Showing posts with label Nigerian Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigerian Economy. Show all posts

Sunday, November 5, 2017

All change! Nigeria is not an oil economy

Descriptions of Nigeria’s economy often include such phrases as ‘Africa’s largest oil producer’ and ‘the oil rich African nation’ but oil economies are typically characterised by low population densities and abundant oil resources. Saudi Arabia with 10 million barrels of oil per day and 30 million people, Kuwait with 2.7 million barrels of oil per day and 4 million people and Qatar with 1.5 million barrels of oil per day and 2.5 million people are typical of such. These economies pursued an economic model that was built around a large government dependent almost entirely on oil revenue for funding. Such economies could afford to have low or in some cases no domestic revenue mobilisation, in the form of taxes. Tax to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratios of less than 10% against the OECD average of 34.6% could be justified especially in the era of high oil prices.
For over three decades, Nigeria pursued this model. But things are changing, with the election of President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015, who was propelled into office under the mantra of ‘change’. That clamour for change, in the areas of governance, security and economy, coincided with the collapse of global oil prices and a consequent huge deficit in government revenues. These circumstances provided the ingredients for an overhaul of the entire economic model.  The first and rather numbing conclusion of that exercise was that Nigeria is not actually an ‘oil economy’. With just 2 million barrels of oil per day and over 180 million people, simple mathematics tells us that 90 Nigerians share a barrel of oil compared to 3 Saudis, 1.44 Kuwaitis and 1.69 Qataris. With oil at just 10% of GDP, Nigeria simply does not fit into the mould of the traditional oil economies.
Interestingly, even nations who did legitimately fit into this narrow mould of high oil revenues and low populations, are abandoning what is now considered to be a flawed model. Thus, the imperative for Nigeria was even more urgent. Nigeria recalibrated its target peer group from the oil economies to the ‘oil plus’ economies such as Mexico and Egypt. This new peer group have diversified economies and tax to GDP ratios of 20% and 16%, respectively, compared to Nigeria’s 6%. Consequently, the change mantra had to be urgently applied to revenue mobilisation.
Analysis of the data suggests that revenue mobilisation is potentially the master key to unlocking Nigeria’s huge growth potential by funding its ailing infrastructure including roads, power and rail. A cursory look at the effective tax rates paid by the huge multinational and local operators, as well as the data on illicit financial flows, indicates a pattern of systematic tax evasion at all levels. Recent statistics released by the Federal Ministry of Finance showed that Nigeria has just 14 million active tax payers from an economically active base of 70 million. Over 95% of these are salary earners in the formal sector, just 241 persons paid personal income taxes of N20m (US$65,573.77) in 2016.  Taxing the high networth and Nigeria’s huge community of entrepreneurs constitutes a critical but yet attainable target. The statistics for corporate tax payment shows the debilitating effects of base erosion and profit shifting as well as abuse of an overly generous tax incentive and duty waiver system. The historical government apathy towards revenue mobilisation is one of the effects of the mistaken identity that saw Nigeria perceive itself as an oil economy. This Administration is determined to correct this identity crisis and all its concomitant effects.
In that spirit, we launched an ongoing and well received, tax amnesty, ‘The Voluntary Asset and Income Declaration Scheme’ (VAIDS) is affording a 9-month window for Nigerian tax payer’s, both corporate and individual, to regularise their tax status in exchange for a guarantee of no interest, penalties, tax investigation or further audit. This amnesty follows successful initiatives in a number of countries, where tax evasion is a problem, such as Indonesia, Argentina, South Africa and India. It has been programmed to end just as the Automatic Exchange of Information, which will provide Nigerian tax authorities with unprecedented levels of information on offshore assets, becomes effective.
The initial signs suggest that Nigerians are responding positively to the new revenue narrative. Despite the emergence from a recession, tax revenues are showing early signs of growth. VAT shows 18.97% year on year improvement. Over 800,000 companies, including some Government contractors, that have never paid taxes have already been identified and are being audited. This is an unprecedented initiative that entails cooperation between Federal and State Governments. The Federal Ministry of Finance has also commenced a database project that combines data from the various arms of government including bank records, property and company ownership, and customs records to create accurate profiles of those liable to pay taxes. The Ministry has also placed one of the world’s premier private investigation agencies on retainership to trace overseas assets.
Changing the Nigerian economic psyche is not an easy task. By its nature, tax mobilisation risks the popularity of any Government, but the present Administration understands that the short term lure of political expediency must give way to the long term best interests of Africa’s largest economy. Her energetic, young and growing population are deserving of the chance to experience a truly transformed, sustainable and growing economy.
Source: P.M. NEWS Nigeria

Friday, August 18, 2017

We must Restructure Nigeria - Mimoko



The immediate-past governor of Ondo State, Olusegun Mimiko, has lent his voice to the call for the Nigeria’s restructuring. Mimiko, who spoke yesterday in Lagos at a colloquium organised by the Island Club, Lagos, said the agitation for restructuring should not be viewed as an attack on the North but an attempt to decentralise power.

