Tag: Economy

  • Book on shared economy unveiled

    A book “Future is Shared” has been launched in Lagos.

    Written by Bayo Adekanmbi, an with Executive of MTN, the book reveals the new business frontier, particularly from an emerging market perspective.

    The book style explores the transformational leverage of connected abundance,  made possible by crowd-based socio-capitalism concepts, such as crowdfunding, crowdsourcing, access economy, on-demand economy and collaborative economy.

    “The correlation is that the success of this business model is inextricably linked to the richness and broadness of data,” said the author, adding that the book focuses on ‘dataconomy’ businesses, such as Uber, and Airbnb.

    Adekambi said: “Data is the oil that fuels the sharing economy.’’

    He said the book also reveals how they rely on the use of data to profile, incentivise, match-make, predict risk, quantify value and distribute opportunities on a real-time basis.

    The book reviewer, Mr. Bismarck Rewane, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Financial Derivatives, who recommending the book said: “I have read The Future is Shared by this prolific intellectual and I recommend it to all entrepreneurs, leaders, thinkers and pioneers. Reading this book will equip several interest groups to come to terms with an ever changing business environment that is finally channelling its focus to a concept that has been in existence for a long time, the concept of sharing!”

    The People Who Share founder and one of the top three global authorities on Sharing Economy, Benita Matofska, said: ”This is an important and comprehensive book that examines the opportunities and potential of the Sharing Economy to transform, not only Africa, but the developing world at large. Bayo, I’m sure, will be seen as a leading light, inspiring and enabling the Sharing Economy in Africa.”

  • 2017: It’s the economy, stupid!

    It is a constant rite of passage. At the dawn of every new year, there is that vibrant and infectious burst of hope of better things to come. Humanity – maybe with few, if indeed any exception – forges a rare unanimity in resurgent optimism; and regardless of varied and, for most parts, disappointing experiences in the preceding year, there is that unanimous mood swing towards keen expectations of bliss in the incoming year.

    Experience shows though that it is a vicious cycle: from high mode in excited hope, to bottom-out in failed expectations, and back to high mode in resurgent optimism. This happens year after year. But it has never been a sufficient factor to dissuade humankind from the almost naive rebound of hope that resonates in the exuberant goodwill we mutually share as we wish one another ‘Happy New Year!’ In that celebratory spirit, I hasten here to wish you, dear reader, a Happy New Year in 2017.

    Rituals apart, it seems apparent enough that the prevailing mood in Nigeria this year just isn’t as boisterous as it used to be in a season as this. If you interrogate the ambience, you would find there is a subdued cheer in the land this New Year; and if I may hazard a guess, I would say the subdued mood has to do with some trepidation many Nigerians feel about general prospects of the national economy in the incoming year.

    Not that this new year isn’t pregnant with promises of better things as all new years have always been. Among others, we have the word of President Muhammadu Buhari that the Federal Government’s 2017 budget plan will send the recession currently plaguing the Nigerian economy on terminal recess in the course of the year. As I recall, the President said that much when he presented the budget proposals to the National Assembly in December.

    And that promise has been amplified by Information Minister Lai Mohammed, who in the closing days of December praised Nigerians for their perseverance and understanding in 2016 and urged them to look forward to better times in 2017. “We give thanks to God that we are alive. By the grace of God, next year will be much easier. 2016 has not been a particularly easy year even for governance because the economy has not done as well as we thought it would. This is not because of incompetence on the part of government, but because of the general global slowdown that affected commodity prices,” the minister told journalists at a Yuletide programme staged at the State House, Alausa, by the Lagos State Government.

    Well, I am sure many Nigerians earnestly look forward to the promised better times in 2017, because the economy put the majority through living hell last year. The bitter experiences left a nasty aftertaste that rankles deep in the polity, and possibly explains the subdued cheer in the land over the dawning of a new year. Besides, critical indices as at the close of last year weren’t exactly bright, with the exchange rate of the naira sliding further and inflation running riot in the economy amidst severe strictures in general cash flow.

    The year 2016 was not all doom and gloom and apologists would want the success stories acknowledged, and you really can’t argue against that in good conscience. The epic war on corruption was waged relentlessly by the present administration despite some faltering steps, and the military under Buhari’s leadership made indisputably giant strides in the battle against Boko Haram insurgents. Even on the economy front, the drying up of foreign exchange resource compelled backward integration that has boosted local content in certain sectors, including agriculture. All that is readily granted. But the prevailing experience in 2016 was an unprecedented hardship that left the bulk of citizens in acute distress.

    That is why if anything matters at all for Nigeria in 2017, it’s the economy, stupid! (Just so we are clear about it, that slogan is a popular variation of the phrase ‘The economy, stupid’, which James Carville coined as a strategist for Bill Clinton’s successful campaign against sitting President George H. W. Bush in 1992. Carville’s coinage was meant for Clinton’s campaign workers as one of the three messages to focus on, the other two messages being ‘Change vs. more of the same’ and ‘Don’t forget health care.’) The recession pangs were intensely suffocating in the just ended year, and many citizens are gasping for life-saving breath even now.

