Tag: Economy

  • Jonathan to Bayelsa: diversify your economy

    Jonathan to Bayelsa: diversify your economy

    President Goodluck Jonathan has urged the Bayelsa State government to diversify its economy, instead of depending on oil and gas alone.

    The President, who was represented by Vice President Namadi Sambo spoke at the first Bayelsa State Investment Forum at the Banquet Hall, Yenagoa.

    The forum with the theme “Unlocking Bayelsa’s economic potential: Opportunities and Challenges”, attracted investors from Europe, Asia, Africa.

    Also in attendance were the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke; Chairman, Nigerian Railway Corporation, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur; Minister of Trade and Investment, Olusegun Aganga and others.

    Jonathan said: “Bayelsa must diversify its economic base. It should not focus on oil wealth. It must pay attention to agriculture, coastal landscape for tourism, maritime industry and new housing estates.

    “The desire by the government for development will be supported by the Federal Government.”

    To realise the economic potential, he said there was a need for the people to place unity above partisanship.

    He insisted that peace was required to ensure the state’s development, adding that the Federal Government was determined to maintain peaceful co-existence in the country.

    “Bayelsa should place unity above partisanship and internal division in its planning and development,” he said.

    The President recommended agriculture as a sector waiting for development in the state.

    He said: “The government itself should place the business of agriculture and education on high priority; focus should also be given to infrastructure; these are the major keys for development.

    “I will also like to urge the government to redouble efforts in securing peace and security in Bayelsa and in the Niger Delta.”

    Governor Seriake Dickson said the state would promote investment in the state.

    He said the forum was organised to present the opportunities available to the world.

    “Bayelsa is a virgin bride waiting for a groom; our land and sea are very ripe for business.

    “I welcome all investors and I must assure you that we have a conducive environment for a growing economy.”

    The Chief Judge, Justice Kate Abiri, said quick dispensation of justice would provide an enabling environment for investment.

    She said: “Bayelsa will not allow any corrupt investors in the state. We will do all we can to allow justice and your business must be in line with the much desired economic growth of the state government.”

  • Tourism to improve South African economy

    Tourism to improve South African economy

    GROWTH in the tourism sector, with its substantial job creation spin-offs, could act as a partial antidote to the sluggishness of the economy, South Africa Tourism Minister, Derek Hanekom, says.

    However, he warned that the hospitality sector’s positive effect could be undermined by South Africa’s new visa and immigration regulations.

    Mr Hanekom told parliament’s tourism portfolio committee that the visa and immigration regulations issued six weeks ago by Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba could have a negative effect on the sector.

    In terms of the new rules, people wishing to visit South Africa would only be able to apply for visas at the country’s foreign missions, which in the case of a large country like China would mean only in Shanghai and Beijing.

    “It could potentially have a negative impact on tourism. We have to make it as easy as possible for person to come to our country,” said Mr Hanekom.

    “We are dealing with a very, very competitive international environment and people have choices. At this stage where we are getting a good share, with close to 10-million arrivals annually.

    “We can increase that share, but if we do the wrong thing that share can drop. We don’t want to slip backwards; we want to maintain it and we want to grow it.”

    Mr Hanekom stressed that it was “critically important” to remove unnecessary bottlenecks and said discussions were taking place with the Department of Home Affairs.

    Many significant role players, both local and foreign, had raised their concerns with Mr Hanekom and Mr Gigaba, pointing out that the new requirements would place quite onerous burdens on visa applications. This included the need for an unabridged birth certificate for children and the accessibility of South African missions.

    Mr Hanekom emphasised the importance of improving the road network to key tourist attractions such as the Kruger National Park.

    South African Tourism CEO Thulani Nzima said a key focus would be growing the domestic market, with the aim of increasing the number of domestic tourists to 18-million over the next five years. The agency had an “aggressive” strategy to grow the African market and planned to have five marketing offices in key African countries by 2020. There is an office in Nigeria.

  • Leveraging on social security to revitalise economy

    Leveraging on social security to revitalise economy

    Though unpopular in Nigeria due to weak economic policies, social security could be the tonic to revitalise the economy, according to experts, who says it would create wealth and bridge the poverty gap, reports TOBA AGBOOLA.

    Ffor long, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress’ (TUC) leaders, have been clamouring for improved standard of living for Nigerians.

