Tag: ICAN

  • Debts undermine economic growth, prosperity, says ICAN chief

    Debts undermine economic growth, prosperity, says ICAN chief

    President, Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), Mr  Chidi  Ajaegbu  has said    foreign and domestic debts will continue to undermine the country’s credit worthiness and compromise its ability to secure new funding.

    Much of the borrowing, Ajaegbu noted, was for recurrent expenditure rather than production, implying that the debt is not being used to grow the economy.

    He said: “The practice of funding recurrent expenditure through debt is unacceptable .it is tantamount to spending unearned income and therefore mortgaging the future by abating possible future economic development.This negative policy should be addressed  urgently  as it is unsustainable.”

    The  ICAN chief, who spoke in Lagos over the weekend,   said while debt remained crucial to development, it was the manner in which it was used that was worrisome.

    Without debt,  he said,  the country cannot go anywhere, arguing that it is how it is used that would determine its impact on the economy.

    He urged the government to direct its debt towards projects that would result in employment creation, such as power generation, road construction and other development projects.

    He blamed poor implementation of annual  budgets  of the Federal Government  is traceable  to avoidable  delays  in the passage of the fiscal bills.

    He said: “Significant expenditure is  committed  to the preparation of annual budgets in the country only for its implementation to be observed in the breach. It is important to enact a law which will define the nation’s budget cycle with specific timelines for each stage and sanctions for a breach of this law.”

    Accordingly,  he  said those in leadership positions must deliver more benefits than they are doing for the nation’s acclaimed economic growth to translate into economic development.

     

  • ICAN wants IFRS specialists in financial sector

    ICAN wants IFRS specialists in financial sector

    The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) has called for International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) specialists in the financial sector.

    Its President, Kabir Mohammed, made the call  in Lagos.

    He said prior to IFRS, what obtained all over the world were country-specific versions of the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), which were based on cultural, legal, economic and regulatory peculiarities of individual countries.

    He explained that in most cases, these standards differed extensively, thereby causing confusion for investors and creating problems for multi-national companies that needed to prepare varying sets of financial statements for the different countries where they operate.

    He said the need for IFRS specialists in the financial sector to increase and also the need to enhance capacity building in that field.

    The ICAN boss, who spoke during the induction for the corporate finance management faculty of IFRS certification programme, said following Nigeria’s adoption of IFRS, the corporate finance management has been in the forefront of building capacity in this area. He said ICAN awards certificate of proficiency in IFRS to desiring members to achieve this objective.

    According to the ICAN boss, the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRC) Act 2011 has replaced the repealed Nigeria Accounting Standards Board Act No 22 of 2003.

    The new Act has also given the Council the responsibility for developing and publishing accounting and financial reporting standards to be observed in the preparation of financial statements of public entities in Nigerian and related matters.

    He said the Act has expanded the scope of activities of the FRC by creating additional departments in such areas as corporate governance, audit standards, valuation and actuarial services.

    It also separated accounting standards in private sector from those of the public sector and will enhance financial reporting in the later which hitherto, has not received the prominence required due to very few available standards for the sector.

    During the induction, 52 accountants were awarded the proficiency in IFRS certificate brings the total awardees to 204.

     

  • 491 bag ICAN Fellowship

    No fewer than 491 have been conferred with the Fellowship award of the Institute of Chartered Accountants  of Nigeria (ICAN).

    The ceremony held at the institute’s centre in Amuwo Odofin, Lagos State.

    Addressing the recipients, the ICAN President, Alhaji Kabir Alkali Mohammed described the conferment as an indication of their high professional skills, compliance to best global practices, commitment to professional ethics and outstanding contributions to the development and growth of the accountancy profession.

    He, therefore, urged the fellows to distinguish themselves in their areas of callings and continue to uphold the profession’s ethical standards and values.

    He said: “In line with our tradition of high ethical disposition, I charge the 491 distinguished Fellowship Award recipients today to continue to fly the profession’s flag of honesty, integrity and excellence with distinction in their respective spheres of influence, no matter the odds,” he said.

    Muhammed urged them to see their new status as service to the institute, their profession and the nation at large.

