I always look forward to this guy's articles because they get me going. Happy people, I hope you are enjoying your weekend. I bring you an interesting read from Etcetera on Nigeria and fake products. Enjoy the article below...
I am sure every Nigerian must have at a point rained curses
on the Standard Organisation of Nigeria for its failure to fulfil its statutory
duties to forestall the importation and local manufacture of fake and
substandard products. And I can also bet that no Nigerian businessman or woman
would accept blames for the substandard products in their shops. So who’s to
blame for the ridicule the nation is subjected to as a result of fake products?
It is no secret that this country has the most useless
standard organisation from earth to jupiter. While every Nigerian is looking
forward to witnessing a sudden growth in the quality of products, and knowing
that the enormity of the decay has already clawed deeply into the system, would
it be fair to hold SON responsible? The influx of fake and substandard products
will continue to undermine the economy, kudos to the insatiable appetite
Nigerians have for cheap products.
It is so easy to blame it on the Chinese producers,
forgetting that it is our taste that has kept them in business. But we created
the avenue for them to exploit us. The importers among us see no crime in
sending a vast majority of their fellow countrymen to their graves as long as
they make a huge profit in the process.
That Nigeria has become the dumping ground for fake products
is not going to change anytime soon as long as the purchasing public remains
ignorant to the simple fact that we are the chief patrons of substandard
products. We keep buying them over and over again even when we know they are
fake.
Analysts correlate this trend with the growing rate of
poverty in the land as a factor that influences our buying preferences. I find
that theory hard to swallow, knowing that majority of Nigerians actually ask to
be shown the fake products sometimes to help ascertain the authenticity of the
said original product and compare the price differences.
We happily buy substandard products claiming the difference
in quality is not too visible. The average Nigerian family is more likely to
purchase drugs from a ‘chemist’ than go to the hospital for accurate diagnosis
and treatment knowing that we have a great risk of buying either substandard or
outright fake products.
Why does the Federal Government waste precious time having
summits and bilateral talks with the Asian countries? Are we expecting them to
shut down their factories when we know for a fact that most of these
substandard products are manufactured at the request of greedy Nigerian
businessmen? The Asian governments are not responsible for our porous borders
or our highly corrupt custom officers. So why would they give a damn about us?
All they can do is feigning sympathy during the useless bilateral meetings as
long as the small chops and samosas are being served. So it is indeed laughable
expecting China to prohibit trade activities that is beneficial to its economy,
whether it is inimical to their development of ours or not.
Late Dora Akunyili showed an example of how the cartel of
substandard products can be brought down. It is quite instructive to note that
several millions of lives would have been lost to fake drugs which found their
way into the country through the porous borders and in connivance with corrupt
customs officials. The surge was reduced when she took the battle to the doorsteps
of fake drug manufacturers and importers at the risk of her own life. But
despite all her efforts, Nigerians are still patronising this illicit business
at their own detriment.
Until all of us go through a total attitudinal transformation
and start seeing things differently from the way we are perceived now, we will
continue to dwell in limbo.
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