• Backs advisory on partial sale of oil assets, airport concessions
• Saraki: Time for blame game is over
• RMAFC disagrees with proposal on sale of NLNG shares
• Saraki: Time for blame game is over
• RMAFC disagrees with proposal on sale of NLNG shares
In a bid to find quick solutions to the economic recession in the country, the Senate yesterday commenced debate on the issue, with Senate President Bukola Saraki presenting a 14-point plan to the federal government on how to make the crisis the shortest ever in history.
The Senate’s roadmap out of the recession
was contained in Saraki’s speech to welcome his colleagues back from
their annual vacation.
Going by the importance attached to finding urgent solutions to the recession, the Senate plenary commenced at 10.10 a.m. after the presiding and principal officers of the Senate filed into the chamber.
Going by the importance attached to finding urgent solutions to the recession, the Senate plenary commenced at 10.10 a.m. after the presiding and principal officers of the Senate filed into the chamber.
The recommendations by Saraki, which will form the basis for an elaborate debate today by his colleagues include:
• The executive must immediately put in place leadership-level engagement platform with the private sector.
• Government must raise capital from asset sales and other sources to shore up foreign reserves.
• The executive must immediately put in place leadership-level engagement platform with the private sector.
• Government must raise capital from asset sales and other sources to shore up foreign reserves.
• Consider tweaking the pension funds
policy within international best practice safeguards to accommodate
investment in infrastructure and mortgages.
• The federal government and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) must agree on a policy of monetary easing to stimulate the economy and harmonise monetary and fiscal policies until economic recovery is attained.
• The federal government and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) must agree on a policy of monetary easing to stimulate the economy and harmonise monetary and fiscal policies until economic recovery is attained.
• Re-tool its export promotion policy
scheme with incentives such as the resumption of the Export Expansion
Grant (EEG), and introduce export-financing initiatives.
• Engage in meaningful dialogue with those aggrieved in the Niger Delta and avoid an escalation of the conflict in the region.
• Engage in meaningful dialogue with those aggrieved in the Niger Delta and avoid an escalation of the conflict in the region.
• Consider the immediate release of funds
to ensure the implementation of the budget for the near short term to
inject money into the economy.
• Similarly, the agricultural sector and agro-allied businesses should be directly supported to boost value addition and jobs creation.
• Similarly, the agricultural sector and agro-allied businesses should be directly supported to boost value addition and jobs creation.
• While government works on the medium to
long-term plans, immediate strategies must be devised that would ease
the suffering of the ordinary people across the country.
• The legislature and executive must co-operate to ensure the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) into law as soon as possible to stimulate new investment and boost oil revenue.
• The legislature and executive must co-operate to ensure the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) into law as soon as possible to stimulate new investment and boost oil revenue.
Saraki added that while the executive is
working on the recommendations enumerated above, the National Assembly
should support it with the necessary legislations and oversight
activities such as:
• Accelerate bills aimed at reforming the
mortgage sub-sector for growth and accessibility in a manner that
deepens people’s access to housing, jobs and economic activities.
• Work on the National Development Bank of Nigeria (Establishment) Bill 2015 which will provide long term cheaper source of funds to the private sector.
• Work on the National Development Bank of Nigeria (Establishment) Bill 2015 which will provide long term cheaper source of funds to the private sector.
• Quickly commence work on the amendment
of the Nigerian Ports and Harbours Authority Act (Amendment) Bill 2016;
National Road Fund (Establishment, etc); National Transport Commission
Act 2001; Warehouse Receipts Act Bill 2016; Review of the Companies and
Allied Matters Act (CAMA), Investment and Securities Act (ISA) and
Customs and Excise Management Act; Federal Competition Bill 2016; and
the National Road Authority. These bills and some of the other economic
reform bills will be considered in the coming days.
• Explore the possibility of backing
certain key government policies with legislations that have time
limitations. This will help give confidence to investors to go into
certain areas of the economy and invest without the fear that such
policies will suffer reversals and loss of investment.
