Category: Industry

  • ITF plans 2m jobs yearly

    ITF plans 2m jobs yearly

    The Industrial Training Fund (ITF) has concluded plans to create two million jobs yearly through the provision of technical and vocational skills to young Nigerians, itsActing Director-General, Mr. Dickson Chinedum Onuoha, has said.

    He said ITF had reached an understanding with the Nigeria Employers’Consultative Association (NECA) and some members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) to undertake the training using ITF’s facilities.

    The ITF boss told The Nation that the plan was in line with its mandate to assist the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration’s job creation efforts. He said ITF had  met over 60 per cent of its mandate with regard to job creation.

    According to him, the technical and vocational skills training project, which would run in 15 centres, had trained over 4,600 youths, who were given one year free technical/vocational training, transport allowance, lunch and instructional materials.

    Onuoha said over 90 per cent of graduates of the programme were either entrepreneurs or in well-paying jobs. “Similarly, we have commenced the implementation of the fifth phase of the National Industrial Skills Development Programme (NISDP) in 18 states, and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) had been earmarked to benefit from this phase of the programme,” he added.

    The ITF boss listed states that were benefiting from the current phase of the programme to include Sokoto, Kwara,Ogun, Katsina, Cross River, Lagos, Adamawa, Ebonyi and Zamfara. Others are Abia, Anambra, Bornu, Plateau, Delta, Nasarawa, Bauchi, Kaduna, Niger and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Onuoha said a new report by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) indicating a rise in unemployment rate in Nigeria was a blow to the administration’s job creation efforts, but that with what ITF was doing in job creation through training, Nigerians should not have any cause for concern.

    Apart from NBS, the World Bank said Nigeria needed to create between 40 million to 50 million new jobs to be able to absorb new labour market entrants by 2030, adding that the informal sector of the economy appeared to have a greater potential for growth and employment generation.

  • Cement price: High, high in the sky

    Cement price: High, high in the sky

    The price of cement, a major component in building, has gone up from N1,600 to between N2,300 and N2,600 per bag. The hike shocked many, especially those with ongoing projects who had made calculations based on the old cement price. What is the implication of this increase? Experts say it will hurt efforts at bridging the nation’s 17 million housing gap and also force adjustments in construction cost, among other consequences. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports. 

    His frustration and fear could hardly go unnoticed. For the President, Lagos State Bricklayers Association, Deacon Abel Olukayode, nothing perhaps, could be more frustrating than not having answers to the barrage of questions from the over 5,000 members of his association seeking to know why the price of cement suddenly rose to between N2,300 and N2,600.

    Kayode told the The Nation that since this week, when the price of cement, one of the most critical raw material for the building and construction industry, went up to N2,600, from between N1,500 and N1,600, it’s been difficult controlling the anger and frustrations of bricklayers who besiege the Akesan, Lagos secretariat of the association daily.

    The price of cement rose up this week, throwing end users, and various operators and stakeholders in the building and construction industry into confusion. From cement distributors to property developers, bricklayers, block moulders, and contractors, there is palpable fear and apprehension over the unsavoury, far-reaching consequences of the price hike.

    Deacon Olukayode lamented: “They (bricklayers) have been lamenting. Contractors in the building and construction industry cannot bear it anymore. Things are getting worse every day. The unreasonable naira/dollar exchange rate, which stood at N414/per dollar, as at yesterday (Tuesday), is seriously affecting the economy and is at the root of the current problem.”

    He, therefore, called on President Muhammadu Buhari to “do something tangible to reduce the exchange rate to N100/per dollar to save lives and property of Nigerians.” He expressed fears that if nothing was done urgently to force down the price of cement, by halting the crashing value of the naira, then Nigerians may have to brace up for more building collapse.

    Olukayode raised some posers to drive home his fear that the skyrocketing price of cement could trigger more building collapse. “Will operators in the block industry be honest enough to mould 25-30 pieces of six inches blocks with a bag of cement based on the orientation being given to them? If they do, can our clients endure to purchase them under the current hardship caused by the economic downturn?” he asked.

    He explained that, for long, block moulders and bricklayers had been complaining  over rising incidents of collapsed building due to mismanagement of cement and other building materials in the market, which are substandard. He warned that with the rise in cement price, the situation may get worse as “clients that are supposed to use five bags of cement, for instance, will be pleading to manage four bags, which is totally unprofessional.

