Tag: Economy

  • Firm, NOA hold dialogue on economy

    Synergos Nigeria and the National Orientation Agency (NOA) are partnering to organise a summit on ‘Youth using Ethnic Diversity for Agriculture Excellence’a foundation dialogue for a more inclusive and collaborative economy among younger Nigerians.

    The dialogue, which holds in Abuja tomorrow is coming at a time the nation has begun building the foundation of a diversified economy and shift of focus from oil-led exports to agriculture led growth as contained in the Economic Recovery Growth Plan 2017.

    Tagged: the Synergos Diversity Dialogue, the summit will be chaired by Peggy Dulany, Founder and Chair of Synergos as well as the Global Philanthropists Circle, she co-founded the latter in 2001.She has continued the tradition of her family and late father American philanthropist, David Rockefeller to ensure Bridging Leadership and Collaboration deliver inclusive economies for the Poor.

    Other guests at the summit are Maryam Uwais, Special Adviser to the President on Social Investment and Garba Abari of the National Orientation Agency. The event is facilitated by Synergos Nigeria, a non-profit organisation with focus on facilitating system changes and influencing sustainable development.

    Synergos Institute founded in 1986 is a global nonprofit organization that brings people together to solve complex problems of poverty and create opportunities for individuals and their communities to thrive. It was founded to promote collaboration among grassroots groups and government or business leaders and organizations, people who otherwise would not have access to each other, so that they can develop long-term relationships and forge new paths in overcoming poverty.

    Adewale Ajadi, head of Synergos Nigeria, explained that the organisation’s resolve to put together the summit was informed by the progress of Nigeria towards systemic improvement in Agriculture in which Diversity is a silent but critical player.

    Ajadi said: “This event is being organised to facilitate discussions on driving a truly inclusive economy through youth, particularly youth in agriculture.”

    Synergos in previous engagements have worked on bridging leadership gaps between Federal and State stakeholders, provided collaboration platforms to promote agribusiness in Kogi, Benue and Kaduna States and facilitated a systems-thinking approach to agriculture in Nigeria.

  • Battle to revive the economy

    We are winning the battle to revive the economy. We are fighting corruption like never before. We are tackling insecurity with renewed vigour. The bottom line is that as things continue to improve, Nigerians will begin to feel the impact in their daily lives.” – Lai Mohammed.

    It is just as well Lai Mohammed admitted that the battle to revive the economy is an ongoing enterprise. It is far from being won. He was honourable enough to also admit Nigerians are yet to feel the impact of government activities on their daily lives. But since ‘hope rises eternal in the human breast’, one can safely conclude that his, is a message of hope to his fellow compatriots, 70% of whom live below $1.3 a day as a result of betrayal by our successive leaders.

    This however is not to say that Buhari administration has not made some giant strides. We have seen evidence of this in the reduced threat to the territorial integrity of our nation and in the drive towards food sufficiency for our people. There is therefore no doubt as the minister rightly observed that “discerning and well-meaning Nigerians cannot but appreciate and encourage some of the good works of Buhari’s administration” against the backdrop of obstacles mounted on his path by his APC-dominated self-serving National Assembly, his warring kitchen cabinet members and his PDP detractors who see nepotism, selective anti-corruption crusade and drive to Islamise Nigeria in every policy thrust of his government.

    But I think the minister must not be allowed to get away with the wrong impression that it is only “the naysayers who engaged in past- time of acting as distraction” that are dissatisfied with Buhari and his APC government of change. Nigerians that invested so much in Buhari’s government of change want him not only to fulfil his promises on such issues as restructuring not only as an answer to our crisis of nationhood, but also as a response to periodic invasion of our villages by Fulani herdsmen and our urban centres by kidnappers and lawless street traders and restive groups canvassing for fiscal federalism.

    It is understandable if the minister is unrestrained in his celebration of what he perceived as the success of the Buhari administration’s anti-corruption crusade. The irony however is that what the government has been doing in the last two years is to attack the symptoms rather than the real cause of corruption which is the dysfunctional federal government that controls virtually everything including ‘residual powers’, the defining feature of a federal arrangement. What the Buhari administration has done in the name of fighting corruption therefore is running after common thieves who stole government funds. Paradoxically, ex-President Jonathan has said “stealing government funds is not corruption”. We may not agree with Goodluck Jonathan, but the truth of the matter is that common thieves, the targets of Buhari’s anti-corruption crusade, are not the source of our nightmare but the all-powerful dysfunctional federal centre.

    It was the might of a dysfunctional centre that General Babangida who called himself the evil genius exploited to set up the Technical Committee on Privatisation and Commercialisation (TCPC) with a decree in 1988.  Babangida thereafter went on to dispose off the following national assets: Assurance Bank, African Petroleum, Unipetrol, National Oil and Chemical Co. Plc, West African Portland Cement, Ashaka Cement, Northern Nigeria Cement, Nigeria Cement company,    Festac 1977 Hotel,   Nigerdock, Niger Insurance, Nigeria Re-insurance, Savannah Sugar, National Trucks Manufacturing, Electricity  Meter Company, Zaria, Hamdala Hotel and Federal Palace hotel  among many others.

    Similarly, Obasanjo who always like to play god hid under the might of the same dysfunctional centre to foist his 1999 Public Enterprises Privatisation and Commercialisation Act on the country in spite of opposition by many well informed Nigerians. Waving  aside opposition, his administration went on to sell off the following national assets: Delta Steel Company valued at $1.5 billion for $30m; NICON Insurance worth N6b but allegedly bought with fake MoU and fake cheques, Ajaokuta Steel Company valued at $1.5 billion but sold for $30 million, ALSCON valued at $3.2b but sold for $130m, Nigeria Re-Insurance Corp. worth N50b but sold for N1.5b (see Adamu Adamu: “BPE: Behind Closed doors”(Daily Trust,  August 12, 2011).

