Okonjo-Iweala reflects on issues of development, reforms and economic rejuvenations in Nigeria during her years as the Finance Minister, where she faced stopping-blocks at bringing her experience and expertise, accrued over years from the World Bank as an economist, to fix a broken and rotten system. Her views on the status and progress reports are undoubtedly winning as the sub-sahara countrty has been in a ditch of social and economic retrogression. I found this book not only reflecting on the dilapidated state of a nation in chaos but also a subject of unreformed society on the brinks of political selfishness of leaders and masquerades of democratic rule.
'Reforming the unreformable' is pivoted on efforts to rejuvenate a collapsing economic state, attempts for surgical repair of the nation's sectors, and hitherto unforeseen strategies of the political class to subvert soccio-economic justices and diversifications towards unsuccessful implementations of policies. There is no doubt that, as a member of an economic team, Ms. Iweala laid sufficient plans and devised startegies to reform a broken system; hence, her separation of economic-will and political diplomacy cum societal ideologies and unbalanced ethics formed the basis for a non-continuous appeal. Overall, I would regard this piece as an accolades of economic reforms without strucking adequately the basis for failures of the government - bad leadership, selfish interests of the political class and endemic corruption.