    Olukayode confided in The Nation that baring last-minute hitches, his association will meet next week Thursday to review the situation and deliberate on the way forward for the industry that has in recent times seen an astronomical rise in the cost of building materials and transportation. He hinted that the outcome of the meeting will determine the next line of action, which may include a rally by members of the association.

    However, while the possibility of more building collapse across the country as a result of the rise in cement price is giving Olukayode a cause for serious concern, other operators and industry experts who spoke with The Nation expressed fears that the effects of the development go beyond building collapse and the shrinking margin of block moulders.

    For instance, the former President of Association of Town Planning Consultants of Nigeria (ATOPCON), Mr. Moses Ogunleye, lamented that the development will affect the production of housing viz-a-viz the number of housing units that can be delivered to Nigerians. While noting that Nigeria’s housing deficit, put at 17 million, may have been grossly understated, he said the current cement price hike will frustrate efforts at bridging the gap.

    Bridging Nigeria’s estimated 17 million housing gap has been a pain in the neck of successive administrations, private property developers, and other stakeholders in the housing sector such as mortgage institutions. The World Bank recently brought the nation’s housing crisis nearer home when it said that about N59.5 trillion in needed to bridge the housing deficit through affordable housing.

    But with the price of cement hitting the roofs, it is easy to see why industry experts and stakeholders including Ogunleye are worried that authorities in the housing sector may have hit the brickwall. The former ATOPCON chief was emphatic that apart from affecting efforts at affordable housing delivery, the development will also lead to adjustments in construction cost and delay in project delivery time.

    Indeed, there are fears that the price hike will trigger increase in the cost of construction and by extension, the need for cost variation in all ongoing contracts. More importantly, perhaps, cases of delay in project delivery and outright abandonment may have become inevitable, even as contractors may be discouraged from embarking on new projects.

    A private developer lamented that the likely price variation for most construction projects might cause confusion and pitch contractors against their clients. According to the developer, who declined to have his name in print, resistance to requests for adjustments in construction cost might force a resort to unprofessional construction practices with consequences for the integrity of construction projects.

    Could the challenge of forex be the only factor responsible for the jump in cement price?  Ogunleye pointed out that although, it is a reaction to the general increase in price of goods and services caused by the challenge of sourcing Foreign Exchange (forex), the rising cost of production caused by lack of infrastructure, particularly power supply has become too heavy for cement manufacturers to bear.

    The town planning consultant is right. Manufacturers in the building and construction industry, especially cement producers, have come under severe strain in recent times as a result of rising cost of production. Ogunleye said, for instance, that the anticipated improvement in electricity supply by the power generation and distribution companies has yet to come the way of industrialists including cement manufacturers.

    At the last count, power takes up over 40 per cent of manufacturers’ cost, according to data from Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN). Also, over 75 per cent of the electricity needs of manufacturers are said to be generated in-house, while about 25 per cent come from the utility firms. Though, cement manufacturers rely on their own gas-powered plants, getting gas to fire their plants remains a pain in the neck.

    Apart from lack of electricity, the challenge of transporting cement and building materials by road as well as the huge forex required to bring in raw materials may have also contributed to the sudden increase in cement price.

  • LCCI: diversification without sustainability’ll not work

    LCCI: diversification without sustainability’ll not work

    For the ongoing economic diversification effort to yield the desired results, there is the need for sustainability, Trade Promotion Board Vice President/Chairman, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mr. Sola Oyetayo, has said.

    He said while the oil and gas sector could be said to be sufficiently diversified, the nation had failed to sustain its diversification in terms of maintaining the refineries and the value chain in the sector.

    Oyetayo recalled earlier Nigeria was not importing refined products, as it had sufficient products. He, however, regretted that because of lack of maintenance and sustainability, Nigeria had become one of the highest importers of refined petroleum products.

    He said with what happened in the oil and gas sector, the government should sustain the growth in the agric sector. His words: “We should aim for sustained growth with a clear cut sustainability road map. This cannot be possible except through the implementation of the right policies.”

    On the Lagos International Trade Fair, Oyetayo called on the government to speed up the handing over of the Trade Fair complex to the Chamber like the Kaduna Trade Fair complex, which the government had transferred to the Chamber.

    He regretted that the complex had been embroiled in controversy since it was concessioned, wondering the reason behind the deal.  He said fair grounds were purpose –built and that a megacity, such as Lagos, should have a befitting fair and exhibition ground.