    The Senate Committee on the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) that probed the sales of federal government houses was also told of how a German firm, Hans Grenmly bought the Abuja Sheraton Hotel and Towers built at a whopping $300m in 1986 for a paltry $34m” and how “Sofitel Hotel (NICON Luxury Hotels) built with a German loan Of $139m in 1990 was bought by the federal government which it later sold off for $50m. (This Day, April 23 2008).

    Obasanjo’s monetisation policy finally paved the way for converting all GRAs in the country to private use by members of the ruling elite and the confiscation of Abuja houses including lawmakers’ residential quarters, Senate President’s mansion and other principal officers’ residential buildings, built with taxpayers’ money by bureaucrats, lawmakers and their fronts.

    As against manufacturing, most of those who confiscated our national assets embarked on asset stripping. They found it more profitable to import the labour of other societies while our own qualified children roam the streets. The PDP crooks who hijacked the dysfunctional centre introduced self- serving policies such as reduction of tariffs on imported finished products while increasing tariffs on raw materials to frustrate companies like Michelin and Dunlop out of the country. They gave themselves import tax waivers on luxury items such as state-of-the-art SUVs and bullet proof cars. Fake and substandard products continued to flood our markets in spite of billions of naira budgeted annually by our dysfunctional centre to protect our monitor our borders and protect our markets.

    The above acts of banditry by those who did not understand the policy thrust of our founding fathers that set up the industries and established the GRAs  rather than mere stealing of government funds by common thieves under Goodluck Jonathan, is responsible for massive unemployment, grinding poverty and  deaths from fake drugs and substandard vehicle parts at home and in the desert and on the Atlantic Ocean of thousands of Nigerian youths seeking greener pastures in Europe to escape grinding poverty at home.

    Nigerians believe President Buhari, like Vladimir Putin of Russia is uniquely favoured by history to address the source of our nightmare. Like Putin, Buhari enjoys the goodwill of many Nigerians. And like Putin, he has the strength of character to take on those who have continued to impoverish Nigerians after paying a paltry $1.6 to confiscate assets acquired according to El Rufai, the former BPE helmsman, between 1970 and 2008 at a cost of over $100b.

    If President Buhari in his current battle of reviving the economy, lacks the political will to adopt the Putin paradigm which forced those who, like our ruling class, confiscated Russian assets to cede the same back to the state, he can try the Obama option of spending state funds to keep sick companies afloat in order to create employment and encourage consumption. What we lose, we gain not only through employment of our youths, safety  of our motorists but also savings from billions our dysfunctional centre and the activities of federal institutions that have proved ineffective in protecting our country from influx of substandard goods.

  • Diversification has positioned economy for growth, says Dangote

    Diversification has positioned economy for growth, says Dangote

    The diversification agenda of the federal government has positioned the economy  for growth after exiting recession, the President of Dangote group, Alh. Aliko Dangote has said.

    Dangote said the group has been committed to diversification of the economy which is important as relying on one resource over others is wrong.

    Represented by the Executive Director, Shareholding and Corporate Communications, Engr Ahmed Monsur, he said his commitment to diverse economy is why it is in the extractive business like cement,sugar,salt,flour, agricultural products and recently into oil and gas.

    Dangote disclosed this yesterday at his Comany’s special day at the ongoing Lagos International Trade fair.

    He said: “We are committed to diversification as it is what the African society needs, to take our basic endowments and add value to it for economic growth as economic growth is a result of value addition.

    “ We are committed to working with the government to add value to every commodity from our brand which is why we are in 12 different countries in Africa and we are opening another branch in another country by next week”.

    He said their mission in the next five to ten years  is not only to be the largest brand in Africa but to be in the top 20 companies of the world.

    The LCCI president, Mrs Nike Akande, in her speech appreciated the  Dangote group for its commitment towards the growth of the economy through diversification.

    Akande said more efforts needed to be done by the government to provide conducive environment for trade so that the economy and the citizens can be the better for it.

    She commended  the government’s effort on the improvement of the nations position in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Ranking from 169 in 2016 to 145 in 2017.

  • Economy: The way forward

    The Nigeria of today is certainly not the Nigeria of 1960. Nigeria in 1960, had 15,703 primary schools with 2,912618 enrolled; 883 secondary schools with 135,364 enrolled; 29 vocational/technical educational institutions with 5037 enrolled; 315 teachers’ training institutes with 27,908 enrolled; and three colleges of technology, 1 (one) university college. Nigeria now has over 150 universities (NUC, 2017) and produces over 300,000 graduates in the year. So, the Nigerian educational system has grown tremendously in quantitative terms and has produced many educated/learned people. Nigerians have also been travelling abroad to virtually all nations to acquire education in various areas of knowledge. Nigerians have learnt a lot in about 57 years. Nigeria is a more knowledgeable nation than she was in 1960.

    Sadly, Nigerian politicians have not changed; indeed they are worse than they were in 1960. This article, in response to the article, ‘Positioning Nigeria for prosperous future,’ written by Minister of Finance Kemi Adeosun, and published in various national dailies, explains why the political group called PDP which ruled Nigeria in the period 1999-2015, could not fix the Nigerian economy and promote democratization, and why the APC which has been ruling the nation since 2015 also cannot fix the economy and promote democratization. The article also suggests how Nigeria can promote rapid industrialization and save Nigeria.

    Nigeria needs political parties because the political groups in Nigeria remain political machines and political machines who seize power. President Dwight Eisenhower (1956) of the United States, reflecting on the issue of a political party, said, a political party deserves the approbation American, only as it represents the ideals, the aspirations and the hopes of Americans. If it is anything less, it is merely a conspiracy to seize power. About 20 years later, Daniel Boorstin (1973), American historian, again reflecting on the issue of a political party, said, a political party is organized for a purpose larger than its own survival; a political machine exists for its own sake, its primary purpose is survival. I agree with President Eisenhower and Boorstin.