    “I urge you to see your new and enviable status as a clarion call to greater service to your institute, profession and the nation at large, particularly in the provision of strategic leadership and continuous use and adoption of International Financial reporting Standard.

    “You must bring your mark of distinction to bear in the discharge of your professional and other duties. Only then we can successfully confer to future generations a banner without stain,” He said.

    The president implored the awardees to always familiarise themselves with the activities of the institute.

    In his keynote address, the guest speaker Jani Ibrahim, an engineer, who spoke on: Entrepreneurship for Economic Development, noted that despite the presence of land, labour and capital in Nigeria, the country still lacks  the required technology and entrepreneurship to drive  other factors of production.

    He called for a re-orientation of Nigerians towards making the country a producing nation.

    He said: “We have to change our orientation as a consuming nation to a producing nation; as an un-enterprising nation to an enterprising one. From our various homes to our schools, we need to consciously decide to become more production conscious than consumption conscious.”

    One of the recipients, Mr Akanle Lateef Oluwole who is also the Special Assistant to Ekiti State Governor on Inter-Party Relations, expressed his happiness.

     

    “I feel great and fulfilled in the profession of accountancy. My advice to other members who are aspiring to get to this stage is to be very serious and patient,” he said.

  • ICAN hails Odu’a Investment’s strategies

    The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), has hailed the investment strategies of Odu’a Investment Company Limited, especially on the newly opened shopping malls in Ibadan.

    Its President, Alh Kabir Alkali Mohammed gave the commendation yesterday after a working tour of the Heritage Mall and the Cocoa Mall, located at the Cocoa House Complex, Ibadan, Oyo State capital.

    Mohammed who is the 49th president of ICAN, led members of his executives to the  headquarters of Odu’a Investment Company located in Dugbe.

    He said the new malls have given Ibadan a facelift and also increased the number of people coming for shopping, thereby making the area a rich economic arena for investment.

    He said:“We have come, we have seen and we are surprised with the level of transformation in this company. We are not expecting this type of edifice in Ibadan, but in Lagos or Abuja. You have changed the face of Ibadan and this is why some residents of neighbouring states are moving down here.”

    He promised ICAN’s professional support for further transformation of the firm.

    Group Managing Director the firm, Chief Adebayo Jimoh thanked ICAN executives for providing a robust platform for training highly skilled personnel.

    Jimoh said:”We have more accountants than engineers here, which shows you the level of training and human capacity building we are giving to our workers. We record more chartered accountants over there and attach more incentives to them.”

  • Jonathan under attack over poor state of economy

    Jonathan under attack over poor state of economy

    NLC, governor, The Economist knock GDP rebasing

    ICAN: it’s okay

    The President and his Finance experts were under attack yesterday over the “necessary” but “unrealistic” rebasing of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    The rebasing makes the country Africa’s largest economy.

    To Labour, a good GDP without jobs is meaningless. A governor advised President Goodluck Jonathan to face the reality in the land – hunger, unemployment and poverty – instead of being carried away by the rebasing.

    The position of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) is a continuation of the assessment of the rebasing announced on Sunday by the government.

    World Bank economists have also cautioned that a large economy does not guarantee foreign investments.

    “What matters is living standards for everyone and the productivity that gurantees those living standards,” World Bank Chief Economist, Africa Region, Mr. Francisco Ferreira, said.

    The government said the long-overdue rebasing – the last one was done in 1990- places Nigeria’s GDP at $509.9b as against South Africa’s $370.3b.

    In a report, the Economist said in spite of Sunday’s announcement of the rebasing, “Nigerians are not richer than they were on Saturday night. The majority of the country’s 170 million people live on less than a dollar a day”.

    In a statement by NLC’s acting President Promise Adewusi titled “Good GDP without sustainable and viable jobs: A time bomb”, the labour said the 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 said 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 added that economic growth without jobs and food on the table, meant nothing in reality.

    “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 tragedy. We 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 the operating environment increasingly hostile. Government should worry that the performance index of industries dropped from 46.08 per cent to 25.81 per cent while service industry more than doubled to 50 per cent from 23.03 per cent. “

    The NLC submitted that this represents a significant change in the economy, a negative change that points to consumption to the exclusion of production.

