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In This Issue...Links to the News:
March 11, 2016
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Nigeria needs Secure Property Rights for Development
2011 International Property Rights Index ranks 129 nations,
97 percent of world’s GDP
May 16, 2011 (Lagos, Nigeria)—The Initiative for Public
Policy Analysis
(IPPA) today announces the release of the 2011 International
Property
Rights Index (IRPI). The IRPI measures the intellectual and
physical
property rights of 129 nations from around the world.
This year, the Initiative for Public Policy Analysis
including sixty-seven
international organizations, partnered with the Property
Rights Alliance
in Washington, DC and its Hernando de Soto Fellowship
program to produce the fifth
annual IPRI.
The IPRI uses three primary areas of property rights to
create a composite score: Legal
and Political Environment (LP), Physical Property Rights
(PPR), and Intellectual Property Rights (IPR). Most
importantly, the IPRI emphasizes
the great economic differences between countries with strong
property rights and those without. Nations falling in
the first quintile enjoy an
average national GDP per capita of $38,350; more than double
that of the second quintile with
an average of $18,701. The third, fourth, and
fifth quintiles average $9,316, $5,065, and $4,785
respectively.
Property rights continue to be a challenge in Nigeria. In
this report,
Nigeria scored 3.9 out of a possible 10 to occupy the 120th
position out
of the 129 nations studied.
“The 2011 report further shows that Nigeria
has a lot to do to improve its property rights situation.
Insecure
property rights has increased the transaction costs and
consequently
undermined the nation’s potentials. The connection between
secure property right and economic
development is widely acknowledged. The import of this
report is that Nigeria and Nigerians continue to miss
out of the benefits of secure
property right,” says Thompson Ayodele the Executive
Director of IPPA.
Nigeria witnesses a marginal improvement in two of the three
components, exception being the
Legal and Political Environment (LP) which decreased
from 3.1 to 2.9. The Physical Property Rights (PPR)
and the Intellectual Property
Rights (IPR) components rose from 4.5 and 3.8 in 2010 to 4.6
and 4.1 in 2011 respectively. The
marginal improvement is however overshadowed
by Nigeria’s overall performance which is below the
regional average.
“The various efforts at achieving development might be a
mirage if
appropriate attention is not placed on secure property
rights regime. This is because
insecure property rights regime scares foreign investors and
the benefits that should accrue there from will
continue to elude the country,”
says Olusegun Sotola a Research Fellow with IPPA.
The International Property Rights Index provides the public,
researchers
and policymakers, from across the globe, with a tool for
comparative
analysis and future research on global property rights. The
Index seeks to assist
underperforming countries to develop robust economies
through an emphasis on sound
property law.
The Initiative for Public Policy Analysis (IPPA), one of the
2010 top and
influential 25 think tanks in Sub-Saharan Africa and the
2005
award-winning organization, is Nigeria's public policy
research institute
or think tank. Its major concern is with the principles and
institutions
that enhance economic development and wealth creation, with
particular focus on Africa and
Nigeria.
To view the 2011 IPRI in its entirety, visit
www.propertyrightsalliance.org
For media enquiries
Contact: Thompson Ayodele
Tel +234.1.791.0959 , +234.80.2302.5079
Email: info@ippanigeria.org
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GHANA’S DEMOCRATIC SYSTEM – A
Proposal for A More Inclusive and Functional Model
GlobalExpressOnLine, May 17, Ghanadot - In this
part we show how the current fragile democratic system
can be modified and made more functional and responsive
to peoples’ needs. It will take only a small
modification to fit our traditional systems with
influence of local decentralized leadership. ...More |
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Rawlings/NDC: It Isn’t Demonic
Spell, It Is Indiscipline
Commentary, May 17, Ghanadot - All progress
starts from the mind. The better the mind, the better
the progress. How better the mind is driven by how
serious, sophisticated, and deep the thinking is. If the
society thinks poorly, its development becomes poor. ....More |
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Nigeria needs Secure Property Rights for
Development
News, may 17, Ghanadot - This year, the Initiative for
Public Policy Analysis including sixty-seven international
organizations, partnered with the Property Rights Alliance
in Washington, DC and its Hernando de Soto Fellowship program to
produce the fifth annual IPRI..
.
More
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The Abysmal Mind of Dominic
Nitiwul
Commentary, May 16, Ghanadot -
Forget the fact that Dominic Nitiwul, the main
opposition National Patriotic Party Member of Parliament
for Bimbila, has LLM from the University of Westminster,
UK, MBA in Corperate Finance from the University of
Glamorgan, UK, and BED (Science) from the University of
Education, Ghana..
... .More
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