At the 3rd Inaugural Lecture of Wellspring University, Professor Ohikhena delivered a stark assessment of Nigeria’s economic trajectory, warning that the nation remains trapped in an “entrepreneurship wilderness.” He argued that Nigeria’s transition from a consumption-driven economy to a sovereign producer is being actively stifled by five historical and systemic “retardation forces.”
Ohikhena’s lecture, “From Nigeria’s Entrepreneurship Wilderness to Wealth,” calls for a radical departure from oil dependency and foreign-centric systems in favor of a national ethos built on indigenous innovation.
The Five Key Retardation Forces
Ohikhena identified a quintet of pressures that have historically undermined Nigerian enterprise:
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Pre-Colonial Comprador Legacy: Early leadership structures that prioritized middleman trading over internal production.
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Colonial Predation: Systems designed to extract raw materials while granting political independence without true economic autonomy.
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Successive Policy Failure: Decades of corruption, infrastructure decay, and an educational system that produces job seekers rather than job creators.
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The “Suffering and Smiling” Mindset: A cultural normalization of underperformance and a passive “sit down and watch” attitude toward governance and innovation.
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Neo-Colonial Digital Age: The risk of being marginalized by AI and robotics if Nigeria remains a mere consumer of foreign technology rather than a developer.
Reclaiming the “Igbo Apprenticeship” and Indigenous Models
A central theme of the lecture was the rejection of the narrative that Africa lacks entrepreneurial capacity. Ohikhena highlighted that pre-colonial Nigeria was a thriving hub of indigenous wealth creation.
Proposed Policy Shifts:
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Educational Reform: Bridging the gap between university and polytechnic training and integrating girl-child and Almajiri education into the formal economy.
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The Igbo Model: Scaling traditional systems like the Igbo Apprenticeship Model as a national standard for vocational and entrepreneurial training.
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Local Content First: Prioritizing power supply, mining, energy, and indigenous medicine over a reliance on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).
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Ending “Japa” Values: Reversing the brain drain by creating an environment where productive values replace fraudulent ventures and the desire to flee.
A Call for Economic Sovereignty
The Professor emphasized that the “Digital Revolution” is a double-edged sword. While it offers a path to wealth, it could also entrench a new form of digital neo-colonialism if Nigeria continues to depend on foreign ideas and consumption patterns.
He concluded with a “final charge” to the nation: Nigeria must adopt a Unified National Policy on Production. This policy must transcend political cycles and focus on self-reliance, indigenous research, and the consumption of locally made goods.