    The NLC said Finance Minister Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, for good measure, added: “We did not set out to become the biggest economy in Africa. We set out to measure how much the economy has changed. And that is the outcome. Becoming the largest economy on the continent is a positive development, but that is not the destination …”.

    “As cheering as this news may be, however, we at the Nigeria Labour Congress are not completely swayed by the latest GDP figure, nationalist as it seems.”

    The statement added: “As we commend the government for achieving the feat of economic rebasing, we urge it to ensure this figure translates into improved living conditions, jobs, revival of industries and improvement of internal and national security. For those will be the measurable indices and indicators of an enlarging and progressive economy.”

    Kano State Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, also yesterday, dismissed the GDP rebasing as a mere fiction, which does not reflect the true state of the economy.

    Kwankwaso, who urged President Goodluck Jonathan not to be carried away by “the fiction”, counselled him to be more realistic by fighting the serious decay in the economy, which he said is threatening the foundation of the existence of Nigeria’s development.

    Kwankwaso, who spoke in Kano when the African Democratic Congress (ADC) visited him at the Government House, insisted that any practical economist would understand that what the government is claiming does not reflect what is on ground as hunger, starvation, diseases and insecurity are threatening the country.

    Kwankwaso said the so-called Railway development undertaken by the Federal Government, ended up in flooding the country with 1902 category trains, which he said are so dirty and stinking. His view is that what the country needs is real economic development and not paper-based development.

    “President Goodluck Jonathan should be more practical in governance and desist from fiction and unrealistic theories that have nothing to do with what is on ground,” he said, adding that Nigeria is in dire need of good governance that would salvage it from the threat of insurgents.

    Kwankwaso noted that except the growth in Nigeria’s economy which they are claiming must have fallen in the hands of some selected kinsmen and politicians from the South and North, who reside in Abuja, but to talk to ordinary Nigerians that the country’ s economy has grown tremendously will be “laughable”.

    But the President of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), Mr. Kabir Mohammed, said the figures have moved Nigeria to its right position.

    Speaking with State House correspondents after leading some members on a visit to the President, Mohammed said it was the right time for investors to come in.

    “It is an opportunity for Nigeria to come up to date and take her rightful place among the comity of nations. Using these bases, you can see that we have moved into our proper position.

    “We have incorporated structures hitherto not considered. This is an opportunity for people who want to invest in the country to make the right decision and come in,” he said.

    On classification of Nigeria as one of the countries with extreme poverty, he said: “It does not change our figures at all. It does not change our figures.

    “The fact is that two-thirds of the world’s extreme poor are concentrated in just five countries: India, China, Nigeria, Bangladesh and the Democratic Republic of Congo.”

    Mohammed said he would continue to uphold the ethics of the accounting and ensure that any corrupt accountant is brought to book.

    “As the President of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, ICAN, let me put it to you, if you have any ICAN member involved in corrupt practices, please bring him or her forward. We have our disciplinary procedures. We shall handle the case appropriately.”

    On the reasons for the visit, Mohammed said: “I led members of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, ICAN, to pay a courtesy call on Mr. president to congratulate him on the wedding of his daughter this weekend and the rebasing of the GDP as well as discuss issues of national importance.”

    Also speaking on alleged corruption by accountants, Minister of Trade and Investment Olusegun Aganga said: “Accounting anywhere in the world is a noble profession and that is why not every body is chartered to practise. It is the only profession where you study Economics, Law, taxation and everything, to do with business.”

     

    How Nigeria’s economy grew by 89 per cent overnight

    ON Saturday, April 5th, South Africa was Africa’s largest economy. The IMF put its GDP at $354 billion last year, well ahead of its closest rival for the crown, Nigeria. By Sunday afternoon that had changed. Nigeria’s statistician-general announced that his country’s GDP for 2013 had been revised from 42.4 trillion naira to 80.2 trillion naira ($509 billion). The estimated income of the average Nigerian went from less than $1,500 a year to $2,688 in a trice. How can an economy grow by almost 90% overnight?

