Section 16
Economic objectives
The economy should promote national prosperity, welfare, and fair opportunity.
Verbatim constitutional text
(1) The State shall, within the context of the ideals and objectives for which provisions are made in this Constitution- (a) harness the resources of the nation and promote national prosperity and an efficient, a dynamic and self-reliant economy; (b) control the national economy in such manner as to secure the maximum welfare, freedom and happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice and equality of status and opportunity; (c) without prejudice to its right to operate or participate in areas of the economy, other than the major sectors of the economy, manage and operate the major sectors of the economy; (d) without prejudice to the right of any person to participate in areas of the economy within the major sectors of the economy, protect the right of every citizen to engage in any economic activities outside the major sectors of the economy. (2) The State shall direct its policy towards ensuring- (a) the promotion of a planned and balanced economic development; (b) that the material resources of the nation are harnessed and distributed as best as possible to serve the common good; (c) that the economic system is not operated in such a manner as to permit the concentration of wealth or the means of production and exchange in the hands of few individuals or of a group; and (d) that suitable and adequate shelter, right to food and food security, reasonable national minimum living wage, old age care and pensions, and unemployment, sick benefits and welfare of the disabled are provided for all citizens. (3) A body shall be set up by an Act of the National Assembly, which shall have power- (a) to review, from time to time, the ownership and control of business enterprises operating in Nigeria and make recommendations to the President on same; and (b) to administer any law for the regulation of the ownership and control of such enterprises. (4) For the purposes of subsection (1) of this section - (a) the reference to the "major sectors of the economy" shall be construed as a reference to such economic activities as may, from time to time, be declared by a resolution of each House of the National Assembly to be managed and operated exclusively by the Government of the Federation; and until a resolution to the contrary is made by the National Assembly, economic activities being operated exclusively by the Government of the Federation on the date immediately preceding the day when this section comes into force, whether directly or through the agencies of a statutory or other corporation or company, shall be deemed to be major sectors of the economy; (b) "economic activities" includes activities directly concerned with the production, distribution and exchange of wealth or of goods and services; and (c) "participate" includes the rendering of services and supplying of goods.
The Nigerian reality
Growth without dignity is not the Chapter II vision.
Poverty, unemployment, inflation, and inequality should be tracked here with current sources.
Source note: Use NBS, World Bank, and CBN data before launch.
Prince Adewole Adebayo's commitment
Adebayo will tie economic policy to jobs, productivity, fair markets, and social welfare.
The Nigerian Reality
Section 16 helps translate economic policy from abstract numbers into constitutional duty. GDP growth is not enough if citizens cannot work, eat, save, or build a future.
Adebayo's Commitment
This page should become the bridge between Chapter II and the economic manifesto: industry, jobs, fair competition, productive agriculture, and welfare that protects human dignity.
Action Angle
Use this section to ask voters to judge every budget by one question: does it move prosperity closer to ordinary Nigerians?
Back an economy that serves citizens.
This is where the live petition, WhatsApp share card, and adopt-a- section pledge will plug in after the platform is validated.