President Bola Tinubu

Can Nigeria Achieve Sustainable Development Without Professional Integrity?

By: Bethel Toby

“The strength of a nation lies not only in the abundance of its resources but in the integrity of those who entrusted with them”.

“Sustainable development is impossible where corruption thrives, accountability is absent, and professionalism is sacrificed”.

Nigeria is widely celebrated as the “Giant of Africa”. Blessed with enormous oil and reserves, vast agricultural potential, an expanding technology sector and one of Africa’s largest economies, the country should ordinarily rank among the world’s fastest- developing nations.

Yet, millions of Nigerians continue to grapple with poverty, unemployment, poor healthcare, collapsing infrastructure, unreliable electricity, environmental degradation, security, inadequate educational facilities and declining public confidence in government institutions.

The contradiction is difficult to ignore. How can a nation so richly endowed remain trapped in recurring cycles of underdevelopment?

Why do projects worth billions of naira fail shortly after commissioning?

Why do roads deteriorate within months of construction?

Why do public hospitals still struggle despite huge budgetary allocations?

Why do qualified graduates struggle to compete globally despite years of education?

Why do investors remain cautious despite Nigeria’s enormous market?

Many analysts argue that inadequate funding is responsible. Others blame politics. Some point to insecurity.

While these factors are undeniably important, many governance experts believe Nigeria’s greatest challenge lies elsewhere- the gradual erosion of professional integrity across public and private institutions.

Professional integrity simply means doing what is right even when no one is watching. It means competence without compromise, honesty without excuses, accountability without coercion and service above selfish interest.

No nation can genuinely achieve sustainable development when those entrusted with public responsibilities choose personal enrichment over national progress.

Sustainable development goes beyond constructing roads, bridges and skyscrapers. It is development that improves today’s quality of life without destroying opportunities for future generations.

It seeks balanced progress in three major areas: economic prosperity, social justice and environmental protection. A sustainably developed Nigeria would guarantee quality education, affordable healthcare, modern transportation, environmental sustainability, food security, technological innovation, accountable governance, efficient public institutions and equal opportunities for all citizens.

Achieving these goals requires one indispensable ingredients- professional integrity.

Without integrity, even the best development plans become expensive documents gathering dust on government shelves.

Every profession exists because society places trust in its practitioners. Patients trust doctors with their lives, parents trust teachers with their children, citizens trust judges with justice, communities trust engineers with their safety, investors trust accountants with financial transparency, readers trust journalists with truthful information and voters trust elected leaders with public resources.

Professional misconduct rarely affects only one individual. It weakens institutions, discourages investment, destroys public confidence, and delays national development.

Integrity therefore is not merely a personal choice. It is a national development strategy.

Many countries with fewer natural resources have transformed themselves into global economic power. Some possess neither crude oil nor vast mineral deposits. Yet they enjoy efficient transportation, world-class healthcare, quality education and transparent public institutions.

Nigeria’s challenge is therefore not necessarily the absence of wealth. Rather, it is how available resources are managed. Every abandoned road project… Every inflated government contract…

Every ghost worker on the payroll… Every examination malpractice… Every fake pharmaceutical product…

Every judicial compromise… Every professional negligence… Every certificate forgery… and every act of bribery…

Represents stolen opportunities for national development. No economy can sustainably grow under such conditions.

Across different sectors, ethical failures continue to undermine national progress. Public office should represent public service.

Unfortunately, many Nigerians believe politics has increasingly become an avenue for personal enrichment rather than national sacrifice.

Campaign promises are frequently abandoned after elections.

Public procurement processes are sometimes manipulated. Development projects are occasionally abandoned despite full budgetary releases.

Political patronage often overshadows competence. These realities weaken citizens’ confidence in democratic governance.

The civil service remains the engine room of government. However, bureaucratic delays, file manipulation, bribery, absenteeism and poor service delivery continue to frustrate citizens and investors alike.

Where professionalism declines, government efficiency declines. Where efficiency declines, development suffers. Collapsed building, failed bridges, poor drainage systems, substandard roads, defective public projects. These unfortunate occurrences often raise serious concerns about compliance with professional standards.

Every poorly executed infrastructure project represents wasted public funds and avoidable human suffering. Integrity in engineering literally saves lives.

Healthcare professionals occupy one of society’s most sacred responsibilities.

Patients expect competence, compassion and honesty. Where fake drugs circulate… medical equipment is poorly maintained… Hospital funds diverted… Or ethical standards are ignored… The consequences can be fatal. A healthy nation remains a productive nation.

For education, it shapes leaders. When examination malpractice becomes common… certificates are purchased… research is plagiarized… admissions are manipulated… academic merit loses value. No country develops beyond the quality of its educational system.

The media represents the conscience of society. Professional journalism informs citizens, exposes corruption and strengthens democracy.

When misinformation replaces truth… When financial inducements determine editorial decisions… Society loses one of its strongest accountability mechanisms.

In the case of the judiciary, it remains the foundation of peaceful societies.

Citizens expect judges and lawyers to protect fairness without fear or favour. Delayed justice, selective prosecution, procedural manipulation. Or unethical legal practices weaken public confidence and discourage investment.