    Nigeria has a deserved reputation for corruption, so a sceptic might think the doubling of its economy a result of fiddling the numbers. In fact it is the old numbers that are dodgy. An economy’s real growth rate is typically measured by reference to prices in a base year. In Nigeria the reference year for the old estimate of GDP was 1990. The IMF recommends that base years be updated at least every five years. Nigeria left it far too long; as a result, its old GDP figures were hopelessly inaccurate.

    The new figures use 2010 as the base year. Why was the upgrade so big? To come up with an estimate of GDP, statisticians need to add together estimates of output from a sample of businesses in every part of the economy, from farming to service industries. The weight they give to each sector depends on its importance to the economy in the base year. A snapshot of Nigeria’s economy in 1990 gave little or no weight to fast-growing parts of the economy such as mobile telephony or the movie industry. At the time the state-owned telephone company had a few hundred thousand customers. Today the country has 120m mobile-phone subscriptions. On the old 1990 figures, the telecoms sector was less than 1% of GDP; it is now almost 9% of GDP. Motion pictures had not shown up at all in the old figures, but the industry’s size is now put at 1.4% of GDP. Nigeria’s number-crunchers have improved the gathering of statistics in other ways. The old GDP figures were based on an estimate of output. The new figures are cross-checked against separate surveys of spending and income. The sample on which the data are based has increased from around 85,000 establishments to 850,000. Only businesses with a fixed location are included: the traders who weave precariously between the traffic are not captured. Even so, many small businesses are now part of the GDP picture.

    Of course, Nigerians are no richer than they were on Saturday night. The majority of the country’s 170m people live on less than a dollar a day. What the revised GDP figures show is that its economy is far more than just an oil enclave, exporting crude to pay for imported goods from richer countries. The oil industry’s share of GDP is now put at just 14%, compared with 33% according to the old figures. Manufacturing is much larger than previously thought. Services are booming. It is still a tough place in which to do business. But any company or investor who wants exposure to Africa’s fast-growing markets cannot afford to pass the continent’s largest economy by.

     

  • Okorocha seeks probe of  NNPC’s missing fund

    Okorocha seeks probe of NNPC’s missing fund

    IMO State Governor Rochas Okorocha has urged the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) to investigate the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) over the alleged non-remittance of $20 billion to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    Okorocha spoke in Owerri, the state capital, when he received the National Executive Members of ICAN at the Government House.

    The governor described ICAN as one of the most critical professions that could reduce corruption and misappropriation of public funds in the society.

    He urged the body to intervene in the financial problems facing the nation, especially unaccounted funds in some organisations.

    Okorocha said he was ready to partner the institute to establish a befitting secretariat in the state.

    He hailed members of the institute for their decision to build a secretariat in Imo State and promised to provide the land and financial assistance to realise the project.

    ICAN President Kabir Alkali Mohammed hailed the governor for his exemplary leadership style.

    He said the governor was dedicated to the collective interest of the people and committed to honesty, transparency and accountability.

     

    He extolled the Governor for appointing some members of their Institute in his cabinet and appealed for more of such appointments.

    Kabir, who stated that they were on tour of the 48 District Societies of the Institute to strengthen professionalism, disclosed that the strategic position of Owerri in the Southeast region of the country necessitated the Institute’s resolve to build a secretariat in Owerri.

    He said the secretariat would provide such facilities as conducive examination halls, library services for the students and offices.

    The ICAN boss further solicited the state government’s assistance in providing a plot of land and logistics to facilitate the building.

     

  • Enterprise Bank, ICAN partner on payment schemes

    Enterprise Bank, ICAN partner on payment schemes

    Enterprise Bank has been named a lead bank as well as collecting bank for various payment schemes of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN).

    A letter from the institute to its stakeholders, titled: ‘Appointment of Enterprise Bank as collecting bank for the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN),’ stated thus: “We are pleased to inform you that Enterprise Bank has been appointed as a Lead Bank as well as Collecting Bank for various ICAN payment schemes. The schemes include student registration fees, annual subscription, examinations fees, and practising licence fees.

    In a statement, the bank said it will process the institute’s payment schemes using the Pay-Direct platform. All branches of the bank have been enabled to seamlessly participate in the collection.

