There needs to be a separation between the low IQ and the high IQ at an early age via standardized testing, something akin to the JEE in India. Then the few resources the state has are disproportionally invested into those kids.
Somalia's pastoralist culture is a curse since it's too egalitarian, all societies need to have a hierarchy with an aristocratic class.
The most pastoralist driven areas of historical Somalia actually had a monarchy and artistocratic class structure Bari-Nugaal for example and later Hobyo in the late 1800s. It was also the most stable area of Somalia , that had state structure that survived until the 20th century when the Southern and Northwestern one fragmented from disruption of trade routes( oromo invasion) at turn of the late 1600s.
CLASS FORMATION AND GENDER IN PRECOLONIAL SOMALI SOCIETY: A RESEARCH AGENDA
CLASS FORMATION AND GENDER IN PRECOLONIAL SOMALI SOCIETY: A RESEARCH AGENDA on JSTOR
Lidwien Kapteijns, Jay Spaulding, CLASS FORMATION AND GENDER IN PRECOLONIAL SOMALI SOCIETY: A RESEARCH AGENDA, Northeast African Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1 (1989), pp. 19-38
www.jstor.org
But yeah as you can see pastoralism is no different from subsistence farming, its just mode of food production.
When someone takes control of the surplus mode of production and redistributes it, creates a tax base from it to support a central authority, that is where centralized states start to emerge from it.
Then out of that non-agricultural work force comes a class separation between producers and non-producers.
I have to do some research on how Arabs got rid of their tribal system their model of monarchy and Islamic law is perfect for Somalia.
That's the thing they didn't. Places were the pouplation was majority tribal arabs are yemen oman, libya, Saudi, and the khallej. All of those places are either unstable or the tribes have been bought off by oil money.
Most of those regions including Somalia has a long history of stable imperial rule. So its completely false to believe that just because they are divided into lineage based clans/tribes that they somehow are per-disposed to fracture and divide into antagonistic groups.
Here is quote from a book that study political history of the region on the eve of colonialism:
''but also with the recent historians' revision of the relevance of the concept of historically stable , purely lineage based tribes in Arabian Peninsula. As we saw in Majerteenia, tribalism and lineage-based identification became a problematic source of conflict not because lineage societies are inherently disposed to fracture and divide into mutually antagonistic groups; on the contrary , these regions have long history of stable imperial rule bolstered by a cooperative climate of international relations.''
It also supports what i've been stressing and arguing on this site that, the current political predicaments of middle east and Somalia is geo-political in nature and somewhat loosely connected to a colonial past.