    Political groups in Nigeria do not represent the ideals, the aspirations and hopes of Nigerians; they exist for their members. Politicians at the local government, state and federal levels get into government and become very rich people in three months. Despite the millions of barrels of crude petroleum sold daily for over six decades so far, over 70 per cent of Nigerians are very poor. Nigerian governments tell long stories and claim that the nation is doing well. They would not accept the well-known bases for assessing the performance of a government – the state of the economy measured by the levels of employment, productivity and inflation, and peace and harmony. Also, Nigerian political machines would not accept globally accepted reports like the UNDP Human Development Report, because they would clearly reveal that they are political machines and conspiracies with no plans to develop Nigeria. They would rather cling to the reports of obscure bodies like Fitch and deceive the ignorant people that Nigeria is rated BB-, BC+; Nigeria has the highest GDP growth in Africa that will trickle down one day; Nigeria built roads and bridges, dams; etc.!

    Political machines connive with foreigners to deceive the ignorant people to adopt programmes which though have beautiful names, lack growth elements and do not promote growth and development. Nigeria adopted the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) in 1986 when the military government of Ibrahim Babangida was ruling the nation. All governments, including PDP and APC governments since 1986 have continued to implement SAP. That is, PDP implemented SAP in the period 1999-2015. The APC has been implementing SAP since May 2015. SAP has three principal elements. They are, 1) the mandatory foreign exchange market (FEM), 2) the sale of public enterprise and liquid assets to the rich nationals and foreigners and 3) adoption of deregulation (laissez-faire economics or market economic philosophy or profit consideration, individualism) as the basis for assessing the performance of public projects and activities. African SAPs were introduced to Nigeria and other African nations in the 1980s by the World Bank and IMF.

    The original document (Bellow, 1986) claimed that the Nigerian SAP has four main objectives. They are to: 1) restructure and diversify the productive base of the economy, 2) achieve fiscal stability and positive balance of payment, 3) set the basis for a sustained balanced non-inflationary or minimal inflationary growth, and 4) reduce the dominance of unproductive investments in the public sector. However, the analysis of the Nigerian SAP in the book entitled, “Understanding why Privatisation is promoting unemployment and poverty and delaying industrialization in Africa (Ogbimi, 2007), showed that the Nigerian SAP lacks growth elements and could not achieve any of its claimed objectives. SAP is merely promoting unemployment and poverty and delaying industrialization. Consequently, SAP has completely sapped and destroyed the Nigerian economy and impoverished the people. All that is left of Nigeria is a sapped majority of people and a destroyed Naira. There are also a few economists, accountants, bankers, lawyers, others in government and business who do not understand the science needed for increasing productivity and transforming an agricultural economy into an industrialized one, daily repeating the financial clichés associated with SAP and the stock market.

    An important warning to every Nigerian is pertinent here. Margaret Thatcher, a former Prime Minister of Britain, once said that to destroy a nation, you first destroy her national currency. She was speaking in relation to the experience of Germany when the nation implemented the German SAP 1919-1923. Germany lost WW I in 1918 as the leader of the Axis powers. The Allied powers demanded $33b from Germany as war reparations. Germany could not pay. The Germans were forced to implement the German SAP principally characterized by the mandatory forex market (FEM). The German Mark exchanged 4.2 units to the US$1 in 1919. In 1920, 63 Mark exchanged for one dollar. The Mark further depreciated in 1921; it exchanged 200 units to the dollar. The Mark depreciated catastrophically in 1922; it exchanged 2000 units to the dollar. In 1923, the Mark collapsed; it exchanged 4.2 trillion units to the dollar and stopped being a national currency. (Stolper, et al.,1967; and Glahe,1977).

    The Germans and Germany were seriously humiliated. But the strong will of the Germans saved them. They abandoned SAP in 1923 and printed another currency, reverting the exchange rate to 4.2 units to the dollar.

    Nigeria’s planning has always been devoid of growth elements. What Nigeria needs is industrialization, not privatization, not mere erection of infrastructure to attract foreign investments, not entrepreneurs. Industrialization is promoted through learning – education and training. The Nigerian economy has been stagnating hence it is experiencing mass unemployment. Stagnation is the problem (disease), mass unemployment is the symptom of the disease. Only mass training and mass employment can link the educational sector with the rest of the economy, enable our educated youths acquire complementary practical skills, promote rapid competence-building growth and  industrialization to save the Nigeria of today. Industrialization is the only solution to poverty in a nation.

    • Prof Ogbimi writes from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife.
  • “Industrialisation driving our economy”

    Akwa Ibom State government said it has intensified efforts at making the state economy robust and resilient.

    Speaking with The Nation, its Commissioner for Information & Strategy, Mr. Charles Udoh, said the state has set up more industries in order to allow more inflow of Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) and create more jobs for the people.

    He described the state as a “huge work station” in reference to the various infrastructure development and industries springing up in several parts of the state.

    Udoh also said the inauguration of syringe and metering industries, as well as other key projects initiated by the current administration in addition to massive investments in agriculture has created opportunities for the economic prosperity of the state and employment opportunities.

    “Beyond the businesses that are on ground, we are also working on a cattle ranch. We have an agreement with an investor from Mexico, who is going to bring in 2,000 herds of cattle into the ranch once it is ready.

    With the ranch on ground, we will have a milk processing factory in addition to hosting a yoghurt processing factory including the value chain,” Udoh said.

    Elaborating more on the state’s industrialisation policy, he said the toothpick and pencil factories established by Governor Udom Emmanuel are producing over 15,000 kilo grammes of toothpick and 20,000 pencils within few hours of production.

    The state, Udoh further said, was putting in place infrastructure to attract foreign investors as opportunity exists in building a gas fired thermal power plant in the state.