    It said the appointment indicates an expression of the institute’s confidence in the lender, adding to the growing list of collections the bank undertakes on behalf of the federal and state governments, parastatals and other institutions.

    Apart from ICAN, the bank also acts as a collecting bank for the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) charges, Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) and other educational institutions like the West African Examination Council (WAEC) as well as the National Examination Council (NECO).

    The rest include the Federal Inland Revenue (FIRS) taxes, state internally generated revenue (state taxes), export levies, Nigeria Export Supervision Scheme (NESS) fees, Custom and Excise duty and DSTV, among others. While thanking ICAN for the confidence reposed in the bank, the statement, added that Enterprise Bank will deliver on this assignment with all seriousness on its way to becoming a top collecting bank in the country.

    With this development, Enterprise Bank, the statement said, will continue to play a leading role in advancing the implementation of the cashless policy as part of the effort to be the bank of choice to all Nigerians.

  • Bola Kuforiji -Olubi still  holds the ace

    Bola Kuforiji -Olubi still holds the ace

    OTUNBA Ayora Bola Kuforiji-Olubi belongs to the comity of quintessential role models as she ranks top as one of the most successful and glamorous ladies in Nigeria.

    At over 70, she is like the proverbial good wine that becomes better with age. Though the former minister and first female ICAN president has been in and out of public glare, she, however, does not fail to register her presence where it is necessary. Her carriage, poise and style are still very much causing stirs at events. Otunba Ayora has been a society pillar, for with such pedigree, she perched permanently in the front row of the comity of the most glamorous female personalities in Nigeria.

    In the fashion world, she never played a second fiddle, as she consistently turned heads at parties with her enchanting personality and style.

  • Ranchers’ Akinbami becomes an ICAN member

    Ranchers’ Akinbami becomes an ICAN member

    Ranchers Bees’ media officer, Vincent Akinbami is now a chartered accountant.

    Akinbami was inducted as an associate member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) last Wednesday after passing the final stage of the institute’s exams in May.

    An excited Akinbami told SportingLife that: “I’m so grateful to God for the success. Combining sport and preparing for exams didn’t come easy for me, however, it’s a dream come true for me.

    “I’ll now focus on how I can make the league board and clubs see the importance of accounting as regards player’s contracts in clubs’ financial statements.”

    Akinbami has worked in various audit firms and as an accountant in the last 12 years while working as a reporter, television and radio sport presenter.

    He is a member of the Kaduna State Football Association publicity committee, and the coordinator forum for a better organised Nigerian League.

     

  • ICAN, schools sign pact

    The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) will soon sign an agreement with tertiary institutions, on its new Professional Examinations syllabus being reviewed in line with international best practices.

    The agreement, to be called the Mutual Cooperation Agreement with Tertiary Institutions (MCATI), stipulates how both parties will collaborate on the accountancy programmes under the new syllabus expected to take effect from November 2014.

    A statement by Claudia Binitie, Director, Corporate Communication and Marketing, noted that under the arrangement,accounting programmes of the partnering institutions from entry level to graduation will be moderated by ICAN and its partners. On graduation, candidates will be granted appropriate exemptions and will be eligible to sit the Institute’s professional examinations. The candidates shall also undergo a 36-month period of attachment and pass the qualifying examinations of the Institute before being inducted as full members.

    This new arrangement was part of the deliberation of the Governing Council of the Institute at its August 2013 meeting. The President and Chairman of Council of the institute, Alhaji Kabir Mohammed, said the agreement would help students prepare better for ICAN exams.

    “When the programme is fully embraced by tertiary institutions, the institute would have found a solution to the challenge of inadequate preparation of candidates for the ICAN examinations.

    “The mutual cooperation agreement with the tertiary institutions is one of the proactive measures by ICAN to ensure that individuals seeking to become chartered accountants acquire the knowledge, professional skills and competence required to protect the public interest in a rapidly changing business environment,” he said.

    With the new arrangement, the ICAN Council is modifying the terms of all earlier agreements between the Institute and various Universities which came into force in 2010 under the Integrated BSc Accounting programme.