    I live on Main Street with the people and I can relate a few experiences from there. Both government and private businesses were stiffed by the short supply in cash flow in 2016, and part of the fallouts were job losses that piled high in the course of the year, making the impact of the 200,000 n-power jobs the Federal Government flaunted in employment creation very tame. As for those who managed to keep their regular jobs, many had to live with delayed / withheld payments or downrightly slashed wages; and those were in the face of a drastic slump in cash value amidst runaway inflation that the Federal Office of Statistics (FoS) reckoned above 18 per cent.

    Epileptic power infrastructure, high cost of fuel and persisting scarcity of forex, among other things, combined to compound the rouge inflation, such that the local economy turned predatory as producers and service providers readily passed on their mounting overheads to increasingly cash-strapped end-users. If you asked me, the most scary dimension was easily the spiralling cost of drugs, which compelled some citizens to shun conventional medicare at a grave risk to their lives.

    A seemingly settled disposition of some state governments compounded the woes for citizens in their workforces. Some state governments appear to have settled for abdication of their moral as well as constitutional responsibility to pay their workers’ salaries that are due. Now, perish the thought of bonuses! And neither are pensions being paid to elderly citizens who are retirees. Those affected are left by employer-governments to sink or sulk in the predatory economy, even though many state governors never seemed to lack resources for ego trips and vanity fairs.

    Bothered by the trend, President Buhari late in December requested state governors to use the refund made to them from excess deductions for external debt service to settle outstanding emoluments of workers. He recently approved a refund of N552.74billion to state governments arising from their claim that they were overcharged in deductions for external debt service between 1995 and 2002. The states received 25 percent of the respective sum approved for them mid-December, and the President only requested that the money be used for workers’ wages. In a directive through Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun, he admonished that the issue of outstanding workers’ benefits, particularly salaries and pensions, be tackled with urgency and not allowed to continue as a national problem. Soon after he assumed office in 2015, President Buhari had declared an emergency over unpaid salaries when it was found that 27 out of the country’s 36 states were behind in payment – in some cases for up to a year. It was on that account the Federal Government has twice issued them bailout funds.

    It is doubtful though that many of the affected state governments are equally concerned for the workers’ welfare, because much of those emoluments remain unpaid by some state governments even now. But that is what you get when a country’s Labour movement is dead. Forget the palpitations you see in relentless factional in-fighting and sporadic but lame pronouncements by Labour leaders on disparate concerns and at discordant times, the Labour movement in Nigeria is DEAD.

  • UAC boss advises workers on economy

    UAC boss advises workers on economy

    UAC Nigeria Plc Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Mr. Larry Ettah has urged the management and workers of the conglomerate not to allow widespread predictions of a gloomy end of year to dampen their zeal to enjoy the yuletide.

    He gave the advice in his 2016 Christmas message to workers, enjoining them to be guided by the conduct of Jesus Christ, whose life epitomised love, humility, steadfastness and grace.

    “In times past, Christmas was another barometer for gauging the economy. Whatever may be the situation in which we mirror our current situation and gauge the mood of our polity, we cannot deny the significance of the season; we cannot afford to surrender to hopelessness.

    “Christmas will not and should not lose its essence because some of us will not be merry; the season speaks more to our spirituality than to our physicality,” Ettah said.

    He urged the workers to reflect on their contribution to the group’s performance in the outgoing year and resolve to do more to ensure increased customer engagement and continuing relevance of the business and its brands.

    He said it was only by looking at the bright side that workers could inspire and elevate one another to push UACN Nigeria Plc to achieve more at a time that other players in the economy are narrowly focused on doomsday predictions.

    Ettah explained that the group’s third quarter results, which had been released much earlier for the nine months ended 30 September, demonstrated the resilience of UACN’s business and the effectiveness of its strategy in a very difficult operating environment.

    The group financial highlights showed that turnover was up from N55 billion in September 2015 to N57.7 billion in September 2016, representing five per cent year on year top line growth.

    Other highlights of the nine-month performance in 2016 showed that the company, in comparative terms with 2015, recorded a Gross Profit of N12.5 billion, up two per cent from N12.2 billion in September 2015; other Income of N1.8 billion, up 92 per cent from N933 million September 2015 and Profit Before Tax (PBT) hit N6.3 billion, up 27 per cent from N4.95 billion in September 2015.

    “To maintain the tempo and ensure that the progress is not unhinged in the challenging circumstances ahead, we must innovate, we must experiment and we must stamp out waste from our systems and processes,” Ettah said.

    He added: “UACN Nigeria Plc should be among the pioneers to explore new pockets of ‘blue oceans’ for business growth and sustainability in these hard times.”