    “There is an opportunity to build a gas fired thermal power plant designed to generate 500 megawatts of electricity into the national grid. Akwa Ibom State has the largest reserves of oil and gas in Nigeria. Any power generated is guaranteed to be purchased by the Federal Government. It is also possible to generate for a secluded area (captive power). The gas required to power the plants in abundance,” he said.

    While also noting that there were abundant rubber trees in the Akwa Ibom/Cross River belt, Udoh said an opportunity also exist for the setting up of a tire manufacturing plant.

    According to him, all vehicle tyres used in Nigeria are currently imported. He added that with a population of over 180 million, vehicles plying Nigeria roads are estimated to be in the region of 30 million, conservatively.

    On the governor’s performance, the commissioner said: “In just two years in office, Governor Emmanuel has implemented several people oriented socio-economic programmes and projects, which have catapulted Akwa Ibom State into the premier league of states in Nigeria.

    He said the state governor was building on the foundation laid by his predecessors, while leading the state on the path of economic prosperity anchored on sustainable development.

    He added that the current administration’s cardinal objective was to transform the state into an industrial hub, a preferred destination for tourism and a major food basket.

    “The success level recorded was accentuated in a recent report of the Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics, which listed Akwa Ibom as the second best FDI destination in the country for the year 2016,” Udoh said.

  • Economy on bailout mode

    How can anyone go to bed and sleep soundly when workers have not been paid their salaries for months? I actually wonder how the workers feed their families, pay their rents and even pay school fees for their children.’

    That was President Muhammadu Buhari at a parley with a group of governors led by the chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum, Abdul’Aziz Yari, at the State House, Abuja last week. If the statement was meant to convey the President’s frustration with the fiscal crisis ravaging the states – the crisis that has hobbled their capacity to meet their obligations to their workers – it would appear that his presidency either misdiagnosed the ailment, or rather conveniently, substituted placebo for an organic therapy.

    To the extent that neither option comes near to being a way out of the problem, the least that can be said is that it does not bode well for an administration known to stake much claims to change.

    One takes it that the President meant well. Otherwise he wouldn’t have called out the club of governors. However, if after two cycles of bailout and another two rounds of Paris Club refunds, the situation in almost all states have neither changed in any appreciable sense nor their future any assured than it was before the intervention, the only conclusion left is that the bailout instrument hasn’t quite worked the magic. Whereas the report of death by suicide, of the 54-year-old Kogi State civil servant Edward Soje over an alleged 11 months’ salary arrears merely drives home the horror of the current situation far beyond the daily statistics reeled out on the countless casualties – either of pensioners collapsing at verification venues or of those still in active service succumbing to the same fate on their way to work – could have ever done, we must acknowledge that a solution is not even yet on sight!

    To state therefore that the fiscal crisis has since moved from being an epidemic to something of a pandemic is merely stating the obvious. With the exception of the federal government, the Federal Capital City administration and half a dozen out of the 36 states, it continues to be a story of insolvency writ large. The blame game of course has not been in short supply with most commentators, almost without exception, instinctively laying the blame exclusively on the laps of the governors most of whom are accused of not only run their states as personal fiefdoms, but live extravagantly, totally oblivious of their environment. This of course is aside the now familiar charge of lacking the creative imagination required for such a time like this. And so it goes on that the governors that having begged for the job should not be indulged since they knew what they were getting into.

    The governors’ job, as I once wrote on this page, has suddenly become the most hazardous job in the world! Did I hear someone say – serves them right?

    Again, like I said before, those who believe the grandstanding and the lie about the federal government being a model in fiscal rectitude are obviously entitled to their delusion. A central government which rakes a whopping 54 percent of the federally collectible revenue and yet maintains a recurring cycle of deficit budgeting on the scale that we have seen has no business lecturing the states on their handling of finances.

    Clearly, if it seems incongruous that the same outsized government would go sourcing for nearly a third of the funds required to execute its 2017 budget from the international financial markets, consider also that a single federal agency – the Nigerian Ports Authority –actually proposes to spend N278 billion out of its projected N288 billion revenue – some 96 percent leaving a paltry N10 for the federation account for 2017. How about that as a window into the swamp described as the federal bureaucracy?

    The figure, by the way, is more than the Ogun State budget of N221 billion; Borno’s N183 billion and Enugu’s N105 billion for the same period – without the accompanying bureaucracy.  We are talking here of the budget of a single agency of the federal government under the supervision of a board exceeding those of state governments for the entire year! Consider also for instance, that in 2016, NPA’s revenue was N201,146,319,843, out of which N174,009,312,695, representing 86 per cent, was expended according to the Senate. NPA is not alone in this; the same could be said of other agencies. Ever heard of the bureaucracy’s cart driving the nation’s development horse?

    The other day, yours truly had raised the question of where the Paris Club funds were kept all this while. I raised the question because it takes an economy run on patriarchal, paternalistic lines to have the kind of trillions being announced as Paris Club refunds warehoused somewhere and the governors of the owner-states subjected to the daily taunting, humiliation and ridicule such as we have seen of late. Surely, nothing can be more ironical that a federal government on a borrowing binge purporting to teach a bunch of insolvent states fiscal rectitude. Only a country where different standards behaviour is expected of different grades of actors in the system can such be contemplated.

    Having put the economy on bailout mode, one assumes that the President has sufficient grasp of its staid arithmetic to be able to pronounce authoritatively not just about its place in the nation’s political economy but in restoring the states to sound financial health. With 50 percent of the Paris Club refund left to share, the president obviously need not worry about availability since the funds are already in the kitty. And now with the Excess Crude Account (ECA) reportedly hitting $2.31billion in September, working on Plan B can expectedly begin in earnest.  After all, the governors have spoken. And so citizens can look forward to another cycle of Paris Club naira rain.