  • NEPC unveils framework to aid women in export

    NEPC unveils framework to aid women in export

    The Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) is working out modalities to include women in export activities that will bridge the gender gap and reduce poverty.

    The move is anchored on the belief that improving the performance of women businesses in non-oil export trade can translate into more jobs and also drive poverty reduction.

    NEPC Executive Director/CEO Mr. Olusegun Awolowo made this known on the sideline of the yearly conference of the Nigerian Association of Commerce, Industry, Mines & Agriculture (NACCIMA) Business Women Group held in Lagos, recently.

    He said $28 trillion could be added to the global economy by 2025 if women participated in the economy on equal footing with men.

    Awolowo said: “Countries with greater economic opportunities for women score higher on competitiveness and national income. Companies with greater gender diversity outperform others on probability and market valuation. A woman spends up to 90 per cent of her income on her family compared to 40-50 per cent by men.”

    He, however, regretted that there were many impediments on the way of women making progress though Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) where they are mostly engaged, making up over 95 per cent of global businesses.

    Awolowo said opportunities are still not the same for men and women, as they are 20 per cent less likely than men to have a bank account. ”Women have more business skills gaps and are more often excluded from the economy. Only one in five exporting firms is led by women,” he said.

    He further said the nation ranked 86 of 102 countries on gender inequality index, adding that NEPC would work towards building the capacity of women in business by bridging the skills gaps and embarking on hand-holding to ensure the businesses did not die as soon as they were initiated.

  • Nigeria spends N1.32tr on imported textile yearly, says DG

    Nigeria spends over $4 billion, about N1.32 trillion, yearly on imported textile and other ready-made clothings despite having what it takes for a thriving textile industry, experts have said.

    The industry, hitherto the second largest employer after the government, has been bogged down by lack of infrastructure and smuggled textile from Asian countries, especially China.

    However, the Director-General, Nigerian Textile Manufacturers Association (NTMA), Mr. Hamma Kwajaffa, said despite the prevailing harsh operating environment, the situation is redeemable.

    He said what is required to turn around the industry is for the government to address the key issues raised by operators in the cotton and textile value chain. This, according to him, is the only way recent initiatives unveiled by government to revive the sector will yield result.

    The NTMA boss told The Nation that the influx of smuggled textile into major markets in Kantin Kwari in Kano and Balogun and Oshodi in Lagos, not only undermines the local industry, but also denies Nigerians the opportunity of getting employed.

    Worse still, he said unbridled importation of fake and substandard textiles into the country deprives the government of revenue, while also draining the country’s precarious foreign exchange reserves.

    As Kwajaffa noted, “other countries are helping their textile industry in many ways due to its high employment potential. Ethiopia has one of the most competitive power tariffs at four US cents/Kwh, which is a fifth of the power cost in Nigeria.

    “Recently, India, which is the second largest textile producer in the world after China, announced a $1 billion incentive package for the textile and apparel industry to create 10 million jobs in three years”.

    Kwajaffa hailed the interest shown by the government in reviving the industry by the on-the-spot assessment of textile mills in Lagos by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment Dr. Okechukwu Enelamah, and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin Emefiele.

    The NTMA boss, however, said about eight issues were brought to the notice of the government, and that most of the issues for which government intervention was sought are within the ambit of existing policy framework whereas some require new initiatives.

    One of the issues, which he said holds promise of reviving the sector was the re-scheduling of the Cotton, Textile and Garment (CTG) loan facility by the Bank of Industry (BoI) to 10+2 years. He said although, government agreed to this, a notification is still awaited for it to be effective.

    The other issue, according to Kwajaffa, is the price of gas supplied to the local industry, which is pegged to the American dollar and has not been reviewed after the drop in global oil and gas prices.

    “The current domestic tariff at $7.38 per MMSCF is three times the price of gas in the international market,” he pointed out, arguing that “there is the need to review the tariff on gas supplied to the industry in Naira, which should be affordable.”

    Kwajaffa also identified scarcity of black oil, which he said has crippled the operations of the textile mills in the north. He said there is need to ensure availability of the fuel oil to the textile mills by way of direct allocation from Kaduna and other refineries.

    Also, consistent supply of certified seeds, he added, is required to ensure adequate supply of cotton to the local textile industry. Besides, under the dual exchange rate policy being pursued, he said CBN should allocate Foreign Exchange (forex) at official rate for meeting the need for import of essential raw materials by the textile mills.