  • Fed Govt’s $29.9b planned loan okay to reflate economy, says Gbajabiamila

    Fed Govt’s $29.9b planned loan okay to reflate economy, says Gbajabiamila

    The plan of the government to borrow $ 29.9 billion is necessary for the country to come out of recession, the Leader of the House, Femi Gbajabiamila has said.

    Speaking while giving reporters the end of year report on the activities  of House of Representatives for 2016, the House Leader said the reason this administration is seeking such quantum of funds for infrastructure is because of the foundation laid by the previous regime.

    According to him the borrowing plan is specific and targeted and necessary to pull the country out of recession and reflate the economy.

    Giving reason why the Buhari administration is borrowing despite the country’s exit from the Paris Club of creditors during the government of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, he said: “I’m glad you mentioned Obasanjo. But you forget that between Obasanjo and this government, there was another government that served for six, eight years or however long and I believe and unfortunately I must say it, they brought us to this sorry state that we are in today.

    “It is what this government found on ground that informed the quantum and the nature of the borrowing they have to undertake. Now to get out of this recession and the sorry state we have found ourselves, I don’t think we can do it without borrowing.

    “Borrowing is necessary, United States, England, Germany they all borrow Borrowing it is an essential feature of democracy especially when you’re running a deficit budget.

    “For now, the borrowing is necessary to pump into the system to inflate activity in the economy, diversify the economy, theres a lot of things we need money for and if the country is not making money, like we used to we have to borrow money.”

    The lawmaker said “former President Obasanjo was able to come to an agreement to exit the Paris club because we were making money”

    He said the country is still within the borrowing regulations as relates to the nation’s GDP.

    On the possibility of increasing the salary of worker particularly in the face of soaring inflation and biting recession, he admitted that salaries at present “are very low,” and that “something has to be done about it.”

    He added: “The House is a House of the people and it will never back away from any move to increase salaries of worker. That is the reason we’re here, weather government or private workers, we’re here because of the people. And i for one and I believe a lot of our members, if and when the issue comes on the floor, I doubt if there will be a dissenting  voice.

    “And we will begin to,look at that viz- a- viz inflation and unemployment

    “Personally, I believe wages are too low as we stand and i think something has to be done about it. And I think the House will be proactive in making that move.”

    On legislation by the 8th House in the past one year, the House Leader said:

    “In the last 12 months, a total of 551 Bills were introduced in the House for the first time with 64 cases of consolidation of several Bills addressing similar issues. Five of the Bills were negatived (not passed) while only 179 passed for second reading and 47 Bills successfully passed by the House in the year 2016.”

  • MMM, evidence of no confidence in economy

    Their celebrations were notoriously short-lived. The streets of Banjul have gone quiet now and citizens of The Gambia, who had erupted in spontaneous jubilation three weeks ago when their despotic ruler was overrun in an election, have retreated into their shells in mournful silence. With Yahya Jammeh’s recant of his concession of defeat to real estate developer, Adama Barrow, the West African country is effectively staring into the abyss.

    Barrow is the Gambian president-in-waiting, while the global community prospects for ways to egg Jammeh out of power. The opposition candidate’s victory in the recent poll in that country makes his ultimate coronation assured, and has invariably drawn the terminal line on Jammeh’s 22-year authoritarian run in power. But Jammeh has lately doubled down on clinging to the reins and won’t let go easily.

    Indications at the weekend were that the Gambian crisis was approaching a head. Barrow was reported revving up to enact the country’s version of ‘Epetedo declaration,’ whereby he would unilaterally pronounce himself substantive president. Nigeria once travelled that troubled road with democracy hero and uninstalled winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, the late Chief Moshood Abiola; and it was a five-year odyssey punctuated with the martyrdom of Abiola and some others, plus the exile and imprisonment of many more through diktats by hardened military strongman, Gen. Sani Abacha. You could say the portents in The Gambia are indeed more dire, because Jammeh is notoriously loathsome of political challenge, disdainful of human rights and free expression, and hot fingered on gun triggers.

    It has been one long journey down democracy road for The Gambia, making the citizens exultant with the promise of a new dawn when Jammeh was handed a shock defeat in the country’s December 1 presidential election. By official scoreline, Barrow won with 263,515 votes to Jammeh’s 212,099 votes. “Having received 263,515 votes of the total votes cast in the election, I hereby declare Adama Barrow duly elected to serve as president of the Republic of Gambia,” Alieu Momarr Njie, chairman of the country’s Independent Electoral Commission had pronounced in Banjul, the capital, penultimate Friday.

    For a country where the recent election offered opportunity for the first change of leadership since a military coup led by Jammeh ousted pioneer president Dawda Jawara in 1994, and the first time that power would change hands by popular election since Independence from Britain in 1965, the news of Barrow’s victory had prompted thousands of Gambians to take to the streets of Banjul in celebration – some on foot and others riding in cars, trucks and on motorbikes – leaving soldiers cultured in Jammeh’s repressive ways palpably confused as they stood by. Many Gambians were reported to have stayed up all night, listening to radio and tallying the vote count by themselves as the figures were being announced at constituency levels. That way, they had a headstart on the likely outcome even before the electoral commission made its call.