    Trust me; the Parisian cash rain would be far less troubling to the anaemic states; for sure, it allows the governors to kick the problem down the road while sparing them the rigour of effective governance. You can bet that the option would be just as attractive to the benevolent federal government who needn’t bother about either shedding its bloated weight let alone be called to answer for the 54 percent unearned and undeserved share from the piggy bank.

    As it was in the very beginning, so shall it be. A terrible cycle – that is.

  • Stockbrokers push for innovative finance, technology to boost economy

    Stockbrokers have identified innovative financial services and products and technology-driven processes as major enablers for the development of the Nigerian capital market and the economy.

    Stockbrokers have thus resolved to bring the issues of rapid changes in technology  and product innovation into the mainstream of national discourse as the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS) begins preparations to mark its Silver Jubilee.

    Stockbrokers have also endorsed privatization of moribund enterprises as a way of boosting their efficiency and attracting private sector participation .

    At a media briefing on the annual conference of stockbrokers scheduled for November 16th and 17th, 2017, Chairman, Annual Conference Committee, Mrs Lilian Olubi said that the conference had been packaged to help deepen the market and expand the professional knowledge of the dealing members.

    According to her, as one of the most prestigious professional bodies in the Nigerian financial industry, stockbrokers have, again, sought to elevate the all-important debate of financial market development at their conference with the aim of charting a course forward on policy alternatives.

    “This is reflected in our theme for this year’s edition titled, “Adapting to Dynamic Changes in the Financial Market”. Our choice of this year’s theme was informed by the marked rapid pace of innovations in the economy and capital markets, which require operators – both dealing members and the investing public, to keep abreast of these developments in order to make informed choices,” Olubi said.

    She noted that as businesses seek for alternative ways to raise capital and investors look to further diversify their portfolios from traditional assets, it has become imperative to encourage innovation of financial products.

    She added that the stockbrokers’ conference would be discussing options and strategies for deepening of our local market through introduction of new products’ such as derivatives, commodities, sukuk and alternative assets.

    “Introduction of new products will help deepen the market and expand professional knowledge on diverse investments products, thus encouraging more foreign investors’ participation whilst also developing our finance professionals. Also, advancement of technology in finance profession has become imperative in improving investors’ experience and supporting efficiency drive of stockbrokers,” Olubi said.

    Corroborating her, the CIS’ First Vice President, Mr Tunde Amolegbe assured participants that top government functionaries would participate in the conference.

    Responding to a question, a member of the Organizing Committee, Mr Akeem Oyewale explained that Nigeria’s economy was ripe for trading in derivatives.

    According to him, Nigeria is a large market which largely depends on mono product pointing out that the economy needed to invest in capacity building in order to cope with the challenges of the global economy.

    Another member of the Organising Committee, Mohammed Garuba advised the investors to take advantage of Investment opportunities in the Capital Market in order to enhance their Returns On Investment (ROI)

    Speaking further, Olubi stated that the Nigerian capital market had a lot of potentials for deepening in terms of investment products and private sector participation.

    “Privatisation of public entities which helps to improve their efficiency, will also aid the objective of boosting private sector participation in the capital markets through primary market issuances for debt and equity securities.  Upon highlighting these various topics, it becomes imperative to discuss them extensively to ensure continual development of the Nigerian Capital Market. We have a cream of notable speakers to do justice to the topics,” Olubi said.

  • Stanbic IBTC: economy on recovery path with ERGP

    Stanbic IBTC: economy on recovery path with ERGP

    Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc, said with diligent execution and policy consistency, the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) has the capacity to steer the country to full economic recovery, sustainable growth and development.

    ERGP was unveiled in April this year as a short-to-long term (2017 to  2020) blueprint to lift the country out of recession and to the path of inclusive growth and development.

    Key goals of the blueprint include macro-economic stability, incremental improvements in national productivity and sustainable diversification of production in such areas as agriculture, energy and medium and small enterprises, as well as manufacturing and services.

    The attainment of these goals underscored the theme of the 23rd Nigerian Economic Summit in Abuja – “Opportunities, Productivity and Employment.” Speaking on the sidelines at the Summit, Stanbic IBTC Holdings Chief Executive,   Yinka Sanni, said practically every sector of the Nigerian economy is endowed with huge potential, which when adequately harnessed would trigger exponential development of the country.

  • Finance Ministry, CBN chart way forward for economy

    Finance Ministry, CBN chart way forward for economy

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Ministry of Finance are collaborating to ensure that the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth of 0.55 per cent which brought the country out of recession is sustained. Raising the government’s revenue base through taxation and sustaining banking sector stability through strong regulations are key in keeping the economy on track. Finance Minister Mrs Kemi Adeosun and CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele used the 2017 International Monetary Fund (IMF)/World Bank Annual Meetings in Washington D.C to take the message of tax reforms and banking sector stability to the global market. SIMEON EBULU and COLLINS NWEZE, just back from the meeting, report.

    The Nigerian economy finally pulled out of recession in the second quarter with 0.55 per cent Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth which many pundits described as fragile.

    The Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) are taking new measures  to deepen the growth in the economy. At this year’s International Monetary Fund (IMF)/World Bank Annual Meetings in Washington D.C, both institutions discussed with international investors on the need to invest in the economy.

    Finance Minister  Kemi Adeosun hold several bilateral meetings with foreign investors and the rating agencies on developments in the Nigerian economy.

    The minister discussed the need to enhance the capacity of  the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and International Finance Corporation (IFC) to meet their obligations of supporting the financing needs of clients and preventing a slowdown in lending. Mrs Adeosun said the institutions were also advised to stop retrenchment from riskier markets and avoid decline in equity commitments at this critical time when the institutions are required to step up their support.

    She said the World Bank Group management was urged to come up with a comprehensive package that will make the global lender ‘a bigger and better bank’.

