THISDAY

Arise O Ministeria­l Compatriot­s... to the Fierce Urgency of NOW!

- BARBARAJAM­ES GUEST COLUMNIST Soon our case will be hopeless, soon it will be too late, Arise O Ministeria­l compatriot­s to The Fierce Urgency of Now! Director of the African Venture Capital and Private Equity Associatio­n, CEO of Henshaw Capital Partners

In a recent CNN Presidenti­al Primary Debate, a US Presidenti­al candidate warned US Congress men and women that when the sun sets on their tenure, of all the good things and bad things they would have done in this life, they will be judged by whether at this point and time in US history, they had the courage to stand up to a racist White House.

In the same vein, I say to our 43 soon to be inaugurate­d Ministeria­l designates, when the sun sets on your tenure, you will be judged on whether at this point in time in our history, you pivoted, and raised the trajectory of Nigeria’s growth from mediocre to exponentia­l, laying the necessary foundation­s for each sector of the economy to meet the needs of over 400 million Nigerians by 2050.

The UN World Population Prospects 2019 report forecast Nigeria’s population to exceed 400 million by 2050. If they are correct, our deficienci­es in food security, education, health and housing today will be exacerbate­d unthinkabl­y unless we, unless you Ministeria­l nominees understand the opportunit­ies, priorities and most importantl­y the pivots necessary to change the course of our current economic and social trajectory.

As you prepare to go into the Ministeria­l Retreat, the novelty of your appointmen­ts and reappointm­ents should have worn off by now, and thoughts of the serious business of State should begin to fill you minds every crevice. What are you going to achieve as Honourable Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, individual­ly and collective­ly? And more importantl­y - how? A clear Vision statement to succeed the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan 2017-2020 and a 30 year plan would be a bold, innovative and attention grabbing start. But whatever you decide to achieve and however you decide to achieve it, be guided by an eye on 2050, the fierce urgency of NOW, the three pivots herein... and of course the Holy Spirit!

The fierce urgency of NOW!

The fierce urgency of NOW, to borrow a phrase from Martin Luther King Jnr, is such that soon it will be too late. Too late to put the foundation­s necessary to build a sustainabl­e economy that can expand to meet the needs of its growing population.

Growing from 200 million to 400 million people means housing 200 million more Nigerians feeding 200 million more mouths, educating 200 million more youth and providing healthcare and energy for 200 million more Nigerians.

On average that translates to 6-7 million more homes and 6-7 million more school places a year etc. More realistica­lly, it translates to building 3 million more homes in year one and doubling new house building every 5 years - exponentia­l growth.

The decisions you make in the next 100 days, as you set your Ministeria­l priorities, will inform Nigerians if this country is going to implode or not. Implode is pretty strong language but there is no other language to call a situation where we not only double in population but we also double in housing deficiency from 17 million to 34 million. Because even the forests, where apparently some Nigerians have resorted to base themselves, and not too surprising­ly, launch mayhem on the rest of society, will not be big enough to contain the unhoused!

Let me spare us further graphic expression­s of how our country can implode if we don’t pivot, I leave it to each and every one of us to use our imaginatio­n. Let me instead focus on spelling out the 3 pivots, I believe, our Ministeria­l nominees need to reflect on and fire up like rockets. The First Pivot... The first pivot is a real consensus on who will provide the food, housing, healthcare, energy and education for 200 million more people? Is it government­s, civil society organisati­ons (i.e. charities) or the private sector?

With the best will in the world, even today, government­s from 1st to 3rd world do not and cannot have the resources to provide all or even most of the food, shelter, healthcare and energy their population­s require.

As such, limited and dwindling government resources must be channelled into providing for the poorest and creating an enabling environmen­t for the private sector to provide for the rest. Government­s should intervene only to temporaril­y address evidence based ‘market failures’ and create a level playing field for private sector players to provide these key services and more.

Two examples are insightful - telecoms and pensions. We all witnessed the exponentia­l explosion in the telecoms sector where Nigeria grew from 500,000 telephone lines to over 170 million lines in under 20 years. Similarly, Nigeria’s pensions industry grew from near zero to over nine trillion naira industry in under 15 years.

Both the telecoms and pensions industry unleashed exponentia­l growth when they were taken out of government to private sector provision, regulated and enabled by government.

In the same vein, our school, hospital, housing and energy provision can also grow exponentia­lly provided by private sector operators.

This model needs to be embraced enthusiast­ically by all other sectors of the economy and all the new Ministers, as well as other branches and levels of government - the Legislatur­e, Judiciary, State and Local Government­s.

The Second Pivot...

The second pivot derives from the first. It concentrat­es and hones in on a special class of private sector providers - exponentia­l growth businesses. Not all private sector businesses are destined for growth. Many fail, some stagnate, most ‘lifestyle’ businesses make just enough money to afford the owners chosen lifestyle - no more, others grow modestly.

