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Making Over Lagos
May 26, 2011
By Alex Perry |
Click
here to read the original article on
Time Magazine website |
In his
epic 1976 anthem "Go Slow," Afrobeat legend Fela Kuti
described the traffic in his hometown of Lagos, casting
it as a metaphor for Nigeria's spiritual standstill.
"Then your head start to ache because car crush they for
your head," he sang. "Lorry they for your front, tipper
they for your back, motorcycle they for your left, taxi-moto
they for your right."
It's a far cry from this vision of the city put forth by
the developers of a new seafront business and
residential district for Lagos called Eko Atlantic: "It
will be a masterpiece of urban planning ... with its
wide boulevards [and] tree-lined avenues with views over
the marina and waterway, dynamic waterfront [and]
traffic that flows."
If it seems there is a gulf between the two, there is -
literally. Eko Atlantic is an artificial island, just
offshore, being created entirely from scratch, built of
sand dredged from the ocean floor. It will be 7 km wide,
extend about 2 km out to sea and house 250,000
residents, with offices for 150,000 commuters. A scale
model at the offices of its developers, South Energyx
Nigeria, features gin-clear canals, giant malls, three
marinas, trams, the island's own power station and a
sail-shaped 55-story skyscraper that will be the new
headquarters for a Nigerian bank. David Frame, South
Energyx Nigeria's managing director, calls Eko Atlantic
"the new face of Africa." Onno Ruhl, country head for
the World Bank, goes even further, calling it the future
Hong Kong of Africa. But plans for Lagos' renovation
don't end offshore. Eko Atlantic is the centerpiece of a
city redevelopment strategy whose ambition is simple and
astonishing: take one of the world's worst cities and
make it one of the best. "This is a real attempt to
prove Lagos can be an economic powerhouse and a gateway
to Africa," declares Frame. Ruhl says, "It's an amazing
thing, not least because it actually looks like it will
happen."
It would be hard to pick a tougher city to make over
than Lagos. The place is more normally known as a
living, breathing definition of anarchy. With 10 million
to 18 million inhabitants - no one is quite sure - Lagos
is the biggest city on the world's poorest continent and
one of its fastest-growing, with the population expected
to be as large as 25 million by 2015, which would make
it the third largest city in the world. Those figures
describe an unmatched concentration of poor people.
About 65% of Lagosians - up to 11 million people - live
below the poverty line, earning $2 or less a day. This
is chaos at its ugliest, deadliest and most colossal: a
malarial megalopolis mostly built of driftwood, tin and
cardboard, with precious little running water,
electricity, employment or law and order, where the
ground is filled with garbage, the water with sewage and
the air with the noise and smog from a million unmuffled
exhausts.
How did it get so bad? It is Lagos' peculiar blight that
on a continent with space to spare, the city managed to
run out of it. When Portuguese explorers arrived in
1472, the settlement of Eko was so scattered around
marshes that they eventually renamed it after the
Portuguese word for lakes. Then the growth started.
First Lagos became a trading hub for slaves, then a
British administrative city, then after oil was
discovered in the Bight of Benin in the 1950s, a
boomtown filled with oil executives and riggers.
Finally, as the biggest port in the most populous
country in West Africa, it became a megamecca for
migrants. Today a new resident arrives every minute, and
each finds ever less of Lagos on which to live. Erosion
from the pounding Atlantic means the city's coastline
has retreated a kilometer since the 1960s.
Such epic overcrowding has spawned a host of other
difficulties - not only legendary traffic but also
unemployment, poor housing, crime and disease. All that
has been exacerbated by Nigeria's notoriously poor
government, something that, in turn, has its roots in
the country's large oil reserves. Oil, which accounts
for about 85% of revenue, detaches a government from its
people. Because it does not depend on them for money, it
feels little need to serve them. That disconnection
helps explain Lagos' decline. When oil prices collapsed
in the early 1980s and state revenues tumbled, work on
Lagos' infrastructure stopped. But when crude prices
recovered, no one thought to resume it.