    At various local and international fora, leaders of the unions have repeatedly called on all tiers of government to do more to lift the living condition of the citizenry through economic empowerment programmes.

    They said the absence of social security for Nigerians has negatively impacted on the fortunes of her citizens, a development which they blame on unbridled corruption and mismanagement of the nation’s resources.

    As far as they are concerned, social economic empowerment is the most acceptable means of tackling insecurity and reducing social vices in the country.

    Their position is anchored on certain premises. Investigations showed that in developed societies, social security play an important role in wealth creation and distribution, because of its ability to enhance the individual’s standard of living.

    To ensure peace and tranquillity in the Western world, most governments provide one form of social security or another, to protect the unemployed, aged and low income earners from  harsh economic conditions.

    The International Labour Organisation (ILO) recently announced that more than 70 per cent of the world’s population lack adequate protection. According to its Deputy Director-General, Mrs. Sandra Polaski, the global community agreed in 1938 that social security and health care for children, the working age population, who may be unemployment due to injury, and the aged, are entitled  to the provision.

    She said so far,  the promise of universal social protection remains unfulfilled for majority of the world’s population. She said the need for social protection has become more compelling in these times of economic uncertainty, low growth and increased cost of living in many nations of the world.

    Director, Social Protection Department, ILO, Mrs. Isabel Ortiz, said many less developed countries have seen the need for social security for their nationals, adding that due to the many laudable benefits inherent in social security provision, many proactive leaders have embraced it for their nations and achieved positive results.

    Mrs. Ortiz therefore, charged other nations, which have not embraced the measure to, as a matter of urgency, do so because of the benefits they stand to gain.

    She said: “Contrary to public perception, fiscal consolidation measures are not limited to Europe. In fact, as many as 122 governments are contracting public expenditures in 2014, out of which 82 are developing countries.”

    Her advice may have hit the right chord in the ears of the Nigerian authorities. The Managing Director, Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), Munir Ababakar, said Nigeria has joined the league of member nations of ILO that care for their employees in the workplace, and in the process, creating a pool of investible funds for social security and economic development, which would also promote industrial peace and enhance economic development.

    He listed other benefits to include favourable spin-offs such as employment generation and high productivity. He said the economic advantage of this would be enhanced and improved quality of life through prompt response to health challenges in the workplace with its attendant impact on Nigeria’s economic indices like Human Development Index (HDI).

    The Managing Director  Premium Pension Limited Wilson Ideva said  the widespread poverty in Africa is as a result of numerous factors exacerbated by lack of social security at old age.

    Speaking at the preview of the World Pension Summit ‘Africa Special’ in Abuja, Ideva said the event has the potential to address the issue of social security in Nigeria.

    “The contributory pension scheme is a vehicle for savings and investment and provides lump sum payment at commencement of retirement and also programmed monthly pension for retirees. The scheme, in addition, avails the government of large pool of funds to drive social and economic development,” Ideya said.

    Recently, the NLC, Delta State Council  called on the state government to introduce the payment of social security benefits to unemployed graduates and youths to lessen the pressure on them to resort to crime. Its Chairman, Mr. Williams Akporeha, called on Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, to address the issue of social security.

    He said: “In addition to your laudable programmes of payment of bursary to undergraduates and scholarships for post graduate students, introduce the payment of social security benefits to unemployed graduates and youths.”

    He said the scheme can be developed with safety valves to make it possible for beneficiaries to start making gradual returns as soon as they secure employment with the state ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs).

    “We envisage that a scheme like this will not only check youth involvement in crime, but also build confidence between the youth and state government,”Akporeha added.

  • ‘New Pension Reform Act’ll boost economy’

    The new Pension Reform Act, 2014 will further concretise the statutory foundation of the pension industry and position it for the attainment of greater heights, the Managing Director, Premium Pension Limited Wilson Ideva has said.

    Ideva who spoke to The Nation in Lagos, commended the Federal Government on the signing into law of the Pension Reform Bill, 2014.

    According to him, the industry is  set to witness unimaginable growth that has never been seen in any sector of the Nigerian economy.

    The new pension law repeals the Pension Reform Act, No.2, 2004, which has been in operation for the past ten years.

    He added that the Nigeria’s CPS has recorded tremendous success in its first decade of operation enlisting 6.4 million Nigerian workers and raking in about N4.3 trillion  as funds under management.

