Tag: boost economy

  • Ascentech holds career expo to boost economy

    As Nigeria looks to alternative options to diversify its economy, Ascentech Services Limited has concluded arrangements to hold a career expo to explore various strategies and options to reduce unemployment and boost national economic productivity.

    At a media interactive session to announce the career expo, Human Resource Manager, Ascentech Services Limited, Henrietta Owie said the career expo, scheduled for March 16 in Lagos, is in line with the Federal Government’s agenda to create employment and improve economic productivity.

    She noted that the Federal Government sees 2018 as a year of consolidation of the economic recovery, and the gains from improved macroeconomic management, especially with the extensive investments made in agriculture, infrastructure and the business environment.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the last December graduation of the Senior Executive Course 39 of the National Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies ( NIPSS), said the country must diversify all its options and ensure that employment and career development is placed at the fore burner of all activities in 2018.

    Owie said Ascentech Services’s career expo is expected with a footfall of over 2000 participants comprising of job seekers and key industry players and more than 50 blue chip and Medium, Small and Micro Enterprises (MSME).

    According to her, the career expo will serve as a platform for more than 20 speakers to chart strategies to diversify the nations’ options in other to ensure career development and to reduce unemployment in the nation.

    “Our career expo is a capacity building event with a difference, designed to reduce the growing unemployment rate in Nigeria by connecting employable talents to prospective employers. The expo is set to be a yearly symposium on human capacity development for employees seeking new opportunities across the junior, middle and senior management levels. It will also feature a wide range of exhibitors of any career-focused expo in Nigeria, consisting of private, International, governmental, non-governmental, and bilateral organisations,” Owie said.

    She added that the expo will connect thousands of candidates with various employers to experience the perfect job interview set to happen throughout the event.

    Participating companies include Azinova Solutions Limited, CORMART, CWAY, SIMBA Group, Sweetco, and Simpli.

    Ascentech Services is an human resource solution provider committed to forging long term partnerships through robust and flexible services that address the changing needs of businesses through recruitment and selection; outsourcing; and training and development.

  • Edo to hold investment Summit to boost economy

    In a bid to re-engineer the economy of Edo State towards a better future for its citizens, the Godwin Obaseki-led government is set to host the maiden Edo State Investment Summit with the theme “Envisioning the Future” from November 10 – 12, 2017 at Edo Hotels, Okada Avenue, Benin City.

    Christened ‘Alaghodaro’ meaning ‘progress’, the three-day summit will bring together local and international business leaders and investors, bankers, financiers, industry experts, policymakers, the diplomatic community and the academia to explore Edo’s rich potential across various sectors.

    Speaking on the importance of the summit, Asue Ighodalo, Chairman of Alaghodaro 2017 said: “The world over, governments are looking beyond oil to alternative revenue sources in order to ensure sustainable development, and we must also get creative and take action today for our future and the future of our children.”

    “Alaghodaro is part of the response of the Edo State Government to the imminent threat of an oil-dependent economy. It seeks to explore opportunities for local and foreign direct investment in the state by highlighting the state’s competitive advantage across various sectors.”

    Ighodalo also disclosed that the key areas of focus at the three-day event would include Law and Order, Civil Service Reform, Agriculture, Manufacturing, Transportation, Forest Regeneration and Conservation, Education, Healthcare, Arts, Culture, Tourism and Hospitality.

    The Edo State Investment Summit is in line with the vision of the Obaseki administration to build “a modern and progressive Edo state where every citizen is empowered with opportunity to live life in its fullness.”

    Alaghodaro 2017 is designed to foster knowledge sharing, build relationships, spark innovation and inspire commitment to strategic deployment of capital for greater socio-economic and environmental impact.

  • ‘How trade laws can boost economy’

    Proper application of trade laws can attract investment and boost the economy, a commercial lawyer, Chinedu Ezeokoronkwo, has said.

    He noted that some foreign investors put off doing business because they are uncertain about the international validity of laws governing trade in Nigeria.