    “At the meetings where I spoke on behalf of Angola, Nigeria and South Africa, I urged the international community particularly the Bretton Wood Institutions to change the narrative on Africa which always portray the continent as Low Income Countries. Indeed, there are some Middle Income Countries  represented by this constituency and so there is the need for the bank to deploy instruments, policies and programmes that will address the peculiar needs of these countries,” she said.

    Diaspora loans

    Also speaking, Emefiele said the apex bank is trying to encourage Nigerians in Diaspora to keep remitting funds to their people at home, and also invest in the country, saying Nigerians in Diaspora do not have any other place they can call home but Nigeria. Nigerians in Diaspora remit $21 billion yearly to the local economy.

    “We will put in place policies that will continue to encourage them. We are working on how we can actually link credit bureau arrangement to the foreign borrowing arrangement so that once there is a link between Nigeria and the foreign credit system, it will be easy for them to even borrow from Nigeria,” he promised.

    The CBN chief said the apex bank is also working out plans to ensure that Nigerians in Diaspora get  some form of attachments to the credit system that they have abroad, either in the United States (U.S) or United Kingdom (UK). That, he said, will make it easy for them to access credit and begin to build their businesses, so that when they retire, they retire back into Nigeria, and they do not retire in Diaspora.

    Forex stability

    Emefiele said current fundamentals show there is a lot of stability in the foreign exchange market. He explained that with exchange rate having come down from high to the level it is now, fluctuating between N359/N365 to a dollar, is a good development compared to where it was coming from.

    He said that as the foreign reserves get stronger, and economic fundamentals get stronger, there is no doubt that the naira will get stronger and there will be more appreciation in the currency.

    Emefiele said the banking system remains stable, and is facing no threats. He said the CBN will continue to focus on the banking system to ensure there is no significant destabilisation, because anything that destablises the banking system will have adverse impact on the economy.

    He said: “We are keeping our eyes on the banking system to ensure there are no significant threats that will alter the strategic health of the banking system, to the point where we have to think about things that will create problems for the economy.

    “What we are doing is that no bank should fail in our jurisdiction, whether you are small. What we are trying to do is to make sure we have strong prudentials that will continue to guide them be it capital. That will ensure that the banks remain strategically healthy, to be able to perform the responsibility and roles they are to play in the economy to achieve growth and development.

    “There is a lot of attention on the banking system again, to the point that we are saying that there are certain banks in certain jurisdiction that are too big to fail, and indeed in every jurisdiction. From our view, we are saying no bank should fail in our environment, whether you are big or small. What we would continue to do is to see to it that we put in place strong prudentials that will continue to guide them.”

    He said the CBN would put in place structures to continue to strengthen and ensure banks remain strategically healthy to be able to perform the roles and responsibilities they are supposed to play in an economy so as to achieve growth and development in that economy.

    The luxury tax planned by the Federal Government is being finalised now, because it cuts across the ECOWAS. There are legal processes you must go through, including the customs union to actually vary the specific taxes.

    Taxation

    On taxation, Adeosun said revenues are needed to provide public services and the burden of taxation must be borne by those whose income allows them to bear it.

    “So, those with higher income should bear greater part of the burden. The problem with Nigeria is that most of our taxpayers are at the lower level. The man on the streets passing traffic, his tax is deducted at source. Why will we not allow billionaires to proportionately pay their taxes? I think we need a mind-set change on taxation in Nigeria. So far, we are encouraged by the response of those companies and individuals to this tax amnesty,” she added.

    Speaking further, she said government’s tax amnesty policy was on track. “We’re on track. We expect that at the end of the timeline, everybody will rush and we will raise significant money. We have every reason to believe that this tax mobilisation effort will work and hopefully bring long-term money,” she said.

    IMF’s Director of African Department, Abebe Selassie, said Nigeria needs new policy on taxation given its very low level of revenue mobilisation capabilities. He said the Fund is already providing tax guidance to the country. He insisted that whatever decision Nigeria takes on tax reforms, has to be backed by the National Assembly.

    Selassie said the Ministry of Finance has identified quite a few steps that can be taken by way of tax administration, improving tax administration, making sure that people are paying the taxes that they meant to be paid.

    “Whatever decision the Federal Government takes on adjusting the tax policy, it has to consult the National Assembly. The IMF has provided a lot of support, technical assistance support and policy advice in this area.

    “But our guess is that there also is going to be need for tax policy changes for Nigeria, which has a very, very low level of revenue mobilisation to improve that. These resources are needed to help strengthen the infrastructure environment in Nigeria, to help invest in the many schools that have to be built and improve health delivery.

    “Now, in terms of designing tax policy changes there is a way to do it, and indeed we advise countries and provide technical assistance on how to do this in a way that is progressive.  So, you know, the taxes are collected from people that are rich, the richer segments of society rather than the poor.  So, there is a lot of technical work that can be done to do that.”

    The IMFF Director said the decision ultimately on these tax policy changes will be the government’s and it’s of course parliament that will ultimately take the decision, but we’ve been providing a lot of support, technical assistance support and policy advice in this area.

    “And again, I cannot stress, the key, again, remains that, you know, Nigeria, we feel needs to do a lot more investments both in infrastructure, and in human capital investment,” he said.

    Selassie said developing plans and models or reform strategies that are specific to Nigeria’s specific needs at this venture are important.

    “On agriculture, given how big the size of the Nigerian economy is and given the potential that it has including an agriculture as it’s used to in the past, it is a sector that should be doing much better.  On the macro side, I think what is needed in Nigeria at this moment are mobilising more revenues.  I think that is important to help the government invest more in health and education and building infrastructure that is going to be important for other sectors like agriculture, manufacturing to take off,” he said.

    According to him, without energy, it’s difficult to have higher productivity activities to take place  in agriculture.