    He said: “It is widely believed that the growth in the industry would have even been more expansive if the previous law allowed the application of very stringent measures on noncompliant institutions and individuals.

    “Moral suasion yielded little results hence it is expected that when the new pension law is fully applied, majority of the country’s working population in the public or private sector or even artisans would be covered by the scheme.

    “The Pension Reform Act among other things, enhances the enforcement responsibilities of the regulatory institution, National Pension Commission (PenCom).”

    Ideva said it will also ensure further airtight protection of pension funds and unpacks guidelines and possibilities of creatively and professionally applying pension funds for national development.

    With the provisions of the Pension Reform Act, 2014, the pension industry in Nigeria is the sub sector to watch in the course of national development in the coming years. The industry is already well positioned to assert its centrality to social and economic development, he added.

  • Rebased Economy: The lies and reality

    Rebased Economy: The lies and reality

    Nigerians at home and Diaspora should have ordinarily been the happiest of persons with the release of the re-based nation’s economy. With a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) that is said to be the 26th out of the over 180 countries in the world, Nigeria should be a haven for investors, business men, and almost all classes of people.

    If the GDP was indeed growing, President Goodluck Jonathan and top government functionaries would not have been wasting public funds trotting the globe in the name of wooing investors to the country. This is because countries with such a high GDP are far from hunger and have many strong points which, would have made them to be so rated.

    However, Nigeria’s case is different. Different in the sense that the citizens themselves have been asking questions as to where did the figures come from? Could the word ‘GDP’ mean different things to different countries? What are the benchmarks that gave rise to the rebased GDP?

    With the rebased economy which puts Nigeria’s GDP at $510 with 2010 as the based year from the previous 1990, Nigeria should to be celebrating and that should translate to achieving vision 20:2020 ahead of the stipulated date. But that is not to be as the country seems to be plummeting deeper into hunger, starvation and poverty in the midst of a ‘robust economy’.

    In announcing Nigeria’s new GDP, the National Bureau of Statistics stated that growth in GDP was not synonymous with increase in job creation and that, increase in the overall economic output of a country does not necessarily mean increase in incomes of individuals.

    This, of course, is in sharp contrast to the general belief that a robust economy goes hand-in-hand with improved living conditions and fairly stable environment, where business transactions are conducted without fear of oppression, where the majority of the goods consumed by the country is produced in the country, where composite unemployment is at its lowest ebb, where probity and accountability is the watchword of the government. These situations are far from being the case in Nigeria.

    With the rebased economy, it means that Nigeria’s economy is larger than the $510 billion, making it the largest economy in Africa and beating South Africa to a distant second. The challenge, however, is when will Nigerians begin to feel the impact of this giant economy?

    Nigeria is a country where the composite unemployment rate is close to 30 per cent of the total population, while youth unemployment is approaching an all-time high of 50 per cent. This is a far cry from other countries with even lesser GDPs.

    Much as Nigerians are happy that the economy of the country is robust, they are more interested in seeing a transformed society, where tolerance reigns, where peace and security remain the watchword of the populace, where people that are willing and capable to work can find paid employment without lobbying for it. Of what importance is high GDP if the country is still ranked among the world’s poorest country?

    Despite the privatization of the power sector, the nation remains in darkness. Countries with far smaller GDPs enjoy stable power supply, yet Nigeria with its newfound GDP can only boast of a paltry 4,000 Megawatts.

    The railway system they claim they are reviving remains in comatose. Water transportation is almost non-existence except in places where there are no viable roads. But series of mishaps on our water ways has exposed the government’s inability to develop anything in the country.

    Security has been a major challenge facing this administration; hardly a day passes without incidents of security breaches. Boko Haram, a deadly sect, has launched a bloody campaign against the countrys unity. The government seems helpless while the criminals kill citizens in broad daylight.

    Social vices have reached a crescendo. If nothing is done to checkmate bloodshed in the country, there can be chaos and anarchy that may consume whole country.

    Nigeria has a better GDP than Austria, an European country. Yet Austria is considered as one of the most comfortable countries in the world. With a very high GDP, life expectancy in Nigeria is barely half of that of Austria, which stands at 80.7 years. Austria experiences an average of 2.1 murders per 100,000 while its unemployment rate stands at a low 5 per cent. Austria’s 75 per cent population is happy with life in the country. This is in sharp contrast to Nigeria where even the rich are dissatisfied with life condition in the country.

