Bola Tinubu, former governor of Lagos State in Nigeria, reflects on his administration’s successes in reforming the civil service, reducing corruption, and improving state infrastructure.
He details the process he went through to reform the state government, from the waste management system to financial mismanagement within the public sector.
Tinubu lays out the steps he took to improve incentives for civil servants, including salary increases, improving quality and hygiene of working environments, and teaching investment principles and how to work toward home ownership.
His payroll-system reforms removed thousands of ghost workers from the system. Tinubu explains how he applied principles he learned in the corporate world to the public sector reform effort.
Tinubu also details the steps he took in removing endemic corruption in the public sector, which included eliminating cash payments to the government.
He discusses how he brought back expatriates to improve the hospitals and transportation system.
He also touches on the difficulties in working with a federal government that sometimes undermined reform efforts.
He served from 1992 to 1993 as a senator until the end of the Nigerian Third Republic.
Prior to entering politics, he worked in the private sector for companies including Arthur Andersen and Deloitte, Haskins, & Sells.
He was also an executive of Mobil Oil Nigeria.
After Tinubu left politics, he became active in negotiations to unite Nigeria’s opposition parties and in pushing for electoral reforms.
He earned a bachelor’s degree from Chicago State University in business administration in 1979.
He holds the tribal aristocratic title of Asiwaju, given to him by the Oba of Lagos, who holds a ceremonial position as the traditional leader of the state of Lagos.