    He further said there is need for the redemption of the huge backlog of unutilised Negotiable Duty Credit Certificates (NDCC’s) in lieu of BoI loan instalment owed by the textile companies.

    Kwajaffa identified other issues raised that are agitating the minds of operators to include the need to encourage import substitution through local patronage, and check influx of smuggled goods and step up action against counterfeit textiles, which fake the Nigerian trademarks.

    He said these measures to revive the textile industry have become necessary in view of the fact that Nigeria has the potential to produce for the local market and also export to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) market of 175 million people, as well as to the developed world.

  • FIIRO chief: food security is achievable through SDGs

    Efforts at achieving food security and improved nutrition can be accelerated by adopting the United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development  Goals (SDGs) agenda, the Director–General, Federal Institute for Industrial Research, Oshodi (FIIRO), Dr. Gloria Elemo, has  said.

    The SDGs aim at ending poverty by 2030.

    Mrs Elemo stressed that food and nutrition security must be viewed as essential dimensions of sustainable development and approached as critical elements in achieving government’s goals to make food available and affordable for Nigerians.

    In a paper presented at a forum in Lagos, she said unless the government was pragmatic enough to target the most-vulnerable, such as the poor, women in rural areas, small holder farmers, and those in parts of the North affected by insurgency, food security may not be achieved.

    The paper titled “Achieving Food Security and Improved Nutrition in Nigeria: Making the SDGs Work for Us”, canvassed the need to deploy science & technology in tackling issues ranging from yield and productivity, bridging yield gap, addressing post-harvests losses and effective management of the natural resources.

    Elemo said: “Science, technology and innovation are key to a robust transformation in the food system that will lead to increased agricultural production and productivity. It would also expand local agro-industry and value addition and improve management of natural resources for sustainable agricultural production”.

    The FIRRO boss said the research institute is poised to making significant contributions to food availability through processing, provision of prototype agricultural processing equipment and technology transfer. It also hopes to reduce post-harvest losses through processing and preservation of foods.

    Others are increasing food access through entrepreneurship training and women empowerment workshops as well as increase in job opportunities. This, Elemo said, will translate to improvement in incomes and also lead to more purchasing power for people.

    She, therefore, asked that science and technology innovation policy as recommended by the Ministry of Science & Technology be fully implemented such that strategies laid out for every sector including agriculture, water resources, and raw material production and linked to improving food security and nutrition can work in line with the  SDGs.

  • How to escape the oil snare, by report

    How to escape the oil snare, by report

    Nigeria can turn the Value Added Tax (VAT) into a goldmine if its administration is decentralised, says the Report on Non-Oil Revenue Generation: Policy and Implementation Programme. The document also seeks the creation of a ministry of Taxation to plug leakages in remittances from Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), and amendment of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, among others. It can be useful in steering the economy away from its dependence on oil, if adopted. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    There is no gainsaying the impact of revenue drop from the Federation Account, caused by declining oil prices on the economy. This development has been giving the three tiers of government headache as they find it difficult to finance capital and recurrent expenditures.

    Nigeria got to this pass because of its age-long dependence on oil revenue despite experts’ arguments that if the country gets its tax administration right, revenue from tax alone could sustain the economy.

    Interestingly, even before the sustained decline in oil prices, which started mid-June 2014, a report exclusively obtained by The Nation foresaw the crisis, and had, in anticipation of the All Progressives Congress (APC) winning the 2015 general elections, came out with robust, far-reaching recommendations on how to reform the tax system and other sources of non-oil revenue.

    The report, formulated from “Policy on Revenue Generation/Finance (Non-oil) 2008, is titled: Report on Non-Oil Revenue Generation: Policy and Implementation Programme. The report is emphatic that if its recommendations are adopted, the dependence on oil money will reduce, and a substantial part of government’s revenue will come from taxation.

    For a start, the document, sponsored by APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, proposes a structure that will allow 91.3 per cent of the nation’s revenue to come from the non-oil sector, leaving 8.5 per cent to oil. This is, no doubt, a radical departure from the current scale that leaves the bulk of revenue to come from oil.

    The report, however, is emphatic that achieving the new revenue scale is not rocket science; what is required is to decentralise the administration of Value Added Tax (VAT) so state governments will be involved in the registration and collection of VAT in collaboration with the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS).