    Marcus Aurelius once observed: “The first rule is to keep an untroubled spirit; the second is to look at things in the face and know them for what they are.” This is to say that we must face our problems headlong and improve the living conditions of our people, without trying to satisfy the whims of the West.

    Until there is an in-house reordering and reshaping, Nigeria’s problems will persist and we will turn to butt of jokes in global community. Government of the day must first purge itself of its ‘sins’ in order to better the living condition of the people as this is the only true wealth that will crystallise into all forms of prosperity, including a truly robust economy.

     

    Philip, just finished from Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, DELSU

  • Body seeks diversification of the economy

    Accountants have been urged to look beyond mere figures and deploy their vast knowledge to ensure that the country moves forward. This was contained in a communiqué released at the end of the Nigerian Students’ Economic and Finance summit which held recently at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    The summit which was organised by the Nigerian Universities Accounting Students’ Association (NUASA), OAU chapter, had as its theme; ‘Putting Nigeria on the pedestal of sustainable economic development: Challenges and way forward.’

    Despite the plethora of economic problems affecting Nigeria such as high level of unemployment, poverty, insecurity, political instability, tribalism, and illiteracy, the summit noted that; ‘Nigeria has a lot of potentials for development which is the reason for listing the country among the MINT countries (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey) that would have capacity and resources like the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, South Africa)in the nearest future.’

    Citing Nigeria’s dependence on oil which has turned her into a mono-crop economy, the communiqué advised that the nation’s economy should be diversified ‘to reduce the overdependence on oil revenue.’

    The summit also urged that the Nigerian tax system be reformed to be simple and progressives and leaders should lead by example. ‘Compliance should be enforced and applied to all, irrespective of social status,’ the communiqué read. ‘Government should address the issues of fiscal federalism and multiplicity of taxes at the on-going national conference.’

    The well-attended ceremony was declared open by the Vice Dean of the Faculty of Administration and the Head of Department of Management and Accounting Dr. D .O Elumilade. Invited guests included the former NYSC Director, Brigadier General (Rtd) Maharazu Isma’il Tsiga and former Assistant Director Federal Ministry of Defence, Alhaji Umar Abdu Tsauri.

    And some speakers at the three-day event were Mr Taiwo Oyedele (Partner, Head of Tax & Regulatory Services, PricewaterhouseCoopers); Dr. Ademola Odeyemi (Executive director, Guaranty Trust Bank plc.), Hon. Fatai Atanda (Commissioner for economic budget and planning, Oyo), Mrs. Ijeoma Anadozie (Country manager, Chartered institute of management accountants), and Mr. Lekan Otufodunrin (Online editor, The Nation newspaper).

    Students from Bayero University, Kano; Lead City University, Ibadan; University of Lagos; University of Ilorin, Kwara; Wesley University of Science and Technology, Ondo; Ladoke Akintola University, Oyo; Oduduwa University, Osun; and Yaba College of Technology, Lagos were also in attendance.

  • Sealink initiative’ll transform economy, says NEXIM chief

    Nigeria will be a major beneficiary of the sealink initiative by the time it is fully on ground, Managing Director, Nigerian Export Import Bank (NEXIM), Mr Robert Orya, has said.

    He told The Nation that Nigerian products are in African countries, adding that the coming of the sealink is expected to facilitate and promote Nigerian products within and outside the continent.

    According to the NEXIM Bank chief, the Return on Investment (RoI) in the country is between 30 and 35 per cent, adding that it is the highest in the world.

    Orya said the Sealink Project is a major step in deepening trade within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) sub-region and a significant step in enhancing the trade flows of the ECOWAS member-states to create jobs.

    Other benefits, according to him, are to promote increased trade flows and opportunities for the people, considering the huge capital flight from the region through the absence of sea trade infrastructure.

    Orya explained that by the time the project is fully completed, it will encourage and enhance Small and Medium Enterprises’ (SMEs) businesses because there will be market for their products outside the country.

    Orya said the funding requirement for the regional project which is $60 million, will soon be met as more investors have shown interest.

    He said the project is in line with the Transformation Agenda of the government, which projects investments in roads, railways, inland waterways, ports and airports development in collaboration with various stakeholders to evolve a multimodal, integrated sustainable transport system. Emphasis will be on rail and waterways, through an effective Public-Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement, he added.