Within a few years, Lagos was one of the world's first
failing megacities, a victim of what U.N.-Habitat, the
international organization's agency for human
settlement, calls overurbanization - a concentration of
too many people in too little underdeveloped space.
Lagosians tried to adapt. With hours of daily gridlock,
businessmen converted their car backseats into offices,
complete with phones, laptops and secretaries, while
motorbike taxi drivers shaved down their handlebars to
stubs, the better to slip through the narrowest of gaps.
Offices and factories squeezed into residential
apartments. Almost every tree was cut down and every
garden built on.
The celebrated Dutch architect and urban-development
theorist Rem Koolhaas, who has published several studies
of Lagos, eulogizes this chaotic, organic growth and the
dynamic adaptability it instills in Lagosians. But the
reality of anarchy is often less romantic. As long ago
as the 1970s, when the city began to buckle, the federal
government abandoned Lagos for a new purpose-built
inland capital, Abuja. Foreign investors and tourists
stayed clear. As the city crumbled through the 1980s,
"area boys," self-proclaimed vigilante street gangs that
ran protection rackets and mugging syndicates, began
terrorizing neighborhood turfs. By the time Babatunde
Fashola was elected governor in 2007, Lagos was a place,
he says, "of very evident despair."
The Bottom of the Pyramid
Fashola is not your usual politician. Rather than
barging his way across town with sirens blaring and
lights flashing like other Nigerian leaders, he chooses
to endure Lagos' traffic with his fellow citizens. Also,
Fashola reads economic theory for fun. On his bedside
table: books by development economists who see potential
in poverty, people like the late C.K. Prahalad of the
University of Michigan or Hernando de Soto of the
Institute for Liberty and Democracy (ILD) in Lima. They
argue that the poor may lack money as individuals but
together, in their tens of millions, they represent a
massive untapped resource.
That counterintuitive approach resonates with Fashola.
When he looked at Lagos as its new governor, he says,
"in everything I saw, I saw opportunity. The
infrastructural deficit of Lagos [is also] a chance to
relieve its poverty. If there is a bad road, it means we
need an engineer and laborers, architects, valuers, land
merchants, banks, merchandisers, suppliers of iron rods
and cement, and food courts." So Fashola embarked on a
comprehensive overhaul of Lagos' infrastructure,
building new expressways, widening and resurfacing
others, stringing streetlights along all the main
highways, integrating road with rail, air and even
water. The city was too big to transform overnight, but
improvements were soon marked. Traffic slackened,
garbage dumps were replaced with green parks, the
proportion of Lagosians with access to clean water rose
(from 30% to 59%) and flood defenses covering 10.8
million people were strengthened. Eventually Fashola
created tens of thousands of jobs in construction and
municipal projects - 42,015 jobs in environmental and
waste management alone. New state skills centers trained
an additional 250,000 people in new trades, then offered
them microloans to set up their own businesses
Lagos' chronic lack of space presented another
paradoxical opportunity. Scarcity of anything increases
its value, an economic truth reflected in city-center
rents in Lagos that were higher than those in London or
Manhattan. Lagos, Fashola realized, was a potential real
estate gold mine. That insight led to Eko Atlantic,
which, because of the profits to be made, will be
entirely privately financed. The same calculation
underpins Fashola's new 17,000-hectare Lekki industrial
park, being built on marshland northeast of Eko
Atlantic.
The most ambitious part of Fashola's plan is still
unfolding. In 2004, when he was working as the chief of
staff for the previous governor, Fashola set up the
annual Lagos Economic Summit. It was there in 2008 that
he met a representative from de Soto's ILD. De Soto's
work on informal economies - the unregulated and
unmapped businesses in which the vast majority of people
in the developing world earn a living - makes him a
champion of the idea that the poor are an untouched
resource. De Soto and the ILD have set up programs in 30
countries designed to correct that, making the informal
economy formal so governments can regulate, tax and
promote it. "Everything has a potential value you can
unlock," he tells Time. "You just have to figure out how
to harness the power that's already there."
