faces Disqualification Threat Over Court FOI Suit

May 19, 2026

Felix Ohagwu Assumes Duty as 47th Ondo Police Commissioner

May 19, 2026

New Ondo CP Assumes Office Vows Professionalism

May 19, 2026

Aiyedatiwa presents staffs of office to two Ilaje monarchs

May 19, 2026

Tinubu Condemns Killing of Abducted Teacher, Assures Rescue of Victims in Oyo

May 19, 2026

EFCC Returns ₦837.5m Stolen Public Funds to Katsina Govt

May 19, 2026

Makinde Opens Door for Dialogue with Terrorists to Save Kidnapped Pupils, Teachers

May 19, 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • BREAKING NEWS
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
    • Sports
  • CONSULTATION
  • Shop
ValidView Network - Breaking News, Nigerian News, Nigerian newspapers, Entertainment, Videos, Sports, Business and Politics.
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • BREAKING NEWS
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Mobile

    The End of the Password? UK Cyber Chiefs Urge Shift to ‘Unbreakable’ Passkeys

    Tinubu Hails Lebara’s Entry as “Vote of Confidence” in Nigeria’s Digital Economy

    I have been fired unfairly by Paystack, says co-founder Ezra Olubi

    FG unveils digital ID app to enhance data protection, user control

    A New Era Begins: Traffic Lights to Add Fourth White Signal for Autonomous Vehicles

    Nigerian Girls Triumph at 2025 Technovation Global Summit with AI Safety App

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • CELEBRATIONS
    • Gaming
    • History and Culture
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Sports

    Singer Niniola announces husband’s death

    Ojude Oba Will Hold Despite Awujale’s Death, Organisers Clarify

    Saka Celebrates Title-Crucial Win with Grandmother Afterfrom Kwara!

    Aiyedatiwa presents staffs of office to two Ilaje monarchs

    Amusan Claims Third in Shanghai Blistering Hurdles Clash

    Celebrating Emmanuel Okala, Africa’s ‘Man Mountain,’ at 75

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Health

    Ebola Outbreak: Nigeria Tightens Borders After WHO Declares Global Emergency

    WHO DECLARES INTERNATIONAL EMERGENCY AS RARE EBOLA STRAIN SPREADS FROM DR CONGO

    Lagos Warns Against Poisonous ‘Ata Esha’ Tomatoes Over Cancer Risk

    NAFDAC Clears BON Bread After Two-Month Shelf Life Probe

    OGEPA Dismisses Air Pollution Reports Over Ijebu-Ode School Incident, Cites Chemical Odour Exposure

    Aiyedatiwa Boosts Emergency Healthcare with Free 48-Hour Critical Care

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Game of Thrones
    • MotoGP 2017
    • eSports
    • Fashion Week
  • Education
    • Sports
  • CONSULTATION
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • BREAKING NEWS
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Mobile

    The End of the Password? UK Cyber Chiefs Urge Shift to ‘Unbreakable’ Passkeys

    Tinubu Hails Lebara’s Entry as “Vote of Confidence” in Nigeria’s Digital Economy

    I have been fired unfairly by Paystack, says co-founder Ezra Olubi

    FG unveils digital ID app to enhance data protection, user control

    A New Era Begins: Traffic Lights to Add Fourth White Signal for Autonomous Vehicles

    Nigerian Girls Triumph at 2025 Technovation Global Summit with AI Safety App

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • CELEBRATIONS
    • Gaming
    • History and Culture
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Sports

    Singer Niniola announces husband’s death

    Ojude Oba Will Hold Despite Awujale’s Death, Organisers Clarify

    Saka Celebrates Title-Crucial Win with Grandmother Afterfrom Kwara!

    Aiyedatiwa presents staffs of office to two Ilaje monarchs

    Amusan Claims Third in Shanghai Blistering Hurdles Clash

    Celebrating Emmanuel Okala, Africa’s ‘Man Mountain,’ at 75

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Health

    Ebola Outbreak: Nigeria Tightens Borders After WHO Declares Global Emergency

    WHO DECLARES INTERNATIONAL EMERGENCY AS RARE EBOLA STRAIN SPREADS FROM DR CONGO

    Lagos Warns Against Poisonous ‘Ata Esha’ Tomatoes Over Cancer Risk

    NAFDAC Clears BON Bread After Two-Month Shelf Life Probe

    OGEPA Dismisses Air Pollution Reports Over Ijebu-Ode School Incident, Cites Chemical Odour Exposure

    Aiyedatiwa Boosts Emergency Healthcare with Free 48-Hour Critical Care

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Game of Thrones
    • MotoGP 2017
    • eSports
    • Fashion Week
  • Education
    • Sports
  • CONSULTATION
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
ValidView Network - Breaking News, Nigerian News, Nigerian newspapers, Entertainment, Videos, Sports, Business and Politics.
No Result
View All Result