    “Addressing the energy issue, requires a lot more public investment and so, the revenue mobilisation angle being important. But on the fiscal side, there is also a need to further improve the allocation of foreign exchange systems, there has been a strong improvement in that.  But I think just creating liquid and deep foreign exchange markets, financing the reforms that have been taking place in the last couple of months is going to be important,” he said.

    The economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa is recovering at a modest pace, and is projected to pick up to 2.4 per cent in 2017 from 1.3 per cent in 2016, according to the new Africa’s Pulse, a bi-annual analysis of the state of African economies conducted by the World Bank.This is below the April forecast of 2.6 per cent.

    World Bank Chief Economist for Africa, Albert Zeufack said that in the second quarter of this year, Nigeria pulled out of a five-quarter recession and South Africa emerged from two consecutive quarters of negative growth. Improving global conditions, including rising energy and metals prices and increased capital inflows, have helped support the recovery in regional growth. However, the report warns that the pace of the recovery remains sluggish and will be insufficient to lift per capita income in 2017.

    He said growth continues to be multispeed across the region. In non-resource intensive countries such as Ethiopia and Senegal, growth remains broadly stable supported by infrastructure investments and increased crop production. In metal exporting countries, an increase in output and investment in the mining sector amid rising metals prices has enabled a rebound in activity.

    Headline inflation slowed across the region in 2017 amid stable exchange rates and slowing food price inflation due to higher food production. Fiscal deficits have narrowed, but continue to be high, as fiscal adjustment measures remain partial. As a result, government debt remains elevated. Across the region, additional efforts are needed to address revenue shortfalls and contain spending to improve fiscal balances.

  • Blue economy, electricity supply, others dominate economic summit

    Blue economy, electricity supply, others dominate economic summit

    The 23rd Nigerian Economic summit has come and gone. But the issues at the summit, such as blue economy, agriculture and others, must be taken serious by the Federal government for its diversification drive to make meaning, writes NDUKA CHIEJINA.

    Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) Director-General Dr. Dakuku Peterside hit the nail on the head at the 23rd Nigerian Economic summit. The time to take advantage of the oceans and boost the economy was now, the NIMASA chief said at the summit with the theme “Opportunities, Productivity and Employment: Actualising the Economy Recovery and Growth Plan”.

    Peterside thus urged Nigerians to key into the opportunities afforded by the Blue economy, which he stated, is the fastest growing sector in the world with enormous business potentials. He added that with the length of the nation’s coastline and the attendant volume of maritime trade, Nigeria is at an advantage of developing the blue economy and stakeholders have to actively participate to reap the benefits of the sector.

    According to Dr. Peterside, “developing the blue economy is paramount across the globe now, and the public and private sector have to collaborate to sustainably harness the potentials of our maritime sector for the benefit of the Nigerian economy, especially as the Federal Government continues the economic diversification drive”.

    The NIMASA DG also stated that economies of Singapore, Ukraine and South Korea thrive on the activities of their maritime sector.

    He further suggested that with improved maintenance culture, adequate data management and statistics as well as articulated actions from stakeholders backed up with  political will, Nigeria will be a leading light in the comity of maritime nations.

    Dr Peterside advocated synergy within stakeholders stating that the Agency with the support of the Federal Government is working assiduously to ensure that Nigerians reap the benefits that abound the sector. He pointed out that the newly approved maritime security architecture will effectively reduce piracy and other related sea crimes.

    For the chairman of the United Bank for Africa (UBA), Mr. Tony Elumelu, the country must resolve its electricity supply challenge for the economic diversification drive to make sense. He suggested that the Federal Government should reconsider the ownership structure of Electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) with a view to taking over controlling shares of the firms.

    Elumelu, who is also the Chairman of Heirs Holding, said: “In as much as some existing investors might not like the idea, the Federal Government could not continue to allow the Discos hold the nation down with inefficient power distribution.”

    His solution to the epileptic  power supply in the country is the “recapitalisation of the Discos and then increase its stake from the current 49 per cent to 51 per cent and sell the controlling stakes to new investors, as the current operators have become obstacles to the realisation of the nation’s power capacity goal.”

    Elumelu added: “Our people are very enterprising and they want to succeed. But they need the right environment to succeed. I appreciate what the government is doing for electricity but we need to do more.  I empathise with the government on its efforts in that sector. But Mr. Vice President, I think there is a lot we can do to correct the ownership of that sector without affecting the property rights of the investors.  That sector must be dealt with it for us to have power to do business.

    “Government, with over N700 billion provided.  In a few months time, that will be exhausted. The market should be able to sustain itself.  This is what I think.  The government has to take actions that will ensure the adequate funding of the operations of the Discos.

    “Mr. V.P, I know some of the operators in this sector will not like this.  This is my idea.  We cannot reverse what has been done.  But we can creatively address what has been done.

    “If government to my understanding, has 49 per cent of the Discos and the private companies have 51. Can we ask these companies to recapitalise.  Let the FG recapitalise.  They will not be able to put in more capital.  So the federal government through the Federal Ministry of Finance Incorporated should increase federal government holding.

    “Then post recapitalisation, the Federal Government sells its controlling shares to new investors who have the financial wherewithal to properly finance the operations of the Discos.  This is important because in a situation where current operators don’t have the funds to run them, if the federal government wants to sell its shares in the discos, investors who should have brought in their capital won’t come in if the controlling shares continue to remain with the current operators.

    “When this is done, then we can have new investors who can come in and run the Discos efficiently.  It doesn’t matter where they come from but they should be investors who have the financial capacity and tested expertise to manage the distribution segment of the sector in such a way that they can deliver effective service.”

    As if addressing the concerns over poor electricity supply, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo said the National Electricity Regulatory Commission would this month issue directives on independent metering.

    He said: “The eligible customer regime allows a willing seller, willing buyer arrangements in the sale of power. While the independent metering directive allows independent entities aside from registered power distribution companies to sell and install meters to customers and be paid directly as collections are made from metered customers.”