    If this is done, the report says Nigeria will generate over 10 times what she is getting under the current arrangement that gives FIRS sole authority to administer VAT. It specifically says, for instance, that Nigeria can realise N560 billion monthly, on the average, from VAT, up from the current N58 billion per month. This is an equivalent of N6.7 trillion per annum at the current five per cent VAT rate.

    “What the Federal Government through FIRS, the sole administrator, is generating from VAT per month is an average of N60 billion to N64 billion. But from our research, which we can back up with data, we can generate about N560 billion per month if each of the state is allowed to administer VAT,” an Accountant and Chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee for the report, Mr. Ommoba Olumuyiwa Sosanya, said, noting the economy is driven by the informal sector, which, despite constituting about 85 per cent, is not in the VAT net.

    Sosonya told The Nation in an interview that decentralising VAT administration would capture the informal sector. He said most of the businesses in the informal sector were not captured under VAT because it was in the hand of FIRS.

    He, however, stated that if the various State Internal Revenue Services are allowed to administer it, not only will the arrangement create employment, as more hands will be needed, non-oil revenue generation from that source will grow about 10 times what the nation is generating now.

    For ease of collection and remittance, the report, according to Sosonya, introduces an innovation that will eliminate leakages and wastages that have been the bane of tax collection in the country.

    He said: “With the advent of technology we are suggesting that every chargeable person, which means those who register because we want to do it to the states; the state will go about and register the shops, the women in the market, the traders because we are traders in the country.

    “They will be asked to have a VAT account. As you have your bank account for your business you also open a VAT account so every day or week, as you are paying your money into the bank, the VAT collected, which is also paid into the VAT account will hit the state’s account.”

    The accountant said what obtained now is that at the end of the month the FIRS will demand from each of the chargeable persons to make a return of the VAT collected, which, in most cases, is under-stated while some are not even remitted at all.

    “But with our projection there will not be leakages because as you are paying your state with your bank account the five per cent, which is the VAT on it, it is paid into the VAT account, which the trader or the company cannot touch. It belongs to the state and from the states it hits the federal account,” he said.

    Sosonya argued that this arrangement has become necessary because while VAT has brought fortunes to most developed countries and some African countries, such as South Africa and Ghana, “the FIRS is overwhelmed and struggling to find its bearing to turn the administration of VAT into a goldmine for Nigerians.”

    Indeed, while South African Revenue Service (SARS), according to the report, realised R813.8 billion, about N12.5 trillion in the 2012/2013 fiscal year, from the country’s 40 million population, Nigeria’s FIRS realised a meagre N861 billion for 2014 from a population of 170 million.

    Also, while Britain’s economy depends mainly on revenue from taxes and customs duties, the Nigerian experience is that most revenue generated allegedly end up in the private pockets of the relevant officials instead of government coffer.

     Ministry of Taxation as game-changer

    As part of the tax reform, the report advocates the separation of tax and other revenue generation exercises from the Ministry of Finance and the creation of a Ministry of Taxation and Revenue to handle such matters.

    The ministry with a substantive minister who will be in the mould of the United Kingdom (UK)’s Secretary for Treasury. The arrangement will make room for proper fiscal transformation and effective management of taxation and other revenue generation activities.

    In creating a Ministry of Taxation and Revenue, the report is not re-inventing the wheel. It points out, for instance, that it was part of the recommendations of the Dr. Pius Okigbo’s Task Force on Tax Administration in 1978, which were implemented by the Alhaji Shehu Shagari administration in 1979.

    So, for four years of the Shagari administration, Nigeria had a Ministry of Taxation headed by the late Mr. Ademola Thomas was the first Minister of Taxation. He was followed by Chief Abayomi Akintola, and later his sister, Dr. Akintola.

    Besides, the report notes that the Lagos State Government has been benefiting from the quadrupled increase of its Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) since the appointment of a Special Adviser on Taxation and Revenue in 2007.

    “The immediate past administration of Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola created a department with a special adviser on taxation and revenue. While Tinubu built the revenue from N600 million to about N6billion, Fashola moved it up to N25 billion because of specialisation of having someone taking care of taxation,” Sosonya said.

    He dispelled fears over possible overlap of functions between the Ministry of Taxation to be so created and the Ministry of Finance. He said under the proposed arrangement, the Ministry of Taxation at the federal and state levels would take charge of fiscal policy, while the Ministry of Finance would oversee monetary policy.

    “There won’t be any overlap of functions,” he maintained, adding that “in the UK where Nigeria derived her taxation, they don’t use minister; they use secretary of treasury who is in charge of taxation.”