    One way of making things clearer, he said, is to domesticate the United Nations (UN) Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG).

    Ezeokoronkwo, the President of Susana Cares Foundation, stated this at launch of his book ‘The Dynamics of Trade Law in Nigeria’.

    He said the book is aimed at ameliorating the plight of trade practitioners transacting business domestically and internationally.

    It would, he added, “bridge the gap between the practical and theoretical aspects of what we study in school and what we do in court and the real business world.”

    The non-domestication of the CISG, Ezeokoronkwo noted, “is very unfortunate because Nigeria, as the giant of Africa, should take the lead in the comity of nations, but has not done that.

    “The book is also a clarion call that this Act should be adopted and domesticated. If this is done, it can be a veritable tool towards economic recovery. The book also made a strong argument for a more proactive enforcement of international awards. This will instill confidence in the minds of investors.”

    He said it also addressed the usurping of powers between the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON).

    “Both agencies have their different functions but you see one agency usurping the power of the other and it shouldn’t be,” Ezeokoronkwo noted.

    Proceeds from the sale of the book, he added, will be used by Susana Cares Foundation to fund the education of indigent students.

    Book reviewer Izuchukwu Onyebuchi noted that the author “did great justice to trade law in Nigeria.”

    Onyebuchi said: “The book sets out the type of businesses that can be done in Nigeria as well the legal regime and regulatory bodies.

    “It also discusses the legislation that regulates specific businesses. It is a one-stop-shop for all the legal knowledge you want to gain if you want to start business in Nigeria.”

  • Banks derail CBN’s N1tr battle to boost economy

    Banks derail CBN’s N1tr battle to boost economy

    Lenders prefer traders to manufacturers, farmers

    MPC retains tight monetary measures

    Highlights of MPC meeting

    •Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) 14%
    •Cash Reserve Ration (CRR) 22.5%
    •Liquidity Ratio 30%
    •Asymmentric Window +200 -500

    ADVOCATES of lower interest rates lost their battle yesterday.

    The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) failed to bring down rates, but tightened measures because banks:

    • have refused to lend to the agriculture and manufacturing sectors, despite the injection of N1trillion into the economy;
    • are lending to traders who pump the cash into foreign exchange trading, thereby increasing the unusual pressure on the naira, which exchanged for N325 and N425 to the dollar in the official and parrallel markets yesterday; and
    • attempts to inject more cash without corresponding increase in industrial capacity will worsen inflation.

    The MPC of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) shocked pundits by retaining all the monetary policy instruments at their current levels.

    Addressing journalists at the end of the MPC meeting in Abuja, CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele said “the Committee assessed the relevant risks and concluded that the economy continues to face elevated risks on both price and output fronts”.

    Emefiele said: “Given its primary mandate and considering the limitations of its instruments with respect to output and conscious of the need to allow this and other measures, like the foreign exchange market reforms, to work through fully, the Committee decided to retain the MPR at 14.00 per cent; the  CRR at 22.5 per cent; the Liquidity Ratio at 30.00 per cent; and the Asymmetric Window at +200 and -500 basis points around the MPR.”

    Defending the MPC’s decision, Emefiele said it decided to tighten measures because banks were not lending money to agriculture and manufacturing, but instead were funneling credit to traders who used the money to demand for foreign exchange.

    Emefiele said: “There was a time when the MPC took a decision not only to reduce the monetary rate but also the cash reserve. These were intended to lower rates and encourage spending by the private sector. After we did that, because we did not see the impact on the private sector, we further reduced the CRR from 30.5% to 25%; N1 trillion was injected into the economy through the banks to loan this money but rather than loan this money those credits went to traders who used them to demand for foreign exchange, thereby putting pressure on the foreign exchange market.”

    The CBN governor went on: “Thereafter, we reduced CRR to its current 22.5%, that is about N300billion to N500 billion but we said we were not going to allow the banks to have the cash until they send proposals to the CBN for primary agric projects, real manufacturing projects and other types of projects that will support industrial capacity and manufacturing output. I must confess that the proposals that we received were mainly for the purpose of refinancing the liquidity of the banks and thought that that was not what we wanted. That is the reason we have been circumspect about releasing some of those liquidity.”