    The outcome eventually disproved Jammeh who had exuded confidence, saying his victory was all but assured by God and predicting “the biggest landslide in the history of the country” after he voted on Election Day. But the Gambian ruler had nonetheless aided the public’s euphoria on the heels of the ballot count with his early concession of defeat. Speaking on state television before the electoral commission called the final tally, he acknowledged that the people “have decided that I should take the back seat,” and congratulated Barrow for his “clear victory,” adding: “I wish him all the best and I wish all Gambians the best.”

    Affirming that he would not contest the result because “as a true Muslim who believes in the almighty Allah, I will never question Allah’s decision,” Jammeh had said: “If he (Barrow) wants to work with us, I have no problem with that. I will help him work towards the transition.” Following his pronouncements, the Gambian military leadership congratulated Barrow and pledged the institution’s allegiance to him.

    But the Gambian ruler, only a few days later, lived up to his mercuric reputation by rejecting the same poll results he had unreservedly endorsed. “After a thorough investigation, I have decided to reject the outcome of the recent election. I lament serious and unacceptable abnormalities which reportedly transpired during the electoral process,” he returned to say on state television. Suggesting that the present electoral commission was beholden to the influence of unnamed foreign powers, he added: “I recommend fresh and transparent elections which will be officiated by a God-fearing and independent electoral commission.”

    Meanwhile the military appear to have withdrawn their pledge of allegiance to a Barrow government and have reverted to being tools of repression in Jammeh’s hands. The electoral commission rooted for the scoreline it had declared in Barrow’s favour and soon came under Jammeh’s sleigh of hand – with soldiers taking over its offices last Tuesday. “The military came to my office and said I am not to touch anything and told me to leave,” the electoral commission’s chair, Njie, told reporters, adding: “I am worried for my safety.” Among others, outgoing United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon described the occupation of the commission’s offices as an “outrageous act of disrespect of the will of the Gambian people and defiance towards the international community.”

    Either by design or by coincidence, the soldiers’ raid on the electoral commission took place as some Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) leaders were arriving in Banjul to press Jammeh on relinquishing power. The delegation, headed by chairperson of the Authority of Heads of State of ECOWAS and Liberian President, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, also included Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari, his Sierra Leone counterpart, Ernest Bai Koroma, and outgoing Ghanaian President John Mahama. But it seemed like they made little headway with their mission: “We come to help Gambians find their way through a transition. That’s not something that can happen in one day,” Johnson-Sirleaf was reported telling journalists.

    Under The Gambia’s laws, Jammeh has until January 18 to conclude the transition processes and hand over power to the winner of the December 1 election. But Jammeh’s party, the ruling Alliance for Patriotic Reconciliation and Construction (APRC), has lodged a challenge against Barrow’s victory at the country’s Supreme Court; only that the legal challenge is unworkable as things are, because that court has been dormant since May 2015 when Jammeh sacked its justices.

    Opposition politicians voiced a concern that Jammeh could insist on clinging to power while the legal challenge pends before the Supreme Court. To meet the January 18 deadline, he would need to appoint as many as six judges to the court; but the Bar Association has warned that any appointment of judges by Jammeh to adjudicate a case involving him would be fundamentally unjust.

    Without the judiciary’s intervention, the electoral commission has the last word in Barrow’s favour on the presidential poll. The chairman, Njie, underscored this last week by saying: “The only way they can pursue the commission is through the court, and there is no court.”

    By all accounts, the time is effectively up for Jammeh in the Gambian presidency and he must leave power at once. Even before the latest poll, his claim on the presidency from four previous elections he purportedly won had been dubious, and he had only steered his country and himself deeper into international isolation. But Barrow’s victory in the recent election puts a final nail on all that.

    There have been suggestions that Jammeh might have backtracked on his concession of defeat out of a dread of what awaits him at the hands of the opposition government when it takes power. If that were so, the Charles Taylor abdication model could be helpful in easing him out of Banjul.

    Barrow (is) revving up to enact the country’s version of ‘Epetedo declaration,’ whereby he would unilaterally prono IR: I woke up recently to a call from a friend, asking me to join a Ponzi scheme which will enable me have my money multiplied without stressý. Fortunately, his explanation wasn’t convincing enough; more than that, I realised that ours is a country whose financial system is so weak that no citizen has 100% confidence in the system.

    MMM, like other Ponzi schemes, only took advantage of a weak system where lending rate is more that interest rate. Many customers complain everyday about illegal charges from banks, but like in a typical capitalist system, only minority decides and enforces its decision on the poor majority. Nothing is so disappointing as seeing a bank post N1:06k as interest rate on one’s account while deducting N4:00k as charge for sending the message which means that you pay back for an interest rate that adds nothing to your personal account. As if this is enough, we also have the maintenance “this and that” charges, ATM card charges for using other banks, VAT and all other deductions, which are just unbearable.

