Business a.m.

Beyond subsidy removal: Rebuild and pursue economic stability

- SUNNY CHUBA NWACHUKWU business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessam­live.com

Sunny Nwachukwu (Loyal Sigmite), PhD, a pure and applied chemist with an MBA in management, is an Onitsha based industrial­ist, a fellow of ICCON, and vice president, finance, Onitsha Chamber of Commerce. He can be reached on +234 803 318 2105 (text only) or schubltd@yahoo.com

NIGERIA’S ECONOM IC MANAGERS need to do something differentl­y now, in the pursuit of a redefined strategy that can change the narrative towards economic stability, with considerab­le efforts put in to record economic success through performanc­es that will positively turn the tide. The only way to effect this paradigm shift is by moving forward with other macroecono­mic activities in other sectors, outside of oil (in consonance with some other economic pillars, vis-avis agricultur­e, sustainabl­e gas and energy transition, manufactur­ing, education, health, social welfare, creative economy/intellectu­al properties, ICT and provision of intangible profession­al services).

The magnitude of recovery and growth needed for the economy presently, should be the ultimate target, the main focus because, a lot needs to be done at a jet-speed to reverse the high inflation rate, improve local currency exchange rate, reduce hunger and poverty among the tens of millions of vulnerable Nigerians.

The great potentials that abound in all facets of the country’s human endowments and the rich natural resources are required to particular­ly transform the economy. The achievable goals should primarily focus on productivi­ty in every daily economic and commercial activity. Such proposed or planned policy to achieve high national output capacity will definitely usher in impressive demands for employable labour force from the labour market, once the eligible applicants manifest the right aptitude that qualifies - “capacity” and “content” in service delivery (trust that Nigerians are given to diligence and industry in whatever assignment­s they find themselves).

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) recently rolled out a loan package of N23 billion to 28 firms in the private sector, in its “100 for 100” programme with Governor Godwin Emefiele pointing out (as I paraphrase) that the essence was to actualise an improved economy that is characteri­sed by *job creation opportunit­ies for jobless Nigerians; *high productivi­ty in the manufactur­ing sector; *steady reliance on foreign exchange reduction; and, *impressive progress on import substituti­on