Nigeria, April 16 -- In all functional democracies across the world, from the OECD countries to the continent of Africa, the successes and failures of democratic governance are directly proportional to the readiness of the governments to pursue institutional and governance reforms. These reforms prioritise the public service, first, as the inevitable complement of democracy (to paraphrase Joseph Schumpeter), and, second, as the mechanism for implementing good public policy. Democratic governance, in other words, depends on how optimal and efficient the public service is as the powerhouse of government's policy commitment to its citizens. This is the reason why the difference between a prosperous democracy and a failing one is the commitme...