    Recently, we saw a discord between the minister of finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun and Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Emefiele, over the lending rate. The latter obviously favoured banks more than their customers  even at the risk of discouraging manufacturers and entrepreneurs. The question is how can you convince Nigerians to believe in you than the Ponzi schemes?

    The Bank of Industry (BOI) has been battling with a proposed scrapping by the legislators and you think Nigerians won’t rather face the darkness that may bring light at the end of the tunnel rather than a light that leads to nowhere?

    Most countries where these Ponzi schemes have worked are under-developed with an economy that doesn’t have the people’s confidence. My opinion is the same with that of the masses: it’s not too late to get a working team to make the economy healthy so that people wouldn’t be planning to reap more from nowhere.

     

    • Eniola Opeyemi,

    Oyo State.

    unce himself substantive president

  • ‘APC’ll revamp Ondo economy’

    ‘APC’ll revamp Ondo economy’

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday said Governor-elect Rotimi Akeredolu will revamp the state’s economy when he assumes office on February 24.

    Civil servants are owed salaries and pensioners are also facing hardship as a result of unpaid pensions and gratuities.

    The party, in a statement by its Director of Media and Publicity, Steve Otaloro, said Akeredolu would be looking into how to salvage the situation.

    According to the statement, the strategies being mapped out by the economic team constituted and headed by the governor-elect would rescue the state from collapse.

    It pointed out that Akeredolu would not be relying solely on funds from the Federation Account, adding that there are plans to truly diversify the state’s economy with agriculture as one of the targeted sectors.

    “The governor-elect would be working on strengthening the APC to ensure that the party’s political ideologies are entrenched and applied in designing and implementing the various people-oriented programmes.”

  • Real sector: Why economy’s growth engine is faltering

    Real sector: Why economy’s growth engine is faltering

    The consensus is that the economy must be diversified from oil to manufacturing and agriculture, which experts believe make up the real sector. They are the economy’s growth engine because of their linkages to other sectors. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports that  efforts at leveraging a vibrant real sector to reboot the economy bruised by recession have continued to be undermined by faulty fiscal and monetary policies and dearth of infrastructure. 

    With a compelling and deep insight into the economy, particularly the real sector, Mazi Sam Ohuabunwa is arguably, one of the respected voices in the private sector. The former Neimeth International Pharmaceuticals Plc President/Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Starteam Consult Managing Consultant recently drew manufacturers’ attention to what he called “frightening trends” in the economy. He left no one in doubt that the nation’s economic woes are far from being over and that the country may not exit recession soon as expected.

    Ohuabunwa’s ‘frank talk’ was in his presentation a fortnight ago at the 49th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the local chapter of Manufacturers’ Association of Nigeria (MAN) in Ikeja, Lagos.

    In the paper titled: “Vibrant, diversified economy: Panacea to economic recovery”, Ohuabunwa raised the alarm that all the indices and parameters that measure the health of the economy look bleak.

    According to him, the unfriendly exchange and interest rates, inflation and unemployment rates, erratic power supply among others, were indicative of more turbulence ahead for real sector operators.

    Ohuabunwa, who was a one-time Chairman of the Nigeria Economic Summit Group (NESG), pointed out that inflation and interest rates have risen to as high as 18.3 per cent and 14.00 per cent.  The exchange rate of the naira to the dollar stood at N310/$1 at the official market and N475/$1 at the parallel market.

    Besides, the unemployment rate rose from 12.1 per cent in the first quarter of the year to 13.3 per cent by the end of the second quarter, according to National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). These negative indices, Ohuabunwa noted, have resulted to increased poverty and misery, with the nation’s Misery Index standing at 49.5 per cent.

    Misery Index, according to development experts, is a measure of the economic well-being of citizens in a specified economy. It is computed by taking the unemployment rate and the inflation rate for a given period.

    An increasing index means a worsening economic climate for the economy in question, and vice versa. Nigeria’s Misery Index stood at 47.7 per cent as at August, the NBS stated.

    Ohuabunwa said that with the current 49.5 per cent,   Nigeria ranks fourth on the world’s most miserable country scale.

    The disturbing trends, according to experts, were preceded by market contraction due to decline in consumer purchasing power; declining corporate sales and profitability; increasing delinquency in meeting obligations, otherwise called credit defaults.

    Also, corporate atrophy, morbidity and mortality were high, just as Nigeria lost her global competitiveness, occupying 169th position out of 189 countries captured on the Ease of Doing Business Index.

    Ohuabunwa brought these realities nearer home when he said: “The economy remains in dire straits. If you are not losing your job, your salary is late in coming (some many months); if you are not closing your factory or business, your sales and profitability have dropped     significantly.

    “If you are a house wife, your feeding allowance can no longer allow you any allowance to manoeuvre. Nobody is exempted from the effects of the recession.”

