MARTIN Ike-Muonso
Martin
Martin Ike-Muonso, a professor of economics with interest in subnational government IGR growth strategies, is managing director/CEO, ValueFronteira Ltd. He can be reached via email at martinoluba@gmail.com
Rethinking Nigeria’s migration profile
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoJanuary 27, 2020
We are a people bathing inside a stream but hurt by the foam from the soap used. In every corner of the world, we have competent
Why blame Dangote?
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoJanuary 20, 2020
Consistent with our Nigerian nature, the plan by the Dangote Group to import 10,000 Indonesian-made light pickup trucks that it plans
Lessons of Shiites Christmas visit to a Christian church
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoJanuary 13, 2020
Regardless of the underlying causes, intolerance and suspicion of each other by people of various faiths have significantly affected
Are we ready for the science and technology frontier?
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoJanuary 6, 2020
This year is the threshold of the decade of ultra-digital science and the technologies that latch on it. Given the experiences of the
Hoping for a genuinely reformed police
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoDecember 23, 2019
We all know that the police is not necessarily your friend. At least not in all cases. However, the Nigerian police still deserve some
Mental models frustrating our collective prosperity
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoDecember 16, 2019
Sometimes, the most enduring solutions to problems are rooted in the mental models that feed them. In the same vein, challenges can
Our economy and the foundations of religiosity and reason
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoDecember 9, 2019
Our ancestors placed a lot of trust in the gods for most of their strategic decisions. That was in an era with limited scientifically
Nigeria’s maturing civic space
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoDecember 2, 2019
We are a country conquered by a privileged few; powerful politicians and ‘men of money’ who apparently, write the destinies of most
“Hustling” our economy to regrets
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoNovember 25, 2019
Things are hard. It is the refrain of virtually every Nigerian, including the very rich. Ideally, the poor should predictably feel the
“Hustling” our economy to regrets
MARTIN Ike-MuonsoNovember 25, 2019
Things are hard. It is the refrain of virtually every Nigerian, including the very rich. Ideally, the poor should predictably feel the