It is always important to engage in a discussion on a subject as important as the political economy of development, strategy and sustainable development. This is because the future of prosperity depends on how we handle this important matter as we respond to the exigencies of the contemporary reality. The question of national income and distribution has always been an important aspect of humanity, which, in 1776, Adam Smith cogently packaged into a book, The Wealth of Nations. The impact of this publication in disciplining the contemporary discourse on the political economy is profound, from which scholars and intellectuals of different persuasions draw important insights. As some may ask, why do I even make reference to an ideological scholar or intellectual? Isn't that a scholar or an intellectual should not be of a particular ideological orientation? This question is important. It affords us an opportunity to, at the outset, c