    Very few banks, he said, “have submitted proposals for agric and new manufacturing projects that we will be considering in due course.”

    Emefiele explained that “if we lower interest rate, what that will do is make it possible for the fiscal authorities to borrow at a lower rate. If they borrow at a lower rate to stimulate the spending, yes it will stimulate the demand for goods. When you stimulate spending by proving cash or money without taking action to boost industrial capacity, what will happen is that there will be too much money chasing too few goods, which will worsen the current inflationary situation we are in right now.”

    The option the apex bank wants to adopt “is that while the fiscal is going ahead to spend, what we want to do is to say, ‘maintain the rates where they are’, since we want to maintain a fairly tight situation and since the tightening, we have seen inflow of FX of above $1 billion between July and now.

    “These were used to procure raw materials. This will lead to price of goods moderating and growth of industrial and manufacturing capacity. We want to match the demand so that it does not lead to further inflationary pressure,” Emefiele said.

    On the efforts of both fiscal and monetary authorities to synchronise their actions, Emefiele said: “We are working together to achieve what we want to achieve so that we don’t hurt the economy.”

    The CBN governor added that “the Committee acknowledged the weak macroeconomic performance and the challenges confronting the economy, but noted that the MPC had consistently called attention to the implications of the absence of robust fiscal policy to complement monetary policy in the past. The Committee also recognised that monetary policy had been substantially burdened since 2009 and had been stretched.”

    Against this background, members, he said, “reemphasized the need to prioritise the use of monetary policy instruments in dealing essentially with stability issues around key prices (consumer prices and exchange rate) as prerequisites for growth”.

    Emefiele said that “the MPC noted that stagflation is indeed a very difficult economic condition with no quick fixes: having been imposed by supply shocks as well as fiscal and current account (twin) deficits. Consequently, the policy framework must be reengineered urgently to provide a lever for reversing the negative growth trend. While the imperative for ensuring financial system stability remains, the MPC reiterated the fact that monetary policy alone cannot move the economy out of stagflation.”

    Emefiele said: “The MPC considered the numerous analysis and calls for rates reduction but came to the conclusion that the greatest challenge to the economy today remains incomplete fiscal reforms which raise costs, risks and uncertainty”.

    “The calls came mainly from the belief that reducing interest rates will spur credit growth, not only in the private sector but also by the public sector, which will help provide liquidity to stimulate consumption and investment spending.”

    The Committee, the CBN boss added, “was of the view that in the past, the MPC had cut rates; but found that rather than deploy the available liquidity to provide credit to agriculture and manufacturing sectors, the rate cuts provided opportunities for lending to traders who deployed the same liquidity in putting pressure on the foreign exchange market which had limited supply, thus pushing up the exchange rate.”

    On providing opportunity to the public sector to borrow at lower rates to boost consumption and investment spending, the Committee agreed that while it was expected to stimulate growth through aggressive spending, doing so without corresponding efforts to boost industrial output by taking actions to deepen foreign exchange supply for raw materials will not help reduce unemployment nor would it boost industrial capacities.

    “The Committee was also of the view that consumer demand for goods, which will be boosted through increased spending, may indeed be chasing too few goods which may further exacerbate the already heightened inflationary conditions. The urgency of a monetary-fiscal policy retreat along with trade and budgetary policy,to design a comprehensive intervention mechanism is long overdue,” he said.

    The CBN, Emefiele noted, “has since 2009 expanded its balance sheet to bail out the financial system and support growth initiatives in the economy”. ”While stimulating economic growth and creating a congenial investment climate always is and remains essentially the realm of fiscal policy; monetary policy in all cases only comes in to support sound fiscal policy. Nevertheless, the CBN has and shall continue to deploy its development finance interventions to complement the overall effort of fiscal policy towards reinvigorating the economy. The interest rate decisions of the CBN are, therefore, anchored on sound judgment, fundamentals and compelling arguments for such policy interventions.”