     Plugging leakages in MDAs’ remittances is imperative

    The report observes that, over the years, Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) have been in breach of Section 22 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007, which allows them to generate revenue and keep 20 per cent of it and pay the balance of 80 per cent into the Federation Account at the end of the year.

    Indeed, the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007 made provisions for the return of 80 per cent of MDAs’ operating surplus to the treasury and the remaining 20 per cent to a General Reserve Fund.

    Section 22 of the Act says: “(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of any written law governing the corporation, each corporation shall establish a general reserve fund and shall allocate thereto at the end of each financial year, one-fifth of its operating surplus for the year.

    “(2) The balance of the operating surplus shall be paid into the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federal Government not later than one month following the statutory deadline for publishing each corporation’s accounts.”

    But the report accuses MDAs of being in violation of this provision. It, therefore, says if the proposed amendments to the offending provisions of the law are adopted, and all the loopholes and leakages plugged for effective collection and prompt remittance to the Consolidated Revenue Fund, Nigeria will realise a minimum of N8 trillion annually from this sector of non-oil revenue generation.

    The report cites the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), for instance, which, according to investigations by the National Assembly, generated over N548 billion in five years, but remitted a paltry N11 million into the Federation Account.

    “Some MDAs even go to the Federal Government and say they don’t make money; they need money; they want subvention,” Sosonya said, describing as unfortunate the recent discovery that over N3 trillion generated by MDAs was not remitted to the Federation Account.

    He, however, expressed optimism that the advent of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) will eliminate wastages and fraud. “The TSA is a wonderful idea. It is a blessing to this country. It’s going to eliminate fraud entirely.

    “Take the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), for instance, that collects dollars and then pay naira to the Federal Government. But, with the TSA, that money goes into the Central Bank account,” he said.

    TSA is a public accounting system using a single account, or a set of linked accounts by government to ensure all revenue receipts and payments are done through a Consolidated Revenue Account (CRA) at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    The idea is to ensure adequate monitoring of government revenue receipts and expenditures and block leakages, as no MDA is allowed to keep any operational bank account. This will ultimately entrench a regime of accountability and transparency in public fund management.

    But in implementing the TSA, Sosanya suggested that there should be a policy which allows  MDAs to operate quarterly budget. The arrangement, he said, will allow MDAs have certain amount that they budgeted and they cannot exceed within that quarter or period.

    His words: “For the smooth running of the MDAs, there should be what we call operational budget quarterly, because right now some of them are complaining that they cannot do things because they don’t have money; they prefer the money into the commercial banks and they can draw it the way they want.”

    Sosanya recommended that if this arrangement is implemented, a penalty should be introduced where, if any of the parastatals pays money into commercial banks, those commercial banks that take the money will pay double of that as penalty, while the accounting officers of those parastatals will be liable to 10 years imprisonment.

    For these to happen, the report recommended that the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007 be amended to accommodate TSA because as it is any of the parastatals could go to court. “The Act is still there, it has not been amended. That Act must be amended to accommodate TSA,” Sosanya argued.

    Apparently aware that the amendment process for the Act requires amending the constitution, which might be cumbersome, Sosanya said there could be a short term measure by way of an ‘Executive Order on Fiscal Regulation on VAT Administration’, which will authorise states to administer the registration and collection of VAT in collaboration with the FIRS.

    According to him, such order or action will validate all legal impediments that may result from the constitutional infringements in the mean time.

    Will the report’s recommendations hit the right chord in the ears of the authorities? Sosanya said he hoped so, “because this is the best time to do it now that money is not coming from oil.”

  • ‘Cassava starch industry generates over N76.9b yearly’

    nigeria’s cassava starch industry generates over $240 million about N76.9 billion yearly,  90 per cent of which is from importation. But the industry has the potential to grow as population and income per capita increase, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Union Dicon Salt (UDS) Plc Mr. Chuka Mordi has said.

    According to Mordi, Nigeria currently has four major functional starch processing plants with a combined capacity of 27,000 tons. He said the nation’s annual starch demand of over 250,000 tons with a market size of $240m is met by importation of corn starch, and this provides an opportunity for import substitution, which is in line with UDS’s strategy.

    UDS Plc is a company operating in the Nigerian consumer goods sector. It has been diversifying into the agro industrial sector, with an initial concentration on cassava and starch processing. The firm has already finalised agreement with GEA Westfalia of Germany to build the largest industrial starch processing facility in Nigeria.