Economic prosperity cannot flourish where justice appears uncertain.

Professional integrity among security personnel enhances public safety. Citizens expect security agencies to protect lives impartially, uphold the rule of law, respect human rights and combat criminality without corruption.

Trust between security institutions and citizens remains essential for national stability.

On the economic cost of ethical failure, professional misconduct carries enormous financial consequences.

Billions of naira are lost annually through abandoned projects, foreign investors become reluctant, businesses spend additional resources navigating bureaucratic inefficiencies. Insurance costs rise. Infrastructure deteriorates rapidly.

Government repeatedly spends money repairing projects that should have lasted decades.

Ultimately, ordinary Nigerians bear these costs through unemployment, inflation, poor public services and declining living standards. Professional integrity therefore is not merely an ethical obligation.

It is an economic necessity. Nigeria’s population continues to grow rapidly. Urbanization is increasing. Technology is transforming industries. Global competition is becoming fiercer.

Climate change demands responsible environmental management.

Meeting these challenges requires institutions built upon competence, transparency and accountability.

No amount of natural resources can compensate for institutional failure. Integrity remains the currency of sustainable development.

“A nation’s greatness is measured not by the wealth beneath its soil, but the integrity within its institutions”.

Across Nigeria’s 36 States and the Federal Capital Territory, citizens share one common aspirations- a nation where honesty, competence and accountability become the hallmarks of governance and professional practice.

Professionals from different sectors agree that sustainable development cannot be achieved unless ethical values are restored.

“No nation can build enduring roads with dishonest engineers, heal patients with unethical medical doctors, educate children with compromised teachers, or secure justice with corrupt institutions.

Sustainable development begins where integrity becomes a national culture”.

Nigeria’s aspiration to attain sustainable development remains one of the country’s most pressing national conversations. While ambitious development agendas, many citizens argue that the greatest obstacle is not the absence of policies but the erosion of professional integrity across public and private institutions.

From healthcare and education to engineering, journalism, law, business, security, agriculture and governance, Nigerians believe that integrity remains the foundation upon which lasting development is built.

Experts insist that no amount of foreign investment, technology advancement or infrastructure expansion can produce sustainable results, where corruption, incompetence, nepotism and lack of accountability dominate professional practice.

On the extensive opinions from Nigerians across professions, Dr. Aminu Yusuf, a Port Harcourt- based medical practitioner: “Hospitals cannot deliver quality healthcare if medical ethics are sacrificed for personal gain. Professional integrity saves lives”.

She urged governments to strengthen ethics monitoring, improved healthcare funding, and reward honest professionals.

For Engr. Chinedu Okafor from Anambra State, he lamented that: “Collapsed building, failed roads and abandoned projects are often products of compromised professional standards”.

He called for stricter enforcement of engineering regulations and blacklisting of contractors involved in substandard projects.

Barrister Grace Bassey, a Port Harcourt- based legal practitioner from Cross River State while lending credence on the issue maintained that: ” Justice delayed through corruption weakens democracy and discourages investors”.

She advocated judicial independence, transparent appointments and stronger disciplinary measures within the legal profession.

Also contributing, a renowned scholar and senior lecturer at the University of Port Harcourt, Prof. Musa Ibrahim: “Educational integrity determines the quality of future leadership”.

He emphasized merit- based recruitment, research funding and zero-tolerance for examination malpractice.

Mrs. Esther Nwankwo, Oyigbo- based Secondary School Tutor declared: “Teachers must see themselves as nation- builders, not merely salary earners”.

She urged government at all levels to improve teachers’ welfare while enforcing ethical conduct.

Dr. Samuel Ebiye, a Veteran Journalist in Rivers State stressed that: “A compromised nation cannot hold leaders accountable”, adding that ethical journalism, fact- checking and media independence remains essential pillars of sustainable democracy.

ACP Ibrahim Bello, Police Officer in the FCT, Abuja stressed that: “Security improves when professionalism replaces corruption”.

He recommended continuous training, technology- driven policing and better welfare for security personnel.

Mrs. Funke Adeyemi, a Lagos- based Chartered Accountant said that financial transparency is the heartbeat of sustainable development”.

She called for digital financial management systems and stronger ant- corruption mechanisms.

Mr. Emmanuel Okechukwu an Umuahia- Abia State- based farmer stated that agricultural policies succeed anti- corruption institutions without political interference, promote merit over nepotism in appointments, invest more in education, healthcare, technology, and infrastructure, digitalize government services to reduce corruption, protect whistleblowers and enforce ethical standards.

He maintained that there is need for rewarding integrity in public service, improved national security to encourage investment, ensure transparent procurement, budgeting, support innovation, entrepreneurship and youth employment, and consistently implement development policies beyond tenures.

Professional integrity is not merely a moral virtues; it is the engine of sustainable development. Nigeria’s abundant human and natural resources can only translate into lasting prosperity when honesty, competence, accountability and excellence become the defining standards across every level of government.

As many Nigerians concluded: “A nation that rewards integrity builds a future. A nation that tolerates corruption mortgage its tomorrow”.

Only by embedding integrity into governance, public service, businesses and professional practice can Nigeria achieve inclusive, resilient and truly sustainable development for present and future generations.

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