    Orya lamented that it is more expensive to move goods from Lagos to Accra or Douala, Cameroon, than to move the same goods from China to Nigeria.

    He said: “It is less expensive to carry a container from China to Lagos. It costs about $3,500 to move products from Lagos to Douala while it costs about $2,500 to move the same products from China to Lagos. If you want to take goods to Tema ports from Nigeria by road, it takes six days with a lot of hassles but if you want to move it by sea, it takes 60 days because you will use European vessels to take the goods to Europe first and then bring it back to Ghana. However, with Sealink, it will take between one and two days.

    “So, a quick-win solution for us is to set up a maritime shipping company since most ECOWAS and central African countries are coastal countries. That way will liberate our countries and our businessmen and help them to keep the margins of their businesses instead of paying it to European shipping companies.”

  • ‘Why economy is not growing’

    Underdevelopment and poor energy supply are some of the problems threatening the economy, the Director-General, Nigeria Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), Dr John Isemede, has said.

    He told The Nation in an interview that inadequate electricity supply has left many industries dead while others moved to neighbouring African countries.

    He cited Michelin and Dunlop Tyres that relocated to neighbouring countries, saying they left because of the non-availability of infrastructure, including electricity.

    He stressed the need for collaboration among government, organised private sector, research centres and universities to fashion out appropriate policy to grow the economy.

    He said inappropriate policies had deprived the nation the needed income from raw materials export while also encouraging importation of finished goods, adding that “we lack the political will and expertise to develop the economy”.

    Calling for strong infrastructure development to grow the agricultural sector, he recounted how cocoa seedlings, which came into the country 104 years ago, built the infrastructure in the Southwest, including the Cocoa House and Odua Investments Limited, but declined as an income earner because value was not added to it.

    He regretted that it was also the case with palm produce that was introduced to the Malaysian government in the 1960s, noting that while the country earned over $21 billion last year from palm produce, Nigeria is the highest importer of oil.

    Isemede questioned the increasing number of universities and research institutes that have refused to add value to the country’s raw materials, which gave rise to the current position where Nigeria export raw materials and import finished goods.

    The NACCIMA director- general argued that there is need to tap alternative sources of energy if Nigeria must be competitive as a nation and urged government to exploit atomic energy and other green energy to run the economy. He decried the touted 4,000 mega watts electricity supply in the country and said that if the nation is actually serious about industrial revolution the current electricity supply, which is barely enough enough to serve Lagos Island alone must be improved upon. He further said that no nation is known to have developed without adequate energy supply. According to him, South Africa with a population of 45 million people generate over 50 mega watts, while Belgium with population of about half of Lagos is generating 60,000 mega watts.

    On why the nation is import driven, he responded that the paucity of infrastructure especially electricity has made manufacturing unattractive as importation is more profitable for businessmen. He said: “ In international business, energy plays a major role, there is no home advantage for any business, its only the unit cost of the products that determine advantage. The nation should therefore, encourage clean and other alternative sources of energy. It is only by doing so that the cost of production will come down and locally manufactured goods become competitive. Energy accounts for 40 per cent of production cost.”

    Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer(CEO) Tricontinental Oil Services Limited, Prof. Toyin Ashiru, also urged entrepreneurs to key into renewable energy. He said it remained the only way for businesses to remain competitive. He canvassed greater private sector participation as the government cannot do it alone.

  • NLC : Good GDP without jobs is meaningless

    The Nigeria Labour Congress ( NLC) has condemned the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) which makes Nigeria’s economy the largest in African.

    The union said the GDP is meaningless since it is without sustainable and viable jobs.

    NLC Acting President, Comrade Promise Adewusi in a statement titled “Good GDP without sustainable and viable jobs: A time bomb,”
    noted that the new GDP will only make meaning to the labour family if it translates into improved living conditions for the ordinary Nigerian which is not the case at the moment.

    Adewusi pointed out that the living conditions in the past couple of years have been progressively nosediving and pathetic.

    Deriding the data, the congress said  “Nigeria being the biggest economy in Africa ought to make no news if vital national statistics such as population, natural resources etc were to form the requisite assumptions for assessment.”

    The congress maintained that economic growth without jobs and food on the table, means nothing in realty.