The Tinubu Enigma: Power, Strategy and the Nigerian StatePart 7: The Economics of Power — Money, Resources and Political Sustainability—Lanre Ogundipe

ValidViewNetwork by ValidViewNetwork
April 19, 2026
in Opinion
0 0
0
Home Opinion
ADVERTISEMENT
483
SHARES
503
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT
Spread the love

If Part 6 examined the intelligence that drives President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s political method, the next layer of analysis must confront a more material question: what sustains it? Political systems are not maintained by strategy alone. They require resources—financial, institutional and organisational—through which influence is preserved, extended and reproduced.

Power, in practice, has an economic foundation.
This foundation is often reduced in public discourse to campaign financing or patronage. While these are visible components, they do not fully explain durability. For a political system to endure across cycles, it must possess continuity of capacity—an economic structure that sustains organisation beyond elections and enables influence even in the absence of formal office.

This is where the Tinubu model becomes analytically instructive.
His continued centrality in Nigerian politics after leaving the Lagos governorship in 2007 suggests that his influence was not merely positional but structural. Power did not recede with office; it was retained, adapted and redeployed. Such continuity is rarely possible without an underlying resource base.

The first principle, therefore, is straightforward: political power requires a material backbone.
Elections require financing. Party structures require maintenance. Mobilisation—whether electoral, institutional or elite—demands logistics and funding. In systems where this backbone is weak, political organisation becomes episodic—visible during campaigns but unstable thereafter.

Durable systems operate differently.
They sustain capacity between electoral cycles.
In Tinubu’s case, this continuity is closely associated with the transformation of Lagos into a financially resilient sub-national entity. The expansion of internally generated revenue, the strengthening of tax administration and the assertion of fiscal autonomy created a state with greater economic independence than most others in the federation.

This shift had consequences beyond governance.
It altered the political economy of power.
A state with strong internal revenue capacity is less dependent on federal transfers and more capable of sustaining long-term planning. It can support infrastructure, retain institutional memory and maintain administrative continuity. More importantly, it creates an ecosystem in which governance outcomes, economic activity and political organisation reinforce one another.

Lagos, in this sense, functioned not merely as a political stronghold, but as an economic platform.
From this platform, a broader political network could be supported—through continuity, coordination and strategic alignment.

This introduces a necessary distinction between patronage and political investment.
Patronage, in its conventional form, is transactional. It distributes benefits for immediate loyalty but often lacks durability. Political investment, by contrast, is structured. It involves the deliberate placement of individuals, the strengthening of institutional relationships and the creation of systems that yield long-term returns.

The Tinubu model appears to operate within this layered framework.
Support is not merely dispensed; it is organised. Relationships are not only maintained; they are embedded within structures that endure beyond individual transactions. This does not eliminate patronage—it reconfigures it within a broader system of political reinforcement.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Yet this structure raises a critical institutional question: how are such systems financed and regulated within a democratic framework?
This is not an individual question. It is systemic.
Nigeria’s political financing environment is characterised by formal rules but uneven enforcement. Campaign finance regulations exist, but transparency remains limited. Party funding mechanisms are defined, yet disclosure is often incomplete.

The result is a political economy that operates partly within formal structures and partly within informal arrangements.
This creates a persistent grey zone.
Within this space, political systems develop internal funding logics that sustain organisation but are not always visible to public scrutiny. While such systems may be effective in maintaining political continuity, they raise legitimate concerns about accountability, competitive fairness and institutional clarity.

The more organised the political system, the greater the demand for transparency.
Without it, perception begins to substitute for evidence—and perception, in politics, can be as consequential as fact.

The role of resources becomes even more evident in coalition-building.
As earlier established, Tinubu’s political method treats coalition not as an episodic arrangement but as a durable structure. Yet coalitions do not sustain themselves on agreement alone.

They require continuous negotiation, alignment of incentives and reinforcement of shared interests.
This introduces what may be described as a political economy of coalition.
In such a system, resources function as stabilisers. They enable compromise, reduce fragmentation and sustain alignment among actors with divergent ambitions. However, they also introduce complexity. Resource distribution within coalitions must balance equity with influence, cohesion with control.

ADVERTISEMENT

This balance is rarely perfect.
Too little alignment, and coalitions fracture. Too much concentration, and they risk internal imbalance and latent instability.
At this point, the analysis must extend beyond political sustainability to governance implications.
A system that effectively mobilises resources for political organisation must also demonstrate the capacity to align those resources with public outcomes. This is where the distinction between the economics of power and the economics of governance becomes critical.

