尼日利亚财政联邦制与资源控制:解构一个难题

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1970年尼日利亚-比夫拉战争结束后,原油出口成为尼日利亚主要的外汇收入来源,国家政治变成了谁控制该国石油资源和收入的斗争。在将近30年的时间里,由尼日利亚北部军官控制的军队不断修改收入分配公式,使北方受益,而使盛产石油的南方感到懊恼和沮丧。虽然后者继续鼓动通过改组和下放权力来审查现有的不平衡的联邦结构,使它们能够控制其社区内的资源,但北方坚持反对改变现状。其结果是南北关系缺乏信任和敌意。本文采用定性研究方法,主要涉及内容分析。其调查结果之一是,北方和南方之间的恶化关系阻碍了国家一体化、国家建设和国家发展。它的结论是,迫切需要通过重组尼日利亚的政治和经济来解决与财政联邦制、收入分配和资源控制相关的各种问题。这将阻止南北双方政治精英争夺联邦政府的地方性和破坏性斗争。
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Fiscal Federalism and Resource Control in Nigeria: Deconstructing a Conundrum
Following the end of the Nigeria-Biafra war in 1970, crude oil exports became Nigeria’s major foreign exchange earner, and national politics became a struggle over who controls the country’s oil sources and revenues. For nearly thirty years, the military, dominated as it were, by Northern Nigerian officers, kept on tinkering with revenue allocation formulae to the advantage of the North and to the chagrin and dismay of the oil-bearing South. While the latter continued to agitate for a review of the existing lopsided federal structure through restructuring and devolution of powers to enable them control the resources within their communities, the North persisted in its opposition to any change in the status quo. The result has been a lack of trust and acrimony in North-South relations. The paper adopted the qualitative research approach which basically involved content analysis. Among its findings was that the soured relations between the North and the South has impeded national integration, nation-building, and national development. It concluded that there is a compelling need to address the various issues associated with fiscal federalism, revenue allocation, and resource control through a restructuring of the Nigerian polity and economy.This will discourage the endemic and destructive struggle for the federal government between the political elite from both the North and South.
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