    Blaming the present disturbing trends on the crash in oil prices, he said passing through this turbulent path cannot be the best of times of a country that is dependent on mono economy.

    “But, we have never come this low in about 27 years” , Ohuabunwa added.

    He warned that Nigeria we may recede further into depression if the authorities failed to initiate serious to curtail the trend.

    The former NESG chief urged those in charge of fiscal and monetary policies to come up with sensible policies to return the nation to a state of macro-economic stability, arguing that a regime of macro-economic stability and supportive infrastructure would be viable options to galvanise the real sector, which comprises manufacturing and agriculture.

    Experts argued that since Nigeria anchored her hope of driving economic growth and development through diversification on the real sector, a stable macro-economic stability would give impetus to the sector. They, however, noted that this could only be possible through a robust monetary policy.

    The thinking is that the prevailing harsh macro-economic environment was caused by the nation’s wrong monetary policy framework; that an economy cannot stand without the right monetary policy framework.

     How faulty monetary policy hurt operators

    For long, real sector operators have been screaming blue murder over the monetary authorities’ failure to initiate a robust monetary policy regime. Some of them argued that the situation hurt them by eroding their competitiveness.

    Putting the situation in perspective, an analyst, Mr. Henry Boyo, said: “The pillar of any economy is monetary policy and the pillar of monetary policy is interest, inflation and exchange rates. When you get those ones right like in countries, you will fix the economy.”

    Boyo, like a lone voice in the wilderness, had been crusading that high interest rate was making it impossible for the real sector to grow and high inflation rate was the main driver of poverty.

    According to him, in most advanced economies in the world, the interest rate is below two per cent. The exchange rate remains stable for many years and the cost of funds below two per cent.

    “Diversification does not rain from heaven; it’s created by a structure and the structure that drives diversification whether it is agriculture, manufacturing or transport is stable monetary policy,” Boyo told The Nation, insisting that interest rate must be at a level that will make it possible for manufacturers and commercial farmers to borrow money at one or two per cent.

    He also said that exchange rate must be such that industrialists, who import raw materials from abroad do not wake up to find out that their costs are increasing on a daily basis, making them uncompetitive.

    Describing diversification as not a new concept and reminding that Nigeria tried to diversify during the military era, Boyo warned that the efforts being directed at diversification would not work because “you cannot expect the real sector, which is normally the driver of the economy, to be vibrant if there is no demand. Industrialists will not do anything when cost of funds is as high as over 20 per cent.”

    He said that fixing the economy is not rocket science; that a robust monetary policy to address the challenge of excess liquidity in the system would put the economy on the right track.

    Boyo blamed unacceptably high inflation rate, high cost of funds and high interest rates on excess money supply into the system.

    Boyo got a backer in Ohuabunwa, who said: “Exchange rate, interest rate and inflation rate can all be moderated by sensible and coordinated policies. Investment flows preferentially to macro-economic stable environment that actually seek, welcome and reward investors.”

    Although, it is not in doubt that crashing oil prices was the main cause of the present disturbing trends as earlier pointed out, Boyo blamed the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). He accused the apex bank of being responsible for the nation’s excess liquidity crisis.

    He said CBN’s conscious, deliberate and misguided payment arrangement that unilaterally substitutes naira allocations for dollar-derived revenue result in market imbalance, which ultimately weakens the naira exchange rate.

    Boyo said that CBN’s monetary policies aggravate the level of inflation in the country. According to him, by substituting naira allocations for dollar-derived revenues, the bank unleashes hundreds of billions of fresh naira inflow into the coffers of commercial banks.

    Insisting that the excess cash in the system has less goods and services to contend with, the expert explained that the resultant market imbalance drives higher prices and fuel inflation.

    Boyo noted that with rising inflation, incomes buy less goods and services. Even higher incomes buy less because of the rising general price level.

    He suggested that the CBN must stop the obnoxious payment policy and in its place, adopt the use of dollar certificates or coupons (strictly not cash) for payment of monthly allocations to the three tiers of government.

    Boyo said that instead of getting dollar from the government and substituting it with naira, the CBN should give the certificates to beneficiaries, who would go to banks to change the certificate into naira.

    According to him, using the dollar certificate will bring down interest, inflation and exchange rates.

    “It (the use of dollar certificates) has so many ramifications, and the earlier it is adopted, the better”, Boyo said, adding that many of the nation’s economic challenges were self-inflicted and can therefore, be solved with the application of standard and established models.

     Agric sector also hit

    The disequilibrium in the macro-economy caused by the nation’s unstable policy environment is also hurting the agric sector, identified as the other component of the real sector and which is believed to hold promises of turning economic fortunes around.

    Like manufacturers, prospective investors in commercial agriculture lack access to capital. Where they do, the high interest rate remains a discouraging factor.