Elaborating on the proposals from the
Senate, Saraki lamented the current economic recession, recalling the
contraction of the gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate in the
second quarter of 2016 to 2.06 per cent following a decline to -0.36 per
cent in the first quarter.
He pointed out that with the current trend, “the Nigerian economy has had two consecutive quarters of economic contraction”.
Saraki advised the government of
President Muhammadu Buhari to immediately put the machinery in place to
raise capital from the sale of assets and other sources with a view to
raising foreign reserves, encouraging investors and discouraging
currency speculation.
He said the federal government, in its
search for economic recovery, should sell some of its assets including
its holdings in the Nigeria Liquefied and Natural Gas (NLNG) Company;
reduce government shares in upstream joint venture operations; sell
government stakes in financial institutions; and concession and
privatise major airports and refineries.
Saraki also suggested the need to situate
pension funds within the international best practices to boost
infrastructure investment, adding that both the federal government and
the CBN must evolve uniform policies to stimulate the economy and ensure
that local borrowing does not overshadow credit for the private sector.
“The executive must raise capital from
asset sales and other sources to shore up foreign reserves. This will
calm investors, discourage currency speculation and stabilise the
economy. The measures should include part sale of NLNG holdings;
reduction of government share in upstream oil joint venture operations;
sale of government stake in financial institutions e.g. Africa Finance
Corporation; and the privatisation and concession of major/regional
refineries and airports.
However, Saraki talked tough, warning all
who choose to introduce politics into the Senate’s roadmap to assist
the government in salvaging the system by accusing it of disloyalty to
steer clear, pointing out that the Senate would not be cowed by such
insinuations to jettison its constitutional responsibilities.
He insisted that the Senate would take tough decisions capable of repositioning the economy irrespective of whose ox is gored.
He insisted that the Senate would take tough decisions capable of repositioning the economy irrespective of whose ox is gored.
He said: “Distinguished colleagues, let
me also state clearly that we shall not hide under the cloak of partisan
solidarity to abdicate our constitutional responsibility under the
principles of checks and balances.
“We shall make critical interventions
whenever they become necessary and undertake emergency actions whenever
they are required, within the confines of the constitution.
“The task at hand requires us to take
tough decisions and do all that is necessary to dig our economy out of
this recession. This imperative must take precedence over partisan
loyalty. This is what the people expect of us and it is the only way we
can continue to justify our presence here.
“As I had mentioned earlier, on our part,
we will do the following: Go immediately to debate the state of the
economy and come up with economic measures that we will submit to the
executive. This, we will do, along with passing the necessary
legislation we have identified.”
He urged his colleagues to put behind
them ethnic, religious and political sentiments and confront the current
challenges in the spirit of unity and oneness, pointing out that even
though he is the most persecuted functionary by Buhari’s government, he
would yet not be swayed by that to be indifferent to the current
economic crisis.
In this regard, he encouraged his colleagues to imbibe the same spirit in the handling of the situation.
In this regard, he encouraged his colleagues to imbibe the same spirit in the handling of the situation.
“I do not think anybody in this chamber
has gone through more political persecution than myself since the
inception of this government, but I will be the last to fold my arms and
say that the current economic problem is not my problem. No, it is,” he
said.
While further tasking his colleagues to
brace up for the current challenges, Saraki said this was not the time
to engage in a blame game or political horse-trading but rather the time
to be deeply committed to ending the economic crisis, bearing in mind
that Nigerians are desperate for solutions and so “don’t care about our
politics; they don’t care about our political affiliations; they don’t
care if we are APC or PDP, north or south, Christians or Muslims”.
“What they want is for us to lead the way out of this crisis and deliver on the promises that we made to them,” he stressed.
He added: “We will work in concert, not
at cross-purposes. Our goal is clear; to work together with the
executive to get our economy out of this recession.