Friday, August 11, 2017

No more room for excuses, Osinbajo tells Mininsters

Acting President Yemi Osinbajo  has said the Muhammadu Buhari administration will no longer accept excuses that suggest that delivering sustainable socio-economic development to Nigerians is not attainable.

He spoke yesterday at the Cabinet Retreat on the Economic Recovery Growth Plan (ERGP) and the 2018 Budget preparation at the State House, Abuja.

In a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, Osinbajo said: “After listening to Dr. Idris Jala all I can say is as the opposition leader in Malaysia said, this is what I have been saying for the past 50 years!

“But seriously he is so right; the challenge is this, the discipline to be unreasonable in our targets and objectives. The discipline of attending the labs diligently and accepting to be locked in a room for as long as it takes to iron out what it is that needs to be done.

“I like the point also that Dr Jala made that the excuse that it won’t work here, the Nigerian factor, or some say exceptionalism, or the acceptance of failure before you even start is certainly not tenable any more.”

Osinbajo went on: “We simply have to accept that there is nothing Nigerian about failure, because as we know in our personal lives, failure and success are commodities on offer to everyone all over the world and every individual and every country makes a choice of which to buy and I will say on our behalf that we will choose success.

“Dr Jala, I have heard motivational speeches, but this is one I think that challenges our whole legitimacy as persons entrusted with leadership.

“I think it goes beyond motivational speech. I think it really challenges the core of our relevance as leaders and I am challenged and I know that many of us here are and I think that we will do what we need to do to make sure that we see through the labs that we have to identify specific areas where we will do this labs. We must see to it that this works.

“I want to thank you again for this exceptional moment you have taken us through and to thank all of you also for taking the time to come. So the work has just begun.”

Permanent Secretaries and heads of Ministries Departments and Agents (MDAs attended the retreat at the old Banquet Hall of the State House, Abuja.

The retreat, which is on the Implementation of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) and the 2018 budget preparation. It was with the theme:  “Building Synergy For Effective ERPG Implementation”.

The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday approved the 2018-2020 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF).

At the end of the retreat, Minister of Budget and National Planning Udoma Udo Udoma told reporters: “It was basically about the ERGP and preparations for the 2018 budget and linking the plan with the budget and we will be briefing cabinet members about the linkages between the plan and the budget.

“Basically, we have to keep on reviewing at every stage. So, this is review about where we are, what needs to be done and what steps we need to take in areas that we need to fast track.

“We are moving ahead in terms of the modalities that have been defined. This is not the time to actually say what stage and so on. We will be giving briefings.”

On when the MTEFF will be sent to the National Assembly, Udoma said: “National Assembly is on break, so, nearer the time they will resume in September but ours is to follow the Fiscal Responsibility Act which has some timelines and we are trying to keep strictly by those timelines.”

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Nigeria' s 2018-2020 revenue projetion feasible

Nigeria’s 2018-2020 revenue projections feasible

Victor Muruako, Acting Chairman, Fiscal Responsibility Commission, FRC. [Photo Credit: Nigerian Television Authority, NTA]

Victor Muruako, Acting Chairman, Fiscal Responsibility Commission, FRC, says the revenue projections contained in the 2018-2020 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP) are feasible.

He told the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN, on Tuesday in Abuja that the projections were in line with the realities on ground.

According to him, the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan, ERGP, of the Federal Government has helped shape the 2018-2020 MTEF and formed the basis for the 2018 budget projections as outlined in the document.

He commended the Federal Government for engaging Civil Society Organisations, CSOs, the media and organised private sector in consultations for the preparation of the document, adding that it was the first time such would happen.

He also said the involvement of civil society and other sectors was in line with the provisions of the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA) 2007.

The Ministry of Budget and National Planning, had on Thursday, carried out a public consultation on the 2018-2020 MTEF and FSP.

