Locals arguable had no trust with FGS to begin with. Businesses barely pay their taxes to FGS and instead invest and pay for their own ecosystem. There is a complete and total economic disconnect between the federal government and the public.Which system? The public sector? If so , I think it's already starting to unravel in some ways. People are losing trust in foreign-driven governance, and local communities are building parallel systems that actually serve their needs , from security to business to social services. The question isn’t if it breaks, but how fast it gets replaced by something more Somali-led and locally grounded.
This shift is accelerating especially now that funding sources from the EU, US, and others are drying up. Without that foreign lifeline, the current system can’t sustain itself for much longer
The only thing FGS has sway in is national policies and diplomacy. Unfortunately I'm not sure how much the private sector is able to influence politics or prevent outside interference like that crappy Turkish oil deal.
Either way, FGS is on its way out since it is only sustained by foreign funding and not by taxes.