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Tobi Igbinedion Co-founder @ TwoCents
city Lagos March 12, 2021, 1:48 p.m.
I am personally pleased about this session Dr. Pertaining to the construction industry in Nigeria. I would like to know if you agree that we have not been strict enough as regards professionals staying with their professional job description. It looks like everyone wants to play a chief role in the most lucrative part of the construction process, which is the construction itself. There's the low-key tussle between the Architect and Builder on whose job it is to manage the construction process. The system also is very porous, someone with zero construction background could become a contractor and win contracts that professionals would struggle to have. A large portion of construction graduates are massively under valued which translates to poor remuneration. If you agree these are actual issues Dr, what's your twocents on how they could be fixed, and how we could have a more sane construction industry in Nigeria. Thanks.
1 Answer request

Dr. Abraham Owoseni Educator @ Covenant University
city Ota, Nigeria March 13, 2021, 7:48 a.m.
Thank you so much Tobi for that question and thanks for this great work and platform.

Yes, I agree with those current challenges you highlighted. And like you shared, this sums it up "The system also is very porous." My two cents will be that;

1. Regulatory bodies should synergise and stop the blame-game, hate-strife rivalries.
There's a lot of home-keeping to be done there.

For example, imagine a CORBON, COREN, ESVARBON, TOPREC, ARCON... working together in harmony? 
Imagine how that will positively influence the construction industry;
Imagine swift registration of professionals and massive public enlightenment on the value/worth of professional services;
Imagine a well-regulated curriculum with 21st-century realities in each of the professional fields?

Also is the need for
2. Regulation of the Informal sectors in the Construction Industry
Skilled trades and vocations such as carpentry, tiling, ironmongery,  etc need lots of support and regulation so society values their worth and they are also well remunerated. 
Imagine a regulatory body for tilers and then a tiler upon training is certified with code of conduct, ethics etc as it obtains for the professional fields. That's part of the difference between the 1st world and the 3rd world, all fields and skilled trades are well regulated, monitored and rewarded whether it's SSCE, OND, HND, BSc/BEng/BTech/MSc/PhD a person has.

Until we come to the point where we see the services of each one as 'complementation' and not 'competition,' the challenges may persist. A tiler is as valuable and good as a Lawyer although one is a vocation/skilled trade and the other, a profession. 

I shared more on this in my book the career leader, talking about the career model. The audiobook is accessible here https://selar.co/thecareerleader
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