    Mordi said the potential for Nigeria’s starch market is huge, as Nigeria is the largest cassava growing country in the world, with an estimated annual output of 45m tons, which continues to grow annually.

    He, however, said over $600m worth of cassava products (flour, starch, glucose and animal feed) are imported, largely as a result of uncoordinated harvest and transport of high grade cassava in commercial quantities.

    Mordi told The Nation that cassava production is largely done at subsistence level, with the local market/human constituting the highest consumers of the produce and less than five per cent for industrial uses. He, therefore, said opportunities exist for the production and processing of cassava products, mostly starch and maltose for food and industrial use.

    Cassava starch, a food grade product refined from cassava roots, is the major component of the cassava plant. It has thickening and binding qualities and is used as binder and thickener in convenience foods. But Mordi said Nigeria processes very little of its current output for starch compared with other countries.

    According to him, all the major starch processing factories in Nigeria operate at less than 20 per cent of their installed capacity, producing about 27, 000 tons of starch per annum. The 20 per cent domestic production capacity, he said, fall short of the nation’s current demand for starch, put in excess of 250, 000 tons per annum.

    To meet local supply, the CEO said starch end-users resort to importation of starch, which presents a clear opportunity for investment in starch processing for import substitution. He said the company’s investment in cassava processing involved the installation of a 10, 000 Metric Tons Per Annum (MT PA) starch processing plant for the conversion of cassava to starch.

  • Nigeria, Zambia lead top in women entrepreneurs

    Africa leads the world in the number of women starting businesses, a study by Global Economic Forum has said. The study, however, added that Nigeria and Zambia led the pack with 40.7 per cent of adult women as owner-managers of their own businesses or nascent entrepreneurs.

    According to the study, the number of women entrepreneurs is higher on the African continent than anywhere else in the world, even compared to the United States (U.S), where only 10.4 per cent of women own and manage their own business.

    The Country Director, Centre for International Private Enterprise (CIPE), Mrs. Omowumi Gbadamosi, disclosed the study result at a conference organised by the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA) Business Women Group (NAWORG) in Lagos, during the week.

    Speaking on the theme, “Challenges facing women-owned business,” Mrs. Gbadamosi said given women business owners’ ability to pull themselves, their families and communities out of poverty, it behoved the government to support them. She encouraged the public and private sectors to work together to ensure that women accessed the finance, training, and support they need to run successful enterprises.

    According to her, over 60 per cent of informal cross-border traders in West Africa are women, for whom the informal market provides opportunities to reduce poverty, create wealth and fight unemployment.

    “In Central and Western Africa, female informal cross-border traders on average employ 1.2 people in their home businesses and support 3.2 children and 3.1 dependents who are not their children or spouses,” she said.

    Lagos State Commissioner for Commerce, Industry and Cooperatives Prince Rotimi Ogunleye, in his paper, said the state has broadened the scope for women participation in business and enterprise by initiating and distilling measures targeted at increasing the number of women-owned business networks.

    He said the state has been closing gender gaps to lift women’s incomes and their contribution to agricultural production and small-scale industrialisation.

    Ogunleye, who was represented by a director in the ministry, Mrs. Mojisola Subair, said women were involved in the development of the human society and economic well being of any country.

    She assured of the state’s continued support to women through innovative entrepreneurship development and business policies and programmes.

    Earlier, First Deputy National President, NACCIMA and Chairperson, NAWORG Iyalode Alaba Lawsonon spoke on the need to redirect the thoughts of grassroots women towards sustainable empowerment and socio-economic self-reliance in her paper entitled “Galvanising the grassroots women entrepreneurs to key into the opportunities of sustainable development goals”.

    She said women were key factors in the drive towards the attainment of global sustainable goals.

  • Agric revolution: Fertilizer supply to the rescue

    Agric revolution: Fertilizer supply to the rescue

    Even before the recent attempt to link urea fertilizer producer Notore Chemical Industries Plc (Notore) to sabotage of Nigeria’s national security and economy, the fertilizer maker and distributor had stepped up its campaign to revolutionalise the agric sector through local supply of fertilizer. The move, seen as a shot in the arm of the ongoing agric transformation agenda, promises to enhance food production and food security. CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    The management of urea fertilizer producer Notore Chemical Industries Plc (Notore) is literarily up in arms. Recent statements credited to the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) that it was involved in activities that sabotage Nigeria’s security and economy did not go down well with the company.