The economics of power sustains political systems.
The economics of governance sustains the state.
The two operate on different logics.
At the national level, this distinction becomes more pronounced. Nigeria’s economic environment is shaped by fiscal constraints, revenue volatility, debt obligations and competing social demands. Resource allocation is no longer simply a political decision; it is a macroeconomic necessity with measurable consequences.

The challenge, therefore, is convergence.
Can the mechanisms that sustain political networks be aligned with those required for national development? Can resource mobilisation for political continuity be translated into resource discipline for economic stability and public value?

This is where the Tinubu model faces its most consequential test.
The Lagos experience demonstrated that economic restructuring could support both governance and political durability at the sub-national level. However, scaling that model to the national level introduces complexities that exceed local control—currency management, energy pricing, national debt dynamics and intergovernmental fiscal coordination.

ADVERTISEMENT

These are structural constraints.
They limit the direct transferability of sub-national success to federal governance.
This introduces an additional layer of difficulty: state capacity.
A political system may be effective in mobilisation yet constrained in delivery. Governance requires bureaucratic competence, policy coherence and institutional discipline. The ability to generate resources must be matched by the ability to allocate them efficiently, monitor their use and evaluate their outcomes.

Without this, economic capacity does not translate into development.
It remains potential, not result.
There is, however, a broader comparative dimension that sharpens this analysis.

Across political systems, durable power structures have historically relied on some form of economic base—whether through state control, party financing or private sector alignment. What differentiates systems is not the existence of this economic underpinning, but the extent to which it is formalised, regulated and subjected to public accountability.

In more institutionalised democracies, political financing—while still contested—is structured through disclosure rules, contribution limits and oversight mechanisms. These frameworks do not eliminate the influence of money in politics, but they make it more visible and therefore more accountable.

Do you want to share a story with us?
Do you want to advertise with us?
Do you need publicity for a product, service, or event?
Contact us on WhatsApp +2348033617468, +234 816 612 1513, +234 703 010 7174
or Email: validviewnetwork@gmail.com
CLICK TO JOIN OUR WHATSAPP GROUP
ADVERTISEMENT

In less regulated environments, the opposite occurs.
The relationship between political power and economic resources becomes less transparent, more personalised and harder to scrutinise. Effectiveness may increase in the short term, but institutional trust becomes more fragile over time.

Nigeria sits between these two realities.
Formal frameworks exist, but informal practices remain influential. This creates a hybrid system in which political financing is both regulated and opaque—structured in principle, but flexible in practice.

This duality is central to understanding the sustainability of political power within the system.
It also raises a deeper developmental question.
A political system that is highly efficient in mobilising resources for organisational purposes may not automatically be efficient in distributing those resources for public benefit. The logic of political sustainability—reinforcing loyalty, maintaining alignment, preserving networks—does not always align with the logic of economic development, which demands efficiency, equity and broad-based impact.

This divergence can produce tension.
Resources that stabilise political systems may not optimise developmental outcomes. Conversely, policies that prioritise long-term economic efficiency may disrupt established political arrangements.

Managing this tension requires more than strategy.
It requires institutional maturity.
It also requires a redefinition of success.
In political terms, success may be measured by continuity, stability and control. In economic terms, it is measured by growth, inclusion and improved living standards. Aligning these metrics is not automatic; it must be deliberately constructed through policy, discipline and accountability.
This is where political economy becomes statecraft.

For Bola Ahmed Tinubu, this balance now defines a critical dimension of leadership. The economic base that supported political durability must now sustain national transformation. This requires not only resource mobilisation, but institutional discipline—ensuring that financial capacity is aligned with outcomes that are visible, measurable and inclusive.

Power can be financed.
It can be sustained.
It can be extended.
But governance imposes a higher demand.
It requires that resources move beyond sustaining power to producing value—and that they do so with clarity, accountability and reach.

Ogundipe, Public Affairs Analyst, former President Nigeria and Africa Union of Journalists, writes from Abuja.

Previous Post

Cows cost more than cars, butchers lament as cattle prices hit ₦2.5m

Next Post

Ondo CJ frees 13 inmates, orders treatment for ailing detainees

ValidViewNetwork

ValidViewNetwork

Next Post

Ondo CJ frees 13 inmates, orders treatment for ailing detainees

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get the latest news from ValidViewNetwork
Loading

SPONSORED ADVERT

SPONSORED ADVERT

As the Lord liveth, you are feeling bushing this 6th month better and stronger than the way you started it in Jesus Mighty Name. Our angels of good news shall locate us this month. Shalom!

  • Home
  • BREAKING NEWS
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • CONSULTATION
  • Shop

© 2022 ValidViewNetwork - Website Developed by HaybeeMultimedia.

No Result
View All Result

© 2022 ValidViewNetwork - Website Developed by HaybeeMultimedia.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist