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Nigeria’s Broken Local Government System And The Grassroots Struggle For Development -By Rachael Emmanuel Durkwa

This dysfunction carries broader consequences. With local governments failing to deliver, pressure shifts to state and federal governments, creating inefficiencies and bottlenecks. It also fuels rural-urban migration, as young people abandon neglected communities in search of opportunities in overcrowded cities. The result is swelling unemployment in urban areas, rising crime, and worsening poverty in rural Nigeria.

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In theory, Nigeria’s 774 local government areas were designed to bring governance closer to the people, ensure even development, and give citizens a direct link to decision-making. In practice, however, the system has become one of the weakest links in Nigeria’s democracy. Across villages and small towns, Nigerians complain that local governments have failed to deliver even the most basic services—roads, schools, health centers, clean water, and waste management.

The signs of this collapse are everywhere. In rural Kaduna, communities build their own makeshift classrooms because local authorities have abandoned schools to ruin. In parts of Rivers and Ondo, heaps of refuse pile up on streets, with residents resorting to burning waste in open spaces. In Borno and Zamfara, villagers travel long distances to access basic health care because local health centers have either collapsed or were never completed. Citizens are left asking: what happened to the promises of local governance?

Analysts argue that one of the major problems is financial dependence. Though the Constitution provides for financial autonomy, in reality, local governments rely heavily on allocations from the federation account, which often pass through state governments. Governors, through joint account arrangements, exercise tight control over local funds, leaving little room for independent decision-making. In some cases, state governments deduct large portions of these funds before remitting what is left to the local councils, crippling their ability to function.

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The effect is visible In the erosion of trust. Communities that once looked to local authorities for leadership now turn to religious institutions, non-governmental organizations, and even vigilante groups to fill the vacuum. Roads remain untarred, boreholes break down without repair, and teachers and health workers in many councils are owed salaries. The disconnect has widened the gap between leaders and citizens, with many Nigerians unable to identify who their local government chairpersons are, or what impact they have on their daily lives.

This dysfunction carries broader consequences. With local governments failing to deliver, pressure shifts to state and federal governments, creating inefficiencies and bottlenecks. It also fuels rural-urban migration, as young people abandon neglected communities in search of opportunities in overcrowded cities. The result is swelling unemployment in urban areas, rising crime, and worsening poverty in rural Nigeria.

Civil society organizations and policy experts insist that the way forward lies in granting true autonomy to local governments, enforcing transparency in their finances, and promoting citizen participation in council affairs. Technology could also play a role, with digital platforms tracking budget allocations and expenditures at the grassroots level. More importantly, local governments need to return to their core mandate: being the government of the people, for the people, at the closest level.

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Until Nigeria addresses the rot in its local government system, grassroots development will remain a dream deferred. The reality is simple but sobering: no nation can grow while its foundation remains broken. And for millions of Nigerians living in neglected communities, the collapse of local government is not just a political failure—it is a daily struggle for survival.

Rachael Emmanuel Durkwa is a 300 Level Student From Mass Communication Department University Of Maiduguri.

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