    For one, the allegation, which specifically accused Notore of being a conduit for explosive materials used by militants, came at a time the fertiliser manufacturer said it was working assiduously to give the current administration’s agric transformation agenda the required push.

    Apparently livid over the weighty allegations, which it strongly denied, Notore on Monday said as a Nigerian company with predominantly Nigerian shareholders, it had always been committed and focused on supporting initiatives of the Federal Government, and championing the African Green Revolution, especially Nigeria’s.

    “Our attention has been drawn to various publications in the media containing serious allegations about Notore. In the publications, Notore is alleged to be sabotaging Nigeria’s national security and economy by being a conduit for explosive materials as well as being “unpatriotic.”  Notore is constrained to refute the allegations in the strongest terms,” the company said.

    Stating that it does not produce, import, or in any way use nitric acid, Notore said it has worked and continues to work with government agencies to ensure that its products move strictly through its controlled distribution channels directly to official distribution partners and then into the market.

    The company, in a statement made available to The Nation, also said it is the premier producer of urea fertiliser in sub-Saharan Africa; that it has been in production for over six years and it remained committed to its core goal of enhancing food production and food security in Africa, particularly in Nigeria.

    Notore said part of its strategy to achieve this goal is to focus on sales of fertilizer in the local market via its extensive, controlled and award-winning distribution channels. It also has and uses extension workers who are committed to the training of local farmers on best practices and the creation of ‘test plots’ to showcase the benefits of effective use of fertilizer on crops.

    It listed other strategies to include the creation of an effective and efficient distribution channel to ease access to fertilizers for the farmers, as well as boosting production capacity to meet the ever increasing demand of the Nigerian farmer.

    The Onne, Rivers State-based fertiliser maker and distributor said over the past years, through its private extension services and controlled distribution channels, which include over 2, 500 Village Promoters, it has reached over three million Nigerian farmers who have been impacted positively with increased yields.

    The company added that as estimated by a 2013 report by Propcom-DFID, an innovative, market-driven initiative of the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID) that aims to reduce poverty in Nigeria, over 33 per cent of smallholder farmers in seven selected northern states learned at least one improved farming practice from Notore’s activities. This led to increased yields and income.

    That is not all. The fertilizer producer also said it worked with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, some selected states, and International Fertilizer Development Centre (IFDC) in designing and implementing the fertilizer voucher program between 2009 and 2012.

    The programme, it stated, greatly improved the administration of the fertilizer subsidy programme by increasing the reach to target beneficiaries from a previous 11 per cent to as high as 60 per cent.

    “The success of this voucher programme became the basis on which the Federal Government created the Growth Enhancement Support Scheme (GESS) e-wallet program, which sought to improve agricultural productivity through the effective and efficient delivery of farm inputs such as fertilizer, which increased yields.

    “It is through these and other activities that Notore has helped and continues to help build Nigeria’s agricultural and economic landscape, which has a direct impact on the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP),” the statement stated.

    The Nation also learnt that as part of its commitment to Nigeria, the bulk (about 75 per cent) of Notore’s production of fertilizer is focused on the Nigerian market. And because Nigeria largely has only one planting season, the majority of this production is sold locally during this peak season, while Notore only exports limited amounts of fertilizer during the dry season.

    Indeed, during the dry season, there is essentially zero demand for fertilizer in Nigeria. But, Notre, it was learnt, continued to work aggressively with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development to encourage and stimulate farming in Nigeria during the off-season in order to further its core goal of increased food production and food security in Nigeria.

    For instance, the compny has been a key partner in the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Anchor Borrowers’ Program aimed at increasing the local production of key crops. During the recently completed pilot of the rice anchor borrowers’ program in Kebbi State, it supplied all the urea fertilizer used in the programme.

    The result of the intervention was visible, as it delivered the requested fertilizer for the programme within a very short period to all the locations in which the program was implemented in the state. In continuation of that program, it has also committed to supplying all the urea fertilizer required for the program during the current rainy season in all 11 target states.

    “Another example of Notore’s aggressive efforts to stimulate farming in Nigeria is its successful onion intervention in Kebbi State. In 2010, an unprecedented severe case of onion twister disease in Kebbi State, similar to the recent tomato crisis, crippled all farming activities involving onions. As of the time of Notore’s intervention in 2010, onions were in short supply with high demand, thereby raising the price to an all-time high of N40,000 per bag,” the statement noted.