    The Committee also feels that there was the need to continue to encourage the inflow of foreign capital into the economy by continuing to put in place incentives to gain the confidence of players in this segment of the foreign exchange market. Consequently, the Committee considers that loosening monetary policy now is not advisable as real interest rates are negative, pressure exists on the foreign exchange market while inflation is trending upwards.

    The Committee noted the positive response of the deposit money banks (DMBs) to the CBN’s call for increased credit to the private sector between July and August. As the growth in the monetary aggregates spiked above their provisional benchmarks, headline inflation continued its upward trajectory in August 2016, and now close to twice the size of the upper limit of the policy reference band.

    “Supply side factors, including energy and utility prices, transportation and input costs, have continued to add to consumer price pressures. Members emphasised that improved fiscal activities, especially, the active implementation of the 2016 budget, and payment of salaries by states and local governments, will go a long way in contributing to economic recovery. In the same direction, the Committee urged the fiscal authorities to consider tax incentives as a stimulus on both supply and demand sides of economic activities,” Emefiele said.

    On the outlook for the future, the CBN governor stated that “the data available to the Committee and forecasts of key variables suggest that the outlook for inflation in the medium term appears benign. First, month-on-month inflation has since May 2016 turned the curve; second, harvests have started to kick-in for most agricultural produce and should contribute to dampening consumer prices in the months ahead; and third, the current stance of monetary policy is expected to continue to help lock-in expectations of inflation which, has started to improve with the gradual return of stability in the foreign exchange market.”

    In this light, the MPC believes that as inflows improve, the naira exchange rate should further stabilise. Overall, the major pressure points remain the challenges in the oil sector (production and prices), output contraction, and other financial system vulnerabilities as well as foreign exchange shortage.

    Reacting to the MPC ‘s decision, analysts have conflicting views on the development. Dr Ogho Okiti President/CEO of Time Economics Limited noted that “cutting the MPR could do more to erode the credibility of the CBN with regards to the conduct of monetary policy. Such action, in our opinion will help worsen the already growing negative real interest rate and could further discourage the return of foreign investors – something the CBN has worked so hard to avoid. Moreover, the pursuit of an expansionary monetary policy in order to support growth, in the face of rising inflation and currency depreciations could prove to be counter-productive, particularly in the absence of complementary fiscal policy reforms.”

    Mr Basil Odilim Enwegbara, an Abuja development economist, aligned with the fiscal authorities by arguing that “a country deep in recession caused mostly by high cost of doing business with one of highest MPRs and CRR among peer economies, has its MPC members behaving as if the economic is in high growth mode,  calls for sober reflection. What it tells us is that the 2007 CBN Act forced on the country’s President is a great fraud that should be stopped. I strongly believe that we have come to the point in our monetary policy stance when the amendment of the CBN Act of 2007 is now urgent. The goal of the amendment is for the Commander-in-Chief of Nigeria’s economy, President Buhari who was elected by millions of Nigerians to better the lives and improve the overall economy should be the one to have the final say about the country’s MPR, CRR and forex policy.  Mr President should call members of MPC to a close door meeting and demand their immediate resignation. In the meantime he should appoint an acting team to be working directly with him until a new team is put in place.”

     

  • Fed Govt releases N109b to boost economy, says Adeosun

    Fed Govt releases N109b to boost economy, says Adeosun

    • 35 states apply for N90b loan

    The Federal Government has already pumped N109billion of its promised N350billion into the economy, the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, has said.

    Mrs. Adeosun, who spoke on Channels Television Programme – Sunrise, yesterday, said the balance of the amount is being held back because of the need to meet with due process requirements.

    She said: “N109billion out of the N350billion has already been disbursed. The funds are ready, however, there are procedural delays, due to the required public procurement processes.”

    She said 35 states have applied to access the N90 billion loan earmarked by the Federal Government to boost state governments’  fiscal sustainability capabilities, saying the states “are in the process of submitting the required documentation which are being reviewed.”