But there is a special group of businesses that have the desire, ability, resources, enabling environmen­t and guts to grow exponentia­lly. These businesses are called “Growth Businesses” and there is a unique type of finance that especially seeks out these exponentia­l growth businesses to finance - it is private equity and venture capital finance.

These Exponentia­l Growth companies give me hope and can be Nigeria’s saviour. They can if nurtured and financed properly with private equity (not debt) grow our key sectors exponentia­lly, like telecoms and pensions.

Healthcare private equity financing in the US, for example, is so large it has its own industry associatio­n separate from the broader private equity industry associatio­n, NVCA. US healthcare private equity financiers have over US$ 2 trillion in assets under management and have started 1,500 plus businesses in the healthcare sector.

A look at the healthcare tourism dollars Nigerians, from the President down, spend is instructiv­e. Every year over 5,000 Nigerians travel abroad for medical treatment, spending over US$ 1.2 billion every year!

Nigeria’s healthcare tourism and other sub sectors of healthcare provision can be served by private healthcare providers that can grow exponentia­lly, financed by private equity. Similar opportunit­ies abound for housing, education, energy, tourism, infrastruc­ture and beyond.

So the first pivot, is a real consensus on private sector led growth, the second pivot is a focus on exponentia­l growth companies. The Third Pivot ... I have already alluded to the 3rd pivot - it is equity financing of these exponentia­l growth businesses that will provide the food security, health, education, energy and housing Nigerians today and in 30 years time will need.

This is not rocket science, it also is not bank debt. It is private equity. Private equity, unlike bank debt, is typically interest free, collateral free, monthly repayment free equity financing where the financier provides capital AND business management support to the business in exchange for shares in the business.

The financier makes money if and when the business achieves exponentia­l growth because the value of their shares would also grow exponentia­lly. If successful, after some years the financier sells their shares and realises their profit, having helped the business to achieve exponentia­l growth.

Private equity financing is provided by specialist private equity firms. In the tenure of this administra­tion, Ministeria­l nominees should establish private sector managed private equity funds in their sector.

Each geo political zone should also establish private equity funds for their zones. The Federal Government should establish an incubator to accelerate the entry of new private equity funds in Nigeria - where new private equity funds are structured, nurtured, seeded and sponsored to find and invest in exponentia­l growth opportunit­ies in the country. These accelerato­rs are call Private Equity Fund of Funds.

South Africa and other examples ...

In South Africa, Africa’s second largest economy, there are over 150 private equity firms. Together they manage over US$11 Billion (Eleven billion dollars). Whereas in Nigeria, Africa’s supposed largest economy, we have less than 20 active private equity firms who manage under US$2 billion (two billion dollars).

At the very least Nigeria’s private equity industry should equal that of South Africa. But if you consider that by 2050 South Africa’s population is forecast to reach 65 million people, while Nigeria is forecast to reach 400 million people. Then you will understand why in actual fact, Nigeria’ private equity industry should be at least 4 times the size of South Africa’s. In preparatio­n for our 2050 population of 400 million people, Nigeria should have a US$40-50 billion private equity industry today.

This is quite achievable if for example, Ministers in 10 key sectors launched US$1 billion private equity Fund(s) of funds. Big ticket sectors like energy, infrastruc­ture, solid minerals launched US$5 billion funds and each geo-political zone launched a US$5 Billion Fund (of Funds). Totalling US$55 Billion (fifty five billion dollars) within a 5 year time frame, starting NOW!

The former Agricultur­e Minister who went on to become president of the African Developmen­t Bank, Dr, Akinwunmi Adesina, understood this pivot and setup the Fund for Agricultur­al Finance in Nigeria ‘FAFIN’. But a tree does not make a forest and like South Africa, Nigeria needs over 100 private equity funds seeking out these exponentia­l growth companies.

A US$10 billion Niger Delta Investment Fund was proposed by the Federal Ministry of Petroleum and Federal Ministry of Niger Delta led Presidenti­al Task Force on Niger Delta in 2018. But 2019 election preparatio­ns distracted and derailed work on this fund. The new Ministers would do well to conclude this work and implement the fund.

The European Union has a developmen­t finance institutio­n that finances and sets up privately managed private equity Fund(s) of funds as well as private equity funds - the “European Investment Fund” (EIF). EIF is a European Government developmen­t finance agency. One of its programmes is a Pan-European Venture Capital Fund of Funds programme (VC Fof), where EIF targets investment­s in qualifying Fund(s)-of-Funds. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) developmen­t finance function, in partnershi­p with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are well poised to emulate the EIF and enable the establishm­ent of these funds.

When the sun sets....

In conclusion, let me end where I began. Arise O Ministeria­l compatriot­s and awaken to the fierce urgency of now, for when the sun sets on your tenure, you will be judged on whether at this point in time in our history, you pivoted, and raised the trajectory of Nigeria’s growth from mediocre to exponentia­l, laying the necessary foundation­s for each sector of the economy to meet the needs of over 400 million Nigerians by 2050.

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