National Issues
From Politics As An End To Prosperity As An End: Why Benue’s New Development Direction Matters -By Leonard Karshima Shilgba
To the extent that Benue is deliberately repositioning itself toward production, industrialization, value addition, and human-capital development, it is moving in the right direction.
For far too long, public discourse in Benue State has been trapped in a narrow and ultimately unproductive conception of politics. Political conversations revolved around who got elected, who secured appointments, which senatorial district produced a governor, which constituency produced a commissioner, and which section of the state felt “marginalized” in the distribution of political offices.
Such conversations have their place in a democracy, but no society develops when they dominate public life. Politics is not an end in itself. Politics is a means to an end. The true end of politics is the collective prosperity, security, dignity, and flourishing of the people.
It is against this background that Governor Hyacinth Alia’s inspection of the Bensono Concentrate Plant, Benva Juice Factory, and the BIPC Motorcycle Assembly Plant deserves careful attention. Beyond the facilities themselves lies something more profound: a strategic shift in development philosophy.
The emerging narrative in Benue is increasingly moving away from patronage politics toward productive economics.
The significance of these projects is not merely that factories are being commissioned. Their importance lies in the fact that they embody a deliberate effort to subsidize production rather than consumption.
This distinction is crucial.
Consumption-driven politics creates temporary satisfaction but little lasting wealth. Production-driven policies create assets, jobs, skills, industries, tax revenues, and enduring prosperity.
The beverage concentrate and fruit processing plants are excellent examples. Benue is Nigeria’s food basket and arguably one of the country’s largest producers of citrus fruits. Yet for decades, thousands of farmers watched enormous quantities of oranges perish annually because of inadequate processing capacity and weak value-chain infrastructure.
The result was predictable: middlemen dictated prices, farmers received poor returns, and wealth generated from Benue’s agricultural abundance was exported elsewhere.
As an orange farmer myself and a native of Ushongo Local Government Area—the largest orange-producing area in Nigeria—I understand the significance of this intervention. For years, vast quantities of oranges suffered post-harvest losses because there was no industrial framework to absorb production. Farmers labored, but others captured most of the value.
The new concentrate and juice factories have the potential to change this equation fundamentally.
Instead of exporting raw produce and importing finished products, Benue can begin retaining value within its economy. Farmers can benefit from more stable demand. Processors can create jobs. Transporters can earn more income. Suppliers can expand operations. Government can generate additional revenue. In economic terms, the state begins to move up the value chain.
This is how prosperous regions are built.
Equally significant is the motorcycle assembly plant. Critics may see motorcycles; economists see industrial capability.
Industrialization rarely begins with sophisticated manufacturing. It starts with assembly, technology transfer, workforce training, supply-chain development, and gradual local content expansion. Every industrial giant followed this trajectory.
The assembly plant therefore represents more than a transportation project. It signals an intention to cultivate manufacturing culture and industrial competence within Benue State.
Even more encouraging is the administration’s investment in human capital development. The ongoing technical training of Benue youths in Belarus—renowned for its expertise in agricultural machinery and industrial manufacturing—demonstrates a recognition that factories alone do not create industrialization. People do.
Machines can be purchased.
Buildings can be constructed.
But skilled technicians, engineers, machine operators, maintenance specialists, and industrial managers must be developed.
The real wealth of any society is ultimately its human capital.
The combination of industrial facilities at home and technical skills acquisition abroad may eventually provide the foundation for a more ambitious industrial ecosystem in Benue. One can reasonably hope that today’s motorcycle assembly plants will be followed tomorrow by tractor assembly facilities, agro-processing clusters, equipment manufacturing hubs, and broader industrial enterprises.
Such a trajectory would be particularly fitting for a state whose comparative advantage lies in agriculture.
Indeed, the future of Benue may not lie merely in producing food but in processing, packaging, branding, manufacturing, and exporting products derived from its agricultural abundance.
That is where sustainable prosperity resides.
Of course, these projects must ultimately be judged by outcomes rather than announcements. Factories must operate. Production lines must run. Markets must be secured. Farmers must benefit. Jobs must materialize. Revenue must grow.
Yet governance should also be assessed by direction.
And the direction being signaled here is unmistakable.
The inspection of these facilities ahead of commissioning is more than a routine government exercise. It represents a visible expression of a broader economic vision—one that seeks to transform Benue from a state known primarily for producing raw agricultural commodities into one increasingly defined by value addition, manufacturing, industrial skills, and productive enterprise.
Politics must have an end.
The end is not political appointments.
The end is not patronage.
The end is not perpetual arguments about zones and offices.
The end is not contestation over political structure control.
The end is the prosperity of the people.
To the extent that Benue is deliberately repositioning itself toward production, industrialization, value addition, and human-capital development, it is moving in the right direction.
And that is a conversation far more worthy of our attention than the endless politics of distribution that has dominated our public life for far too long.
© Shilgba