    The finance minister stated that monthly disbursements to each state will be conditional on compliance with pre-agreed Fiscal Sustainability Plan (FSP) milestones.

    She said if Nigeria is to achieve sustainable growth, it needs a planned approach to financial discipline, targeted investment and economic diversification, pointing out that government’s Economic Plan is strong on fiscal discipline.

    In her words: “The people know we need to get our country working, and to do that, we need to do three things: get the country’s spending in check with firm financial controls, raise money for targeted investment in much needed infrastructure and see us diversify the economy from a damaging dependence on oil.”

    The minister who addressed a wide range of issues, said the diversification of the economy will increase when each state starts to increase their Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), adding that this would create local jobs and expand wealth within the states.

    She cited  Kebbi State as one state that has taken the initiative to increase its production of rice as a means of increasing its IGR.

    “Ultimately, when we collectively expand IGR, we generate more jobs and create more wealth,” stating that other states have different resources that can be developed to generate IGR within their domain.

    Mrs. Adeosun said the the economic blueprint is about putting in place the financial pillars to enable states to work effectively and efficiently with the Federal Government, stressing that getting this right will enable “states to be critical economic drivers for prosperity and pillars of professional probity.”

    She expressed optimism that Nigeria would eventually overcome the current challenges, saying that the higher revenue collection and the greater sharing of non-oil earnings are indications that the reforms are starting to work.

    On the new foreign exchange policy, she said: “We are happy with the new FX policy. This was the missing link between monetary and fiscal policy and we are happy that it is now in place.  It is supply and demand driven.”

    On her ministry’s decision not to reinstate special bonus and overtime payments paid to civil servants in 2013/2014,  she said: “This is part of the same clear goal of ensuring fiscal discipline. We recognise the value of our staff and have made sure salaries are paid and we’ve worked hard to avoid redundancies. Although I understand the disappointment some staff may have, any special payments wouldn’t be appropriate and there simply aren’t any provisions to pay out the N 1.2billion. We need to return fiscal discipline not just to the Ministry of Finance, but to every arm of government.”

    Mrs. Adeosun however said  any delayed legitimate overtime payments will be paid.  “The Director of Finance and Administration will address these and ensure that they are paid.  Staff will get what they are legally entitled to.

    “The task now is for management and staff of the ministry to work together to achieve the goals of the administration: real reform through financial discipline, providing targeted investment and diversifying our economy.  The staff work hard and they are committed so they must be paid what they are due,” she stated.

    She said state governments have a key role in diversifying the economy, saying the whole essence of the reform is to improve accountability and transparency, increase public revenue, rationalise public expenditure, improve public financial management and ensure    sustainable debt management.

  • Islamic banking’ll boost economy if well harnessed, says Emir Sanusi

    Islamic banking’ll boost economy if well harnessed, says Emir Sanusi

    Emir of Kano, Muhammad Sanusi II, has said Islamic Banking institution can revitalise the troubled Nigerian economy if well adopted.

    According to him, one of the major benefits of the system is to reduce poverty.

    He spoke yesterday at the Third Annual Holiday Convention of the Guild of Muslim Professionals (GMP) at the Administrative Staff College of Nigeria (ASCON), Topo, Badagry in Lagos State.

    The former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, who disclosed that non-Muslim countries including Cote d’Voire, Senegal and Gambia are picking interest in the Sukuk, the Islamic banking system, also called for increased awareness on the Islamic Banking system.

    Speaking via video recording on the benefits of the system, which he said remain largely untapped, the monarch further urged Muslims to invest into Halal products and services, including Game reserves, Cinemas, games among others.

    These, he said, can help the Islamic banking system to thrive and drive the economy.

    In his address, Sterling Bank Head of Islamic Banking, Dr. Bashir Oshodi, said over 100 million Nigerians are living below poverty line.

    He said a recent research has shown that Nigeria, Tanzania, Congo and Ethiopia, were marked to become extremely poor by year 2030, adding that these countries are predominantly Muslims.