The key assumptions and macro-framework of the 2018 budget were predicated on oil production of 2.3 million barrels per day (mbpd), oil price of 45 dollars per barrel and an exchange rate of N305 to one dollar.

The inflation rate was pegged at 12.42 per cent and Gross Domestic Product growth rate was pegged at 4.8 per cent.

It was also projected in the MTEF that oil production would be 2.4 mbpd in 2019; 2.5 mbpd in 2020, while exchange rate was retained at N305 to one dollar for 2019 and 2020.

Inflation was projected to stay at 13.39 per cent in 2019 and 9.90 per cent in 2020.

The MTEF/FSP is a three-year planning tool that defines government’s economic, social and development objectives and priorities.

In a related development, BP expects global oil prices to hold within a range of $45-$55 a barrel next year as U.S. shale production grows, the British company’s chief financial officer said on Tuesday.

Brian Gilvary told Reuters in London that global demand was looking pretty strong, and prices would firm around the levels seen today.

“We can now see where the price elasticity is. As the price comes up to $52-$53 a barrel, we start to see some uptick in activity, as it drops to $45, we start to see that curtailing.

“For 2018, something around $45-$55 a barrel is probably a good range.

“(This is because) after a slow start to the year, global oil demand recovered in the second quarter of 2017 and was expected to grow by 1.4 to 1.5 million barrels per day,” Gilvary said.
Brent crude oil prices averaged $51.71 a barrel in the first half of 2017 and are currently just below $53 a barrel.

Earlier BP reported a drop in second quarter profits after an exploration write-off in Angola.

Friday, July 28, 2017

What has Obasanjo's generation done for Nigeria?

LET ME start by congratulating former
President Olusegun Obasanjo on his newest
title of Baba Onigbagbo Ogun (Leader of
Christians in Ogun State) conferred on him
by the Christian Association of Nigeria,
Ogun State Branch on Sunday, February 26,
2017 in celebration of his 80th birthday. This
is a position that should make the former
President speak the truth no matter the
condition he finds himself but alas it wasn’t
so.
On Monday, February 27, 2017 at a
programme organised by the Kaduna State
Chamber of Mines and Commerce, Obasanjo
challenged Nigerian youths by asking them
what their generation would do for Nigeria.
He stated that his generation fought for the
unity of Nigeria and laid the foundation for
democracy but forgot that his generation
also undid the two things they did for
Nigeria. His generation fought for the unity
of Nigeria and still introduced disunity in
like manner. The democracy that was given
to Nigeria by his generation was a fake one
as it is “lootocracy”, a democracy that is
based on looting, looting and looting.
The evil done to Nigeria by Obasanjo’s
generation is unequalled and unparalleled.
Obasanjo and his contemporaries like Gen
Sani Abacha, Gen Ibrahim Babangida,
immediate past government and
Muhammadu Buhari among others are the reason why Nigeria is at the zero point we
are today.
Nigeria gained independence in 1960.
That independence was truncated by
Obasanjo’s fellow military men when we
had the first coup and Maj. Gen. J.T.U.
Aguiyi Ironsi emerged as the Head of
State. The casualties of the coup included
the Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar
Tafawa Balewa; the Sardauna of Sokoto, Sir
Ahmadu Bello; the Premier of the Western
Region, Samuel Akintola; and finance
minister Festus Okotie-Eboh, among
others. These shining stars were lost to the
coup plotted and executed by Obasanjo’s
generation and Nigeria has not been the
same since then.
After this, there were coups and countercoups
including the one involving
Obasanjo in 1975 that saw to the removal
of Gen. Yakubu Gowon from office and the
circus continued until “democracy” came
back fully in 1999 with the same Obasanjo
as President of the Federal Republic.
The military coups were the first actions
that created division in our country. The
same unity that Obasanjo’s generation
claimed they fought for. The coups were
plotted and executed based on religion and
ethnic coloration and till today, the fruits
of those ignoble actions are being reaped
by Nigerians. Apart from the coups, this
generation destroyed the commonwealth
of Nigeria and positioned us for the
breaking point of today.
The military governments headed by
Obasanjo’s generation were characterised
by looting, state sponsored assassinations,
mysterious disappearance of people from
the country and other evil vices. When
Buhari as a military officer toppled the
democratically elected president Shehu
Shagari from office in a bloodless coup
in 1983 and took over the reins of power
with his deputy, Brig. Tunde Idiagbon,
they succeeded in leading the country
into its worst economic mess, the value
of the naira dropped and there was
hardship everywhere coupled with the 52
suitcases issue too. So, what has Obasanjo’s
generation done for Nigeria?
After a period of time, Buhari was
removed in a palace coup by Babangida
in 1985. Babangida’s tenure was a
continuation of the maladministration of
the Buhari regime, from assassinations
to looting and other vices including
the introduction of the failed Structural
Adjustment Programme; this tenure
stood out. Under the leadership of the
Evil Genius (as fondly called), Dele Giwa
was killed in a parcel bomb on a Black
Sunday. That was the first and only time
that a Nigerian had died by parcel bomb
and this was long before Boko Haram
started deploying bombs everywhere.
Under Babangida, the June 12 election
which was adjudged the freest and fairest
election in Nigeria’s history was annulled
for no reason. Till today, what happened
to the $12bn Gulf War oil windfall under
Babangida remains a mystery. So, what has
Obasanjo’s generation done for Nigeria?
The maladministration of Obasanjo’s
generation continued with the government
of Yar’Adua/Jonathan. The government
of the day will be in competition with
Abacha’s tenure based on corruption
perception index. It was all about looting,
looting and looting. We can’t forget so soon
the alleged missing $20bn among other
looted funds as was revealed by the EFCC.
So, what has Obasanjo’s generation done
for Nigeria?
The same Buhari that was a beneficiary
of a coup that removed Shagari from office
in 1985 is now the President of Nigeria
after winning the 2015 presidential election
and as it was in 1983, so it is in 2017. The
Nigerian economy is experiencing its worst
recession in 25 years courtesy of the Buhariled
government. The security situation is
still a mounting challenge.
From the north to the south, it’s all
shades of civil unrest and terrorist attacks
and our President is currently in London
on medical vacation after campaigning
against foreign medical treatment. All
because Obasanjo’s generation didn’t build
a world class health system for Nigeria. So,
what has his generation done for Nigeria?