    NLC noted that the “unemployment figures are frightening. We have found it necessary to warn time without number that the army of the unemployed youths constitutes a veritable army of the disparate, the desperate and the angry, and that government should urgently address the problem.
    “So far nothing has illustrated this fear better than the recent Immigration recruitment exercise tragedy. We therefore do not need any Economist or Diviner to tell us that life has improved, because it has not.”
    A GDP, said Adewusi,  could not be said to have significantly improved if our industries are virtually shut and operating environment increasingly hostile. Government according to him, should worry that the performance index of industries dropped from 46.08% to 25.81% while service industry more than doubled to 50 % from 23.03%. “

  • Economy still in the woods

    Economy still in the woods

    The economy is not faring well. It is bogged down by huge outflows in foreign direct investments. Portfolio investments face similar crisis, as the steady decline in foreign exchange reserves, investments in equities and bond markets show. This is giving the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and other stakeholders the goose pimples, reports COLLINS NWEZE.

    The drop in Foreign Direct Investments(FDI) and portfolio investments is giving the government and the private sector a sleepless night. The impact of investment reversals is felt in foreign exchange reserves, investment in the equities market and bonds.

    FDI is a direct investment into production or business in a country by an individual or company from another country. This is done either by buying a company in the target country or by expanding operations of an existing business. FDI is in contrast to portfolio investment which is a passive investment in the securities of another country, such as stocks and bonds.

    According to the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), there has been a negative spike in foreign portfolio transactions this year, with more funds moving out than coming in. The NSE’s maiden foreign investment report said total foreign outflow was N50.14 billion in January as against inflow of N39.53 billion during the period, bringing total foreign transactions to N89.67 billion.

    In January, last year, foreign inflow was higher at N40.96 billion against outflow of N20.50 billion.

    Also, data from the CBN showed that gross external reserves as at December 31, 2013 stood at $42.85 billion, representing a decrease of $ 0.98 billion or 2.23 per cent compared with $43.83 billion at end- December 2012. The reserves have further dipped to $38.79 billion as at March 12 after dropping by $3 billion in one month.

    The reserves were at $42.77 billion on February 3, and dropped to $39.72 billion on March 3. It has further dropped to $37.8 billion in March 28. Analysts said the reserves declined as imports of fuel and foods soared.

    CBN explains drop in reserves

    The decrease in the reserves level was driven largely by the increased funding of the foreign exchange market in the face of intense pressure on the naira and the need to maintain stability.

    CBN said the pressure on external reserves was deemed to be consistent with the seasonal annual payment of dividends to foreign investors.

    Oil prices remained relatively high while production was improving, and there were signs of accretion to external reserves. The CBN also expressed concern over the sudden surge in domiciliary account balances which may offset the gains from imposing 75 per cent cash reserve ratio (CRR) on public sector funds.

    It expressed concern over the continued depletion of the Excess Crude Account (ECA) which balance stood at less than $2.5 billion on January 17, this year compared with about $11.5 billion in December 2012. According to the CBN, the absence of fiscal buffers increased its reliance on portfolio flows thus, constituting the principal risk to exchange rate stability, especially with uncertainties around capital flows and oil price.

    On the depletion of fiscal buffers, it decried the continuous fall in revenue from oil despite stable price of oil and production last year.

    It said accretion to external reserves remained low while much of the previous savings have been depleted, thereby undermining the ability to sustain exchange rate stability. The apex bank, therefore, urged the fiscal authorities to block revenue leakages and rebuild fiscal savings needed to sustain confidence and preserve the value of the naira.

    It said the reduction of the United States (US) stimulus, especially, could in addition, trigger capital flow reversals and put greater pressure on the naira exchange rate. It also expressed concern about the widening gap between the official and the Bureau De Change exchange rates, noting that this could precipitate speculation and round-tripping.

    The CBN also noted that the decrease in the reserves level resulted largely from a slowdown in portfolio and FDI flows in the fourth quarter of last year resulting in an increased funding of the foreign exchange market by the CBN to stabilise the naira.

    The regulator expressed concern over the continued depletion of the ECA which balance stood at less than $2.5 billion during the last Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting on January 17, compared with about $11.5 billion in December 2012.

    “This absence of fiscal buffers increased our reliance on portfolio flows thus, constituting the principal risk to exchange rate stability, especially with uncertainties around capital flows and oil price,” the CBN said.

    Other stakeholders’ view

    Emerging markets strategist at Standard Bank Group Ltd, Samir Gadio, said there is a difference between current depletion in reserves and the sharp slide in late 2008 when oil price collapsed and foreign investors pulled out. He said the difference in the current reserves erosion is that the oil price has remained robust in recent years and that capital outflows have been somewhat less extreme.