    This, he said, will break the distribution gridlock and there is good cause to believe that we will achieve the 10,000MW envisaged in the ERGP.”

    Osinbajo’s emphasis at the summit was how to improve the ease of doing business in Nigeria. He said the Federal Government has resolved to dismantle ‘institutional hurdles’ towards smooth business operations in the country.

    He assured the business community that the incidence of multiple Customs checkpoints, especially on the eastern axis, would be looked into to create a conducive investment climate in the country.

    The Vice-President said government received several reports from concerned Nigerians “who describe the checkpoints as inimical to growth and development.”

    Osinbajo also revealed plans “to dismantle all clearance bottlenecks at sea and airport borders to ensure quick facilitation, while government will implement reforms at the National Agency for Foods Drugs and Administration Control (NAFDAC) and the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to make their operations quicker and more orderly”.

    The Vice-President lamented that “our budget for this year is about N7 trillion. That is not enough to address all the infrastructure challenges we have and that is why we will always partner with the private sector to address them.”

    He said the Buhari administration remained committed to partnering with the private sector to address the country’s infrastructure shortfall.

    Osinbajo said: “Foreign exchange reserves have risen to about $33 billion and end users have increased access to foreign exchange partly due mainly to increased export earnings and remittances as well as the introduction of a dedicated transparent window for Investors and Exporters (NAFEX).”

    The results, he said, “have been encouraging as the inflows of capital in the second quarter of 2017 of about $1.8 billion were almost double the amount of $908 million imported in the first quarter of the year.”

    On the concerns of high interest rate, Osinbajo said the government is “concerned as most of you are, with the very high interest rates and of course most of that have to do with government borrowing. Since the evidence points to a crowding out of the private sector, the Federal Government is reducing its demand for domestic paper and will seek to refinance maturing domestic debt with longer tenor and cheaper external borrowing”.

    “Intervention funds will continue to be made available through the Bank of Industry, and repositioned NEXIM and Bank of Agriculture and the newly established Development Bank of Nigeria,” the vice-president said.

    Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma stated that “to get out of recession required our refocusing the economy from reliance on crude oil to enhancing non-oil revenues, and the non-oil economy. In short, we had to quicken the process of changing from a mono-culture economy to a diversified, competitive economy, in which we grow what we eat and consume what we make.”

    Some of these initiatives, he said, “have contributed to the second quarter performance numbers recently released by the National Bureau of Statistics which indicate that, after five quarters of contraction, we have now recorded a small growth of .55 per cent.”

    The Chairman, Board of Directors of Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), Kyari Bukar, said the support of governors for businesses was critical to growing the economy.

    “Every business,” he said “is a tenant of a State and we believe that our advocacy for a more globally competitive environment must not be limited to the Federal Government. The NESG is increasing its focus on state governments that are willing to dialogue with us to address competitiveness and the ease of doing business at the sub-national level.”

    Udoma expressed government’s commitment to the faithful implementation of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) 2017 – 2020 that was launched by President Muhammadu Buhari on April 5.

    The minister said the Buhari administration has demonstrated clear commitments to working with the private sector through the recent concession of some nation’s airports and other policy interventions to provide a favourable environment for their business operations in Nigeria.

    He also said government was focused on making the Nigerian economy globally competitive and more diversified away from its mono-economic structure, hence working with the private sector would be the surest way to achieve such objective faster.

    Udoma said: “Government is committed to faithful implementation of the ERGP by ensuring that our annual budget aligns with the priorities of the ERGP and also special monitoring units have been planned in all MDAs to ensure effective implementation.”

    He called on the private sector to work towards strengthening the ERGP Implementation Strategy and contribute towards its effective implementation.

    The minister revealed that as part of efforts to grow the economy, next year’s budget would soon be ready for vetting by the National Assembly. The Executive, he said, has concluded plans to submit the 2018 budget to the National Assembly before the end of this month.

    The Minister of State for Budget and National Planning, Hajia Zainab Mohammed, who spoke on Udoma’s behalf at a news conference to mark the end of the summit.

    Hajia Mohammed said the prepared 2018 budget would be presented to the President shortly for the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approval before transmission to the National Assembly.

    “We are working closely with the legislature. We want to ensure the budget is passed in December so that it starts to work from January 2018,” she said.

    She said she was optimistic that the 2018 budget would be passed in time to meet the January commencement of the fiscal year as planned.

    Speaking on the power sector tariff crisis, Hajia Mohammed stated that “it is clear no new investor will come without tidying the issue of tariff adjustment. They insist the current tariff is not sustainable but the new tariff will be a joint agreement with all stakeholders.”

    The Federal Government, she said, “will carry out another privatisation exercise for the power sector because what we sought to achieve by the previous privatisation has not been achieved. It has not worked well.”

    She added: “Government is still a shareholder in the current arrangement and so we want to call all existing stakeholders to the table and agree on way forward. We will agree on the level of shareholding and other issues so that this power issue can be addressed once and for all.”

    Power, she said, “is key to economic development and it is something the government is determined to ensure it works.”

    On private sector players’ worry that government heavy local borrowing has crippled banks’ ability to lend to them, the minister said: “The government will reduce local borrowing for private sector to get adequate credit to operate.”

    On the successful execution of the government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), she said: “We will review them and we have said the functional economic laboratories will be set up across the country in two weeks from now. We are not waiting for months. It is part of the recommendations.”

    On bills pending before the National Assembly, which if passed will accelerate economic growth, Hajia Mohammed said: “There are pending bills and we always try to carry out economic impact on them. For instance, the Competition Bill has the capacity to create 381,000 jobs annually, generate revenue of N148.3 billion yearly. It will also lead to a 10 per cent reduction in price of goods.

    “For the National Transportation Commission Bill, it will also boost job creation and government revenue”.

    Stakeholders will sure be on the look out to see if the deliberations at the summit will be put to use in the days to come.