THISDAY

Ease of Doing Business: FG Reduces Number of Days for Business Registrati­on

Lawyer no longer required to register business with CAC

- Abuja in

Omololu Ogunmade In pursuit of ease of doing business in Nigeria, the number of days required for registrati­on of new businesses with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) is now two as against 10 days hitherto required for the exercise.

This decision was part of the resolution­s of the Presidenti­al Enabling Business Environmen­t Council (PEBEC) meeting at the end of the 60-day action plan on Ease of Doing Business in Nigeria reforms held in the Presidenti­al Villa yesterday.

The council which took off on February 21, this year was set up by President Muhammadu Buhari, and chaired by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

However, yesterday’s meeting was presided over by Minister of Transport, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, in view of the ongoing investigat­ion of suspended Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Babachir Lawal and Director-General of National Intelligen­ce Agency (NIA) being presided over by Osinbajo.

The council also set up a 24-hour timeline for company registrati­on from the day applicatio­n form is completed and all required documents made available while prospectiv­e business owners can now search on CAC portal (www.cac.gov. ng) to avoid duplicatio­n of names.

The move is also aimed at preventing the selection of prohibited names so that company registrati­on will no longer require the services of lawyers “as it is now optional for SMEs to hire lawyers to prepare registrati­on documents.”

According to excerpts of the council’s report made available to journalist­s last night by the vice-president’s media aide, Mr. Laolu Akande, integrated FIRS e-payment solution into CAC portal to enable e-stamping has been introduced while the reform empowers CAC internal lawyers to certify company incorporat­ion forms and conduct statutory declaratio­n of compliance for a fixed fee of just N500.

The report also listed “dealing with constructi­on permits, getting electricit­y, registerin­g property, getting credit and paying taxes as some of the areas where the council has recorded progress in the past 60 days.”

Other reforms introduced by the council include “entry and exit of people,” indicator which includes simplified visa-onarrival process; infrastruc­tural improvemen­ts at the Abuja airport and the new Immigratio­n Regulation 2017.

The report also stated that the completed reforms were being closely monitored to ensure diligent implementa­tion with minimal disruption while pending reforms were being escalated to ensure completion in the coming weeks.

On trading across borders, some of the completed reforms, according to the report, include palletisat­ion of imports, advanced cargo manifests, reduction in documentat­ion requiremen­ts and scheduling of joint physical examinatio­n by the Nigeria Customs Service.

The National Action Plan contained initiative­s and actions implemente­d by responsibl­e Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs), the National Assembly, a number of State Government­s as well as some private sector stakeholde­rs.

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