Federalism in the Covid 19 period and beyond

Journal article


Babalola, D. 2023. Federalism in the Covid 19 period and beyond. Cuadernos Manuel Giménez Abad. 9, pp. 148-164. https://doi.org/10.47919/FMGA.CM23.0117
AuthorsBabalola, D.
Abstract

Nigeria, a three-tiered federation, provides an intriguing example of how the 2008 and 2016 global financial crises, as well as the COVID-19 crisis, have had a significant impact on the practice of federalism in the country. These crises precipitated severe global economic downturn, and Nigeria was not exempt, putting the country's fiscal system to the test. As a significant oil exporter, Nigeria was impacted by the global oil price decline of 2008. Similarly, the 2016 financial crisis, which was precipitated by falling oil prices, exacerbated Nigeria's struggling economy, as the federal government struggled to maintain its expenditures, resulting in a reduction in revenue allocations to the states of the federation. Nigeria’s oil-generated revenue is exclusively concentrated in the centre and shared among the three levels of government according to some agreed formula. The COVID-19 pandemic revealed additional flaws in Nigeria's federal system, highlighting the disparate crisis response capabilities of states and local governments. In its attempt to manage the pandemic, the federal government adopted a top-down strategy, illustrating the overcentralised character of the federal system, which is the result of decades of military rule and excessive oil dependence. The management of these crises reignited the debate about the efficacy of federalism in Nigeria, and this article is a contribution to that debate, contending for a non-centralised federal system in which state governments cease to operate as extensions of the federal government. In addition, it argues for fiscal federalism in accordance with the federalism principle requiring each level of government to have the financial capacity to operate independently.

KeywordsNigeria; Federalism; Fiscal federalism; COVID-19; Centralisation
Year2023
JournalCuadernos Manuel Giménez Abad
Journal citation9, pp. 148-164
PublisherDialnet Foundation
Fundación Manuel Giménez Abad
ISSN2254-4445
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.47919/FMGA.CM23.0117
Official URLhttps://www.fundacionmgimenezabad.es/sites/default/files/Publicar/publicaciones/documentos/monografia_9_julio_2023.pdf
Related URLhttps://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/revista?codigo=19613
Publication dates
Print17 Jul 2023
Publication process dates
Accepted23 May 2023
Deposited26 Jul 2023
Accepted author manuscript
File Access Level
Restricted
Publisher's version
Output statusPublished
Permalink -

https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/9514z/federalism-in-the-covid-19-period-and-beyond

  • 61
    total views
  • 25
    total downloads
  • 0
    views this month
  • 0
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

ECOWAS and the challenge of preventing a resurgence of coups d’état in West Africa: An assessment of the ‘Zero Tolerance’ policy
Babalola, D. and Onapajo, H. 2024. ECOWAS and the challenge of preventing a resurgence of coups d’état in West Africa: An assessment of the ‘Zero Tolerance’ policy. South African Journal of International Affairs. 31 (1), pp. 1-22. https://doi.org/10.1080/10220461.2024.2353266
Party politics, dearth of political ideology, and the 2023 presidential election in Nigeria
Babalola, D. 2024. Party politics, dearth of political ideology, and the 2023 presidential election in Nigeria. The Round Table: The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs. 113 (5).
Power sharing in Nigeria’s divided society: structures, conflicts and challenges
Babalola, D. and Onapajo, H. 2024. Power sharing in Nigeria’s divided society: structures, conflicts and challenges. in: Aboultaif, E. W., Keil, S. and McCulloch, A. (ed.) Power-Sharing in the Global South: Patterns, Practices and Potentials Cham: Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 145-167
The challenges of nation-building in Nigeria and the state-building alternative
Babalola, Dele and Okafor, Chukwuemeka 2022. The challenges of nation-building in Nigeria and the state-building alternative. Ethnopolitics. 23 (1), pp. 20-33. https://doi.org/10.1080/17449057.2022.2101308
Federalism and the Covid-19 pandemic: A perspective from Nigeria
Babalola, D. 2021. Federalism and the Covid-19 pandemic: A perspective from Nigeria. in: Federalism Year Book 2021: Federalism, Subsidiarity and Regions in Europe European Center for Research on Federalism Tübingen (EZFF), Baden-Baden: Nomos European Center for Research on Federalism Tübingen (EZFF). pp. 139-148
Restructuring, political gimmicks and elite manipulation in Nigeria
Onapajo, H. and Babalola, D. 2021. Restructuring, political gimmicks and elite manipulation in Nigeria. in: Tella, O. (ed.) A Sleeping Giant? Nigeria’s Domestic and International Politics in the Twenty-First Century Cham, Switzerland Springer Nature. pp. 61-71
Nigeria’s 2019 general elections – a shattered hope?
Onapajo, H. and Babalola, D. 2020. Nigeria’s 2019 general elections – a shattered hope? The Round Table. 109 (4), pp. 363-367. https://doi.org/10.1080/00358533.2020.1788765
Ethno-religious voting in Nigeria: interrogating voting patterns in the 2019 presidential election
Babalola, D. 2020. Ethno-religious voting in Nigeria: interrogating voting patterns in the 2019 presidential election. The Round Table: The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs. 109 (4), p. 377–385. https://doi.org/10.1080/00358533.2020.1788763
The political economy of federalism in Nigeria
Babalola, D. 2019. The political economy of federalism in Nigeria. Palgrave Macmillan.
Resource abundance and the dilemma of fiscal federalism in Nigeria
Babalola, D. and Okafor, O. 2019. Resource abundance and the dilemma of fiscal federalism in Nigeria . Journal of African Political Economy and Development. 4 (1), pp. 3-21.
New clamour for “restructuring” in Nigeria: elite politics, contradictions, and good governance
Babalola, D. and Onapajo, H. 2019. New clamour for “restructuring” in Nigeria: elite politics, contradictions, and good governance. African Studies Quarterly. Volume 18 (Issue 4), pp. 41-56.
Ethnicity, ethnic conflict and the elusive quest for peace in Nigeria
Babalola, D. 2018. Ethnicity, ethnic conflict and the elusive quest for peace in Nigeria. in: Nigeria, a Country Under Siege: Issues of Conflict and its Management in Democratic Nigeria Newcastle Upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 21-46
Contending Issues in Political Parties in Nigeria: The Candidate Selection Process
Babalola, D. and Abba, S. 2017. Contending Issues in Political Parties in Nigeria: The Candidate Selection Process. Journal of Pan African Studies . 11 (1), pp. 118-134.
The efficacy of federalism in a multi-ethnic state: the Nigerian experience
Babalola, D. 2015. The efficacy of federalism in a multi-ethnic state: the Nigerian experience. The Journal of Pan African Studies. 8 (2), pp. 74-92.
Youth unemployment and armed insurrection in post-military Nigeria: the contending issues
Babalola, D. and Ayuba, C. 2015. Youth unemployment and armed insurrection in post-military Nigeria: the contending issues. The Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies . 40 (3), p. 263–288.