Posted by Samuel on Sun 07th Dec, 2025 - tori.ng
He stated that this question, which Raina asked him at Harvard Business School in 2009, redirected his life from banking to politics.
Alex Otti, the Governor of Abia State, has recounted a story about a question a Harvard classmate asked him that ended up haunting him for a long time.
The governor stated that his classmate, Samvit Raina, an American of Indian descent, had asked him why many Nigerians he had met were successful, brilliant, and hardworking, yet the country from which they came was economically and development-wise backwards.
He stated that this question, which Raina asked him at Harvard Business School in 2009, redirected his life from banking to politics.
Speaking at the 2025 dinner and award presentation ceremony of the Harvard Business School Association of Nigeria in Onikan, Lagos, on Saturday, he said that his classmate’s question led him to abandon a lucrative banking career to pursue public service.
Otti, at the time, was participating in the Advanced Management Programme at Harvard.
He said, “I did not respond promptly in order not to be seen as endorsing an uncomplimentary remark against my country by a foreigner, but within me, I knew that he may not be the only one asking the question.”
The question, Otti explained, prompted him to engage in deep reflection during his time in Boston, where the school is situated.
“I spent the rest of my time at Boston reflecting on the poser raised by my course mate: how do you explain the paradox of very successful people operating from a country that is everything but successful?” he said.
The introspection, Otti said, led him to confront uncomfortable truths about Nigeria’s development challenges.
Otti said he thought about his home state of Abia and its development challenges at the time.
“The more deeply I thought, the more worried I became. Nigeria is a nation of multiple constituencies and wherever you go, there are no shortage of intelligent, hardworking and passionate individuals. The question then is: why are we failing at even the most basic matters of civilisation? Why are elementary concerns like waste disposal, access to potable water, electricity, roads, primary healthcare and basic education still a challenge here?” he asked.
After examining the foundational structures that propelled other nations to greatness, Otti said he arrived at a disturbing conclusion.
“I realised that our problem was never about the size of the treasury box nor the appetite for progress but in the fact that those who ought to have taken the lead were often absent in the decision-making room. Like myself, they were busy chasing after career success, looking to hit the next million dollar or to publish their paper in a reputable journal. To these incredibly-smart people, government is treated as a minor irritation.
“Ultimately, while we were at Harvard, Cambridge, MIT, Oxford and in other elite universities topping the result charts and winning all the laurels, barely-educated individuals were taking decisions that influence how the world sees Nigeria in our various local government headquarters, state capitals and in Abuja,” he noted.
Otti challenged the gathering to find out where the majority of result-driven leaders are most likely to be found to understand where the country’s challenges were coming from.
“Where are you most likely to find a superior number of ethical and result-driven leaders: at the board meeting of an NSE-listed company or at a gathering of political stakeholders in our states? You can probe further to ask: where would a First-Class graduate from an elite university be keener to start his professional life: at a regular government agency in Umuahia or in a blue-chip company?” he asked.
According to the governor, the disinterest in public affairs by the country’s best minds has had negative consequences on its economy and development.
“The summary of it is that our disinterest in public affairs offered an extended invitation to persons of questionable development orientation to step in and produce outcomes that are generally unsatisfactory,” he said.