    “Islamic Banking, if well harnessed, would ensure large numbers of people are economically independent,” adding that people like Aristotle, Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall were all proponents of interest free banking.

    Jaiz Bank Plc Head of Corporate Affairs, Al-Hassan Abu Kareem, lamented that Muslims are the least beneficiaries from their operations.

    This, he said, is due to ignorance on the benefits inherent in it.

    He urged scholars to avail themselves of the opportunity of the training sessions organised by the Central Bank of Nigeria, which he said, would help them understand the real perspectives of Islamic banking and how it can be fully integrated into the society.

    He said: “There was one of our non-Muslims customers who collected N2 million naira loan and he was the first to get that from us when we started initially. Accidentally, it was the period when there was media advocacy against Islamic banking and Jaiz Bank. After getting the loan, he showed it to his church members and that was a positive testimony for us.”

    GMP Board of Trustee chairman Abdul Akeem Oyewale, urged Muslims on creating awareness, getting education and training on the Islamic banking system.

    He urged Muslims to register for online courses that could avail them of the basic knowledge of the Islamic banking system.

  • LADOL’s N51b vessel facility ‘ll boost economy, says NPA

    The N51 billion vessel fabrication facility built by Lagos Deep Offshore Logistics (LADOL) and Samsung Heavy Industries (SHI) will create jobs and boost the economy, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) Managing Director Mallam Habib Abdullahi has said.

    He praised the facility’s promoters for their contributions to the industry urging other investors to follow suit.

    The facility is located at the back of Lagos ports.

    Conducting the NPA boss round the facility, LADOL’s  Managing Director Dr Amy Jadesimi and the Managing Director of SHI-MCI, Mr Dong Seong Suh, said the  facility with a quay length of 520 metres, depth of 13.5 metres and heavy lifting area of 5,000 metric tonnes is designed to become  largest vessel fabrication and integration facility in Nigeria and Africa.

    The facility, Jadesimi said, would create 5,000 direct and 50,000 indirect jobs.

    The facility, she said, is the first fabrication and integration yard in Africa with an area of 121,000 square metres consisting of an assembling area, a painting shop, utility and warehouse area with a production capacity of 10, 000 metric tonnes.

    The project, on completion by October next year, the LADOL boss said, will be capable of fabricating 1,000 metric tonnes per month as well as integrating the Egina FPSO and other FPSO projects expected to be done in the country.

    She listed ongoing projects  to include a passenger terminal with an emergency response facility and the capacity to accommodate 1,000 passengers, which is due to be completed in 2017. She also spoke of an integrated quay wall with a built design of 13.5-metre draught and 500-metre long to be completed next year.

    Jadesinmi expressed appreciation to the management of NPA for its support and cooperation over the years, which she said, has given her company the opportunity it enjoys presently.

    Commending the joint project, Abdullahi  said he was happy not only as the MD of NPA, but as a Nigerian because of the huge investment within the LADOL Base in Lagos.

    The facility, the NPA boss said, would not only add value to the economy, but promote indigenous growth and provide stiff competition in the maritime and oil and gas industry.

    Abdullahi assured the promoters of the project that NPA will continue to provide security around the facility and give it all the necessary support to grow and boost the economy.

    “I am proud of this huge investment, not only as somebody representing the Nigerian Ports Authority, but as a Nigerian seeing other Nigerians promoting this kind of investment in our country.

    “The project is not only to be of great benefit to the NPA, but also to the economy. And I believe this is the type of investment any government will like to welcome. This project will provide more investment, generate employment, and will provide peace and security that will allow other investors to invest in our country.

    “I am very impressed what the LADOL MD said what we need to promote the economy is competition, collaboration, synergy, reconciliation if there is any and robust partnership that will serve as encouragement for others to come in.

    “ As the landlord, we will do all we can do to make sure that we give all the necessary encouragement not only to LADOL, but to other companies that are willing to invest in our country,” Abdullahi said.

    He also assured the company of the NPA’s  support and collaboration in the areas of security, pilotage, dredging and safe channels among others.