In May 2009, at Fashola's invitation, de Soto went to
work for Lagos. Almost immediately, he discovered the
mother of all informal economies. A preliminary study
revealed that 93.7% of the city's businesses, with
assets worth a collective $50 billion, functioned
outside the law. That handily beat annual foreign aid to
Nigeria ($11.4 billion) and dwarfed foreign investment
($5.4 billion) and, if it could be channeled, would
deliver an unprecedented boost to the city's prosperity.
It also indicated there was so much about his city that
Fashola didn't know or control, de Soto told the
governor, that many of his reforms would likely misfire.
"If you have that many people outside, it doesn't matter
what you say to them," he says. "They're already
following rules other than those set by the government."
How to get Lagosians into the system? Property rights,
said de Soto. Because of the chaotic way the city had
grown, most land and buildings there were untitled,
making them difficult to buy, sell or borrow against.
But if Fashola were to set clear property rights, that
massive asset could be tapped. What's more, since they
would benefit, residents and businessmen would line up
to have their property counted. They would volunteer to
become part of the system. "Since the Domesday Book,
people have been linked to their assets and identified
themselves through them," says de Soto. "Property rights
are the key to finding out how many citizens you've got
and who they are and what they're doing. Once you have
that, then you can reform the city."
An Ownership Society
For the past 18 months, Fashola has dispatched teams of
surveyors across Lagos to determine who owns what. Once
they finish, millions of Lagos' citizens will have a
stake - legal and enforceable - in their city's future.
The transformation will not be immediate, cautions de
Soto. "This is what Europe was doing from the 15th to
the 19th centuries," he says. "Even at the end of that
period, you had these Dickensian cities." But, he says,
"once they got that rule of law in place, they became
productive."
For Fashola, the law is key. The changes he is
overseeing improve infrastructure, create jobs, make
money, even build him a soaring political career. But
ultimately, the aim is to end the anarchy, he says. A
city that does not function "creates desperate
conditions for people and reduces their ability to
resist temptation." Lapses can be minor, like driving on
sidewalks or into oncoming traffic, or major, like
violent crime. Fashola sees both as symptoms of Lagos'
dysfunction, and he is tackling them by, in one
approach, setting up a series of driver-improvement
schools as well as, in another tack, employing area boys
as cleaners and gardeners to beautify their
neighborhoods. It's working. Orderly lanes are becoming
the norm on the roads. And crime is down. From 2007 to
2008, armed robberies in Lagos fell 89%. From 2008 to
2009, car theft fell 54%. And murder more than halved,
from 221 cases in 2007 to 94 in 2010. This rising sense
of citizenship is revealing itself in another surprising
way. Astonished then delighted by the transformation
their new governor was effecting, Lagosians were happy
to pay for it. By 2010 the governor was raising 70% of
the state's income locally from taxes. By diminishing
the importance of oil money handed out by the federal
government and raising the role of local tax, Fashola
has reconnected the state to its people. He takes that
as a stamp of approval for his efforts to reverse
lawlessness in government as well as across the city.
"The capacity of a government to attract taxes is a very
strong measure of its legitimacy," he says.
And slowly, like a rousing giant, Lagos is emerging from
its Dickensian squalor and rediscovering its soul. The
city that produced Kuti and Afrobeat and a host of
writers like Nobel Prize-winning author Wole Soyinka is
witnessing the birth of a hip urban scene. New bars and
cafés, boutique hotels and restaurants suddenly abound.
Kuti, it turns out, was right. Something as simple as
freeing up the roads can free the spirit. "We set out to
demonstrate that we can transform ourselves ... that
there is nothing wrong with us as a people," says
Fashola. "At the beginning, there was uncertainty about
whether or not any of this was even possible. [But what
we did] was suggest in very practical terms - in ways
that are touchable and can be seen - that things can be
changed, no matter how bad they are. We restored hope.
We restored belief." Lagos, city of hope. How's that for
vision? |