“We will proffer our solutions on policy issues, and where necessary enact the necessary legislation to ensure that investors’ confidence returns to the market.”
“We will proffer our solutions on policy issues, and where necessary enact the necessary legislation to ensure that investors’ confidence returns to the market.”
He also said the National Assembly would
back the executive with the necessary laws to boost investor confidence
and restated the commitment of the Senate to hasten the passage of the
necessary bills such as the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), submitting
that the passage of the PIB would stimulate fresh investments and boost
oil revenue.
“The impasse of not passing the bill is doing great harm to the industry and the Nigerian economy as a whole,” he observed.
“The impasse of not passing the bill is doing great harm to the industry and the Nigerian economy as a whole,” he observed.
However, the Senate’s plan to dissolve
into an executive session for a briefing by an expert on the true state
of the recession was stalled by the need to observe the National
Assembly’s tradition to adjourn plenary in honour of a late colleague.
Hence, yesterday’s plenary was adjourned
after Saraki’s speech in honour of a member of the House of
Representatives who represented Ifako-Ijaye federal constituency in
Lagos State, Hon. Adewale Oluwatayo. Oluwatayo passed on in July while
the National Assembly was on recess.
The executive session will now hold today.
Also speaking after yesterday’s plenary, Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, said the current recession was not peculiar to only Nigeria but had also hit a number of other countries such as Venezuela whose mainstay is oil.
Also speaking after yesterday’s plenary, Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, said the current recession was not peculiar to only Nigeria but had also hit a number of other countries such as Venezuela whose mainstay is oil.
He described it as a blessing in
disguise, saying it would provide the platform for the nation to explore
other sources of revenue such as the solid minerals’ sector.
RMAFC Opposes Sale of NLNG Shares
However, as the Senate joined the clamour
for the federal government to divest of some of its interest in the
NLNG in order to augment the revenue shortfall and boost foreign
exchange reserves, the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal
Commission (RMAFC) has kicked against the recommendation.
The CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, and
Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, had advised the government to
consider the partial sale of its oil assets as the recession bites
harder.
But in a statement signed by the RMAFC’s
acting Chairman, Shettima Umar Abba Gana, the commission argued that it
would be unwise for the federal government to dispose of its crown
jewels that generate revenue and keep the Federation Account healthy
over the long term.
Citing the NEITI 2013 audit and financial
report of Nigeria’s oil and gas industry, RMAFC disclosed that the sum
of $12.9 billion was received by the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) from the NLNG over an eight-year period which the
corporation did not remit to the Federation Account.
The audit, according to the commission, also revealed that NLNG paid $1.289 billion as dividends in 2013.
The audit, according to the commission, also revealed that NLNG paid $1.289 billion as dividends in 2013.
“It is the considered view of the
commission that Nigeria’s assets like NLNG and other strategic national
resources should not be sold to meet short-term financial obligation,”
it said.
RMAFC recalled that the CBN governor
indicated that the sum of $10 billion could be realised from the sale of
oil and gas sector assets held by the federal government.
It said: “The commission is of the strong opinion that the same amount could be borrowed from the IMF and the revenue from these assets could be used to amortise the loans over an agreed period.
It said: “The commission is of the strong opinion that the same amount could be borrowed from the IMF and the revenue from these assets could be used to amortise the loans over an agreed period.
“It should be noted that after the
amortisation of the loans, those assets would still be owned by the
federation in addition to their regular dividends and revenue.”
RMAFC said instead of selling off such
vital assets, which generate funds for the federation, wealthy Nigerians
should be encouraged to set up their own LNG projects, since Nigeria is
ranked seventh in the world and first in Africa with natural gas
reserves base totalling 188 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) as at May 1, 2015.
In addition, Nigeria’s natural gas is
regarded as one of the best in the world as it has low hydrogen sulphide
(H2S) or carbon dioxide (CO2) impurity levels, the commission added.
Culled from Thisday
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