Nigeria has not settled since Buhari became President, Betty Apiafa


A member of the House of Representatives, representing Abua-Odua/Ahoada East federal constituency, Betty Apiafa has stated that Nigeria became unsettled since the All Progressives Congress mounted the seat of power.

Apiafa, who doubles as Chairman, House Committee on Health Institutions, noted that the current administration led by President Muhammadu Buhari treats citizens with utter disdain.

According to her, “In Nigeria, the All Progressives Congress, APC, should realize they are the party in power.

“The country has not settled since they came to power. Today they are fighting the National Assembly; today Ministers are making inciting statements. You can’t fight with the judiciary, legislators all the time.

“You saw the way Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, ran government calmly and positively. Now you have a situation where a party with majority in the National Assembly is always at daggers drawn.

“Nigeria, as it is today, is a country where you don’t respect minority rights, and this is critical. I come from a minority; I don’t regret it. But one does not feel right that minorities are treated this way.

“Look at the last elections I was intimidated. The kind of intimidation we suffered in that election was unprecedented.

“They took my driver to intimidate me. I had to run on the motor bike on that re-run Election Day. They collected my car, and it was after the election they released it with an apology.”

Enclosures

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Nigeria has not settled since Buhari became President, Betty Apiafa


A member of the House of Representatives, representing Abua-Odua/Ahoada East federal constituency, Betty Apiafa has stated that Nigeria became unsettled since the All Progressives Congress mounted the seat of power.

Apiafa, who doubles as Chairman, House Committee on Health Institutions, noted that the current administration led by President Muhammadu Buhari treats citizens with utter disdain.

According to her, “In Nigeria, the All Progressives Congress, APC, should realize they are the party in power.

“The country has not settled since they came to power. Today they are fighting the National Assembly; today Ministers are making inciting statements. You can’t fight with the judiciary, legislators all the time.

“You saw the way Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, ran government calmly and positively. Now you have a situation where a party with majority in the National Assembly is always at daggers drawn.

“Nigeria, as it is today, is a country where you don’t respect minority rights, and this is critical. I come from a minority; I don’t regret it. But one does not feel right that minorities are treated this way.

“Look at the last elections I was intimidated. The kind of intimidation we suffered in that election was unprecedented.

“They took my driver to intimidate me. I had to run on the motor bike on that re-run Election Day. They collected my car, and it was after the election they released it with an apology.”

Enclosures

 images-3-10.jpg 

 images-3-10.jpg