    “It has never been easy to borrow money in Nigeria from the banks”, Ohuabunwa lamented, recalling that in the past, several funding initiatives were opened by the Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Development and the CBN at single digit interest rate.

    He, however, regretted that the ease with which the facilities were accessed by the applicants became an issue and that those who benefit more from the initiatives are usually emergency farmers and fly-by-night businessmen.

    The Nation learnt that lack of access to capital that is friendly to agriculture has been a pain in the neck of farmers wishing to invest in equipment to process their harvest through value addition to ensure preservation and higher returns.

    “Most of our agriculture exports are mere commodities with little value addition, which makes them easily susceptible to global market price volatility”, Ohuabunwa confirmed.

    According to him, many agriculture enthusiasts have had their fingers burnt by watching their harvest spoil and lose value before they could not get off-takers. He recommended single-minded focus on manufacturing-production through value addition as the best way of out of recession.

    But Nigeria’s quest to leverage agriculture to grow and diversify the economy has never been this tough and lack-luster. Experts recalled that Nigeria made significant progress in positioning agriculture to galvanise the economy during the stewardship of former for African Development Bank (AfDB) President Akinwunmi Adesina held the forte as Agriculture & Rural Development Minister.

    They recalled that apart from pursuing several initiatives captured under the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA), it was during his time that agriculture was being projected as a serious business, not a vocation.

    “Visible efforts were made to show that agriculture is not a business for the old, women and the uneducated, but for young people as well. A crop of young people called Nagropreneurs were born and showcased,” an expert who preferred anonymity said.

    ATA may have lost steam under the current administration due partly to the recession, Adesina’s successor, Chief Audu Obge spoke passionately about repositioning the sector. The consensus of operators has been that the new attempt to turn around the fortunes of agriculture must be built on the platforms and successes already achieved if it must yield the desired result.

    They expressed the belief that given the urgent need to ride on the back of agriculture to diversify and steer the economy out of recession, Nigeria does not have the luxury to reinvent the wheel.

    Insufficient resources

    The new thinking struck the right chord in the ears of Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode. He recently took the campaign to revolutionalise agriculture to the doorstep of corporate organisations.

    Ambode, who was on a courtesy visit to Nigerian Breweries (NB) Plc, advocated agriculture and backward integration by corporate entities as a way of revitalising the local economy.

    He said agriculture, which was once the mainstay of the economy, would only thrive with the encouragement of backward integration by not just the government, but by corporate bodies, such as Nigerian Breweries has been doing through its sorghum and cassava value chains.

    The governor said: “With the thousands of jobs you have created through your sorghum and cassava value chains, it is clear that we can use agriculture and backward integration to revive and reflate this economy. We would like to partner with you in this regard to increase employment in Nigeria.”

    But, will Ambode’s colleagues join the push to reposition agriculture? Will the corporate bodies heed the clarion call? What about the Federal Government through Ogbe, on whose table the buck stops? Will the government demonstrate the political will to give the minister’s “Green Alternative Agriculture Promotion Policy” the necessary push?

    With answers to the above questions remaining in the realm of conjecture, the consensus of experts is that government, for a start, the government must address the land tenure system and the ease of getting land for commercial agriculture.

    Besides, the dearth of extension services, appropriate technology and expertise, which are in short supply, must be resolved and the availability of seed stock, fast-maturing species and access to affordable fertilizer, among others, must be accorded attention.

    An accountant, Mr. Omooba Olumuyiwa Sosanya, added: “Nigeria must start having farm settlements in the local government areas and we can specialise on crops each of the states has comparative advantage in.”

    He told The Nation that with the introduction of agricultural marketing board that will buy the goods from the farm settlements and sell at subsidised prices to the market, “you are not only creating employments, but creating wealth, because most of our graduates will be employed.”

  • TUC urges govt to save economy

    The Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) has called on Federal Government to do its best to bail  the economy from recession, noting  that with a healthy economy, Nigerian youths would have better choices.

    This was said by the Lagos State Chairman of TUC, Azeez Ogunremi during industrial relations lecture tagged: “Transformational Leadership and Organising The Unorganised’ put together by the Congress.

    He stated that the high rate of unemployment could be tackled with the  improvement in the economy.

    According to him, ‘’Unemployment in Nigeria is a big issue. Those who are employed do not know what will happen tomorrow. There is no way we can solve unemployment without addressing the economy of the country. If the economy is okay, there will be employment opportunities.  The government should make it a priority to improve the economy. Labour is to work for the survival of the organisation.

    “For us we want to educate our labour leaders to know what to do at the right time and doing the right thing. Some companies have folded up today. The purpose of this workshop is to enlighten our labour leaders on how to organise the unorganised.”

    The State Controller, Ministry of Labour and Employment, Mr. Olawale Shado said, “the issue of union recognition is statutory. In psychology, we have two types of employers. We have some with unity frame of reference and others with paternity frame of reference. For the paternity frame of reference, they are employers who believe that they are fathers to the workers. And you know in our culture, the child is not in the position to challenge the father. They don’t want to share decision with their workers.