  • N600b Calabar-Katsina-Ala highway’ll boost economy

    N600b Calabar-Katsina-Ala highway’ll boost economy

    •President inaugurates 260-kilometre inter-state road

    President Muhammadu Buhari was yesterday at Obung Village, Netim Clam in Akampa Local Government Area of Cross River State to perform the ground-breaking for the construction of a 260-kilometre Super Highway to link Calabar, the Cross River State capital with the northern part of the country.

    The President expressed the Federal Government’s commitment to the speedy completion of the dual carriage highway within the scheduled five years.

    Besides exposing Cross River State to socio-economic opportunities, the project, when completed, will also attract patronage from Central Africa to the seaport in the Southsouth state.

    Buhari said: “When completed, this road, which starts from the seaport and terminates at the boundary between Cross River and Benue states will link the southern part of Nigeria to the Northcentral, the Northeast and ultimately, Central Africa.

    “This will, undoubtedly, expand the boundaries of our economy by providing countries such as Niger Republic and Chad access to the seaport.”

    He commended Governor Ben Ayade and his team for creating a new vista of business opportunities for the state and the country.

    Ayade’s colleagues from Imo and Akwa Ibom states , governors Rochas Okorocha and Udom Emanuel witnessed the ceremony.

    The super highway, which is an evacuation corridor from a deep seaport in Bakassi, is expected to shorten travel time between Calabar and Katsina-Ala from about six hours to one hour thirty minutes. Both projects – super highway and the sea port – are estimated to cost about N700 billion.

    Ayade listed the road’s special features to include: internet connectivity throughout the highway; a photographic solar system with a satellite antenna; and speed cameras.

    He said: “It is probably the first road to have anti-slip features on the highway, it is a digital road designed for the 21st century. This road is a 260km super highway; it’s an evacuation corridor from the seaport. It will have a track of 14 metres and a key wall of 680 metres that would allow for vessels from outside and every other vessel to berth. It will therefore provide an evacuation corridor for vessels, material and equipment lying in Calabar uniformly, effortlessly to Northern Nigeria.”

    With a take-off grant of 500 million Euros, the project will be financed by partners under a public-private-partnership (PPP) arrangement, the governor said.

    According to him, the project was borne out of a need to reduce dependence on federal allocation, consequent upon the loss of the state’s oil wells to neighbouring Akwa Ibom State and the ceding of the mineral-rich Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon.

    He said: “The state was reduced to wants in body and spirit. It became imperative that we need to construct a new means of production, we needed to open the horizon to get more young people employed.”

    Ayade urged his colleagues from Benue and Nasarawa states to key into the project and ensure that the roads spread over from Katsina-Ala.  He commended the President for shelving politics and putting national interest first in deciding to perform such a function in a state not controlled by the ruling the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “Given the circumstances of our nation and politics, Cross River State would not have been worthy of your first port of call. You have shown that you are truly the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” he said.

    The President, he noted, gave his support for the project from inception to ensure that the dream of the state becomes a reality.

     

  • Investment in agric ‘ll boost economy, says Belgore

    A former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Alfa Modibo Belgore, said increased public investment in commercial agriculture was one way out of Nigeria’s economic woes.

    Belgore stated this in an interview with journalists in IIorin.

    He urged governments at all levels to invest more in agriculture, to create more employment opportunities, thereby addressing unemployment which he described as a major economic challenge for the country.

    “By now, Nigerians ought to have embraced mechanised farming for job possibilities.’’

    Belgore condemned the high rate of rural-urban migration of farmers, saying that many of those farmers eventually become commercial motorcyclists in urban centres.

    He said both the Federal and state Governments needed to increase financial assistance to commercial and small-scale farmers, as well as provide storage facilities to guard against food wastage.

    He added that overcoming food insecurity in the country was hinged on the modernisation of farm storage facilities.

    On the political situation in the country, the former CJN said: “what Nigeria needs now is political stability and not political crisis.“

    With political stability, this country can be one of the leading economies in the world.