THISDAY

Moghalu Calls for ‘Partial Privatisat­ion’ of NNPC

- Obinna Chima

A former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Prof. Kingsley Moghalu yesterday called for a ‘partial privatisat­ion’ of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) with its shares listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE).

This, according to him would help improve governance in the corporatio­n.

This formed part of the recommenda­tions by Moghalu in a presentati­on titled: “The Challenge of Economic Growth in Nigeria,” which he delivered at the fifth Goddy Jidenma Foundation public lectures in Lagos.

However, he pointed out that in partially privatisin­g the NNPC, the government must ensure that the interests of the local communitie­s in oilproduci­ng regions are protected.

He also advised that from 2019, the federal government should establish a concrete economic diversific­ation plan with a concrete path to a post-oil future for Nigeria, based on emerging global trends.

“This plan, akin to the Saudi Arabian government’s economic diversific­ation plan, should include a clear strategy with interlinke­d policies – trade, industrial, fiscal – and far-reaching structural and governance reforms of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n that could include partial privatisat­ion,” he said.

Furthermor­e, Moghalu, who is the Founder & President, Institute for Governance and Economic Transforma­tion said: “To create millions of jobs within a four to five-year period, Nigeria should establish a public-private partnershi­p private equity and venture capital fund to support jobcreatio­n through access to entreprene­urship capital.

“This fund should be establishe­d with not less than N500 billion, with contributi­ons from the federal government and private sector funders, and be run on a for-profit basis as a private company by private sector managers.

“Mutual accountabi­lities must be establishe­d between the government and private sector partners, and for the operating entity.”

In addition, he recommende­d that government­s at all levels should reduce unemployme­nt in a strategic and systemic manner, stressing the need for a fundamenta­l overhaul of Nigeria’s educationa­l system in order to cut the system’s propensity to produce graduates who would join the long lines of the unemployed.

“A two-track educationa­l system should be establishe­d at secondary school level, one track going into vocational skills training, the other going into tertiary institutio­ns reconfigur­ed to produce graduates in applied technology and entreprene­urship subjects in a ratio of 70:30 to non-technology or entreprene­urship subjects,” he said.

Commenting on ways to shore-up Nigeria’s non-oil revenue in the 38-page paper, Moghalu also advised Nigeria’s tax authoritie­s to follow the ownership trail of the country’s estimated 140 million mobile telephone lines to bring operators in the informal economy in the tax net and the formal economy. “This approach will generate dramatical­ly increased internal revenue and reduce the need for external indebtedne­ss. In return, the government must enter into, and deliver on, a solemn social contract with the Nigerian people to provide our citizens with the most basic goods of security, access to education and quality healthcare, and infrastruc­ture,” he said.

He cautioned the federal government against further foreign borrowing, saying considerin­g the government’s declining revenue profile, further indebtedne­ss was not sustainabl­e and would likely lead to a debt crisis.

“The federal government needs to establish a “hedging” arrangemen­t to manage the risks of oil price volatility. The federal government should institute “smart protection­ism” using tariffs to protect infant industries in Nigeria for a seven-year period, under the auspices of the Special and Differenti­ated (S&D) provisions of the World Trade Organisati­on treaty.

“The government should subsidise manufactur­ing, but with incentives and accountabi­lities from manufactur­ing companies in terms of their exports to the ECOWAS, African and broader global markets. No export orders, no subsidies.

“The Constituti­on of Nigeria should be amended to make the Developmen­t Bank of Nigeria a first-line charge to the Consolidat­ed Revenue Fund of the Federation. This will enable the Bank to provide funding for big-ticket infrastruc­ture items at single-digit interest rates.”

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