    “Nevertheless, drastic steps will be required to stop or slow the erosion of foreign reserves and restore confidence in the Nigerian market. In our view, a sharp tightening of monetary and liquidity conditions is urgently required if the CBN still wants to protect current dollar/naira levels,” he said.

    He said the naira to dollar rate at the interbank exchange rate appears to have found a new level in the N164 to N165 threshold, but would have probably trended higher without direct CBN dollar sales to the banks.

    The CBN, he said, has intervened more proactively, and at an earlier stage even on an intra-day basis, especially as it sought to reassure the market after the change of leadership at the apex bank. The CBN has also continued to provide dollar via its Retail Dutch Auction System (RDAS) window and resumed forex exchange forward sales to reduce the immediate pressure on the currency.

    The key question is obviously how long the CBN can afford to defend the recent level of the exchange rate amid a deteriorating foreign reserves reserve position. With a heavily managed currency regime, an unsustainable downward trend in foreign reserves is generally the prelude to devaluation, as a qualitative drop in confidence and positioning against the local unit eventually force the central bank to adjust the exchange rate anchor.

    But Eurasia Group’s Africa Director, Philippe de Pontet, said despite the upheaval at the CBN, Nigeria’s economic fundamentals remain strong compared to other frontier markets given a relatively low debt-to-GDP ratio and budget deficit. The economy is forecast to grow around seven per cent this year.

     

    Multiple taxation

    President, Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN) Mark Dike said multiple taxation is a disincentive to FDI and therefore hinders economic development. He said multiple taxation is hindering economic development and social emancipation.

    “There is no doubting the fact that taxation is inevitable because it provides the resources for government to provide infrastructure for its citizens, but when taxes are severally replicated on the income of an individual, then there is a big cause for concern. For instance, some state and local governments request people to pay for registration of business premises and licence of business premises,” he said.

    Dike explained that the above example is one of the same as the only difference is the change of name. He regretted that governments, unfortunately, seemed not to have the wherewithal to enforce discipline and sanctity in the tax system as it is obvious that all levels of governments today are bent on collecting any taxes, anyhow.

    He said clients and policy makers have continued to look up to us in their constant search for solutions to these various taxation and fiscal policy problems.

    “For instance, there had been several agitations from some quarters for an upward review of property tax. This call, though, seems good on the surface but definitely not the major solution or panacea to the problem of insufficiency of revenue or eradication of corruption which has eaten deep into the fabric of the system,” he said.

    The CITN boss said the success of a unified tax system depends largely on the government’s use of tax professionals who are its members to handle their tax matters in order to eliminate quacks in the tax system.

    “The regulation of the tax practice and administration in any country is necessary to discourage sharp practices. This apart, the low level of tax education among the populace has made voluntary compliance quite difficult, hence, the need to consult members of a regulatory body like the CITN for professional tax advice and guidance,” he said.

    Despite these challenges, the World Bank calculates that Africa received $48.2 billion capital inflows in 2011, an increase of $8 billion, and notes that the continent remains an investment destination.

     

    Solutions to the problem

    To check this trend, the CBN is looking at possibilities on taxing FDIs and other capital transfers to check capital reversals by short-term investors.

    CBN Deputy Governor, Operations, Dr. Kingsley Moghalu, said the apex bank and other emerging markets were worried over ‘Faustian bargain’ with short-term portfolio investors and, therefore, looking at explicit measures to stem capital outflows in wake of Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing programme.

    Capital transfers involve the acquisition or disposal of an asset, or assets, by at least one of the parties to the transaction and are made in cash or in kind.

    Moghalu’s position was obtained from a report by ‘Central Banking-Daily briefing’, a journal on Central Banks Policy, Regulation, Markets and Institutions.

    The Deputy Governor told The Nation in an emailed response to enquiries that he was “looking at possible options for emerging market economies, not necessarily what Nigeria will do” to check capital reversals.

    Moghalu last year said Africa needs the right skills, education to attract needed FDI. He said the continent needs to direct FDI according to their priority, not according to that of foreign investors.

    He said African countries will not jump into prosperity until they have developed strong manufacturing base driven with developed information technology. He said it is only through industrilisation that the over 20 per cent unemployed rate in Africa will reduce.