    “For the one with unity frame of reference,  this type of employer is ready to embrace union and ready to share decisions with the employees. On the practical aspect, some employers feel that when there is a union in place, radicalism and confrontation will come into place, and their job will be threatened. Like I mentioned earlier, an employer has no choice when it comes to the issue of union recognition because it is constitutional and statutory. As  far as the law as concerned, the law is very clear on this.”

    The National President, Association of Senior Staff of Banks and Insurance and Financial Institutions, Mrs. Oyinkan Olasanoye, said the increasing rate of casualisation in companies had made it necessary to train labour leaders on how to negotiate conditions of service.

    She said: “We realised that over the years that there are so more casual workers than the full time workers.  The difference between these workers is the irregularity in their conditions of service. We felt that the only way we can assist them to have a regular condition of service and dignity of labour is when we try as much as possible to organise them. The lecture is  a way of telling our members why we need to organise the unorganised”

    The Managing Consultant, Alz Trust Limited, Mr. Austin Okoro, addressed the theme, “Transformational leadership and organising the unorganised.

  • Consult widely, reflate economy, Emzor chief advises Buhari

    The Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, Emzor Pharmaceutical Group, Mrs. Stella Okoli, has advised President Muhammadu Buhari to adopt a multi-pronged approach in tackling the economic recession ravaging the country.
    These will include consulting widely across various sectors, strategising and spending to reflate the economy.
    Speaking with The Nation,at the weekend in Lagos, she said if a business entity was allowed to run out of cash, it would die, arguing that when an economy does not have money, people suffer. Therefore, she said, the government must spend to reflate the economy.
    Shelauded the anti-graft war of Buhari and advised that the recovered funds be channeled to the productive sector, infrastructure, and research and development because these are areas that can reinvigorate the economy.
    Okoli, also the Vice president of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), said though the challenges confronting the sector were daunting, the youth should be involved in manufacturing. She noted that on the flip side, all levels of government, including corporate organisations and non-governmental organisations (NGOs), have crucial roles to play in supporting and encouraging youths who may have passion for manufacturing.
    “We have many talented young people in Nigeria. Look at the Aba made shoes young Nigerians are producing; they are of good quality. We can encourage this kind of entrepreneurship. If our youth have access to regular power supply and loan, they will achieve a lot because they are gifted. Training should also be provided for them on how to improve the quality and packaging of their products. The various regulatory agencies should work with them to ensure their products are of excellent quality,” she said.
    The MAN chief said the government should create industrial parks across the country to serve as a base for talented youths to draw assistance to set up cottage industries.
    She recalled that the regime of former President Olusegun Obasanjo made a pledge to let out a wing of the now abandoned Federal Secretariat Complex in Ikoyi for use as an ICT Park. Sadly, she said, several years after, that property is still lying fallow, wasting away.
    “My advice to our youth is that they should not be discouraged to the extent of burying their passion for entrepreneurship on account of recession. They should forge ahead and they will succeed and help lift the country out of recession,” she said.

  • 2017 Budget will take Nigeria out of the woods, says Buhari

    2017 Budget will take Nigeria out of the woods, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has assured that the 2017 Budget proposal he will lay before the National Assembly on Wednesday will take Nigeria out of the woods to the path of growth.

    He urged Nigerians not to lose faith in the ability of his administration to deliver on its promises.

    The promise was contained in the President’s 2016 Eid-El- Maulud message to the nation he personally signed.

    He said: “As we use the memorable occasion of this celebration to reflect on our current challenges, I urge you not to lose faith in the ability of this administration to make a difference in the lives of our people.

    “The reality of the temporary challenges should not undermine our hope, reverse our collective will to succeed, or divide us; rather it should remind us of why we need to stay together, fight together and succeed together.

    “We all share a vision of a better Nigeria, and we will all share in the responsibility of building the country of our dreams.

    “As we look forward to 2017 with hope and huge expectations, let me assure you that with collective dedication and hard work, we will overcome the mountain of economic difficulties, and return our country to the path of prosperity.

    “The 2017 Budget proposals which I will lay before the National Assembly on Wednesday, will contain measures that we are confident will get the nation out of its economic woods.” He stated

    He said that the Eid-El- Maulud celebration is offering another opportunity for Nigerians to pause and reflect on the current realities before the nation.

    The President wished all Muslims a happy and memorable celebration, which marks the birth of Prophet Mohammed (Peace Be Upon Him).

    According to him, the nation has gained immensely through the Prophet’s teachings, particularly on peaceful living, tolerance, sobriety, generosity, sacrifice and honesty, and wisdom.

    “The universal truths of the Prophet’s values remain unchanged. Against all odds, we have used these pillars of strength in securing a just and fair society, and our efforts are beginning to yield dividends in curbing terrorism, militancy, corruption and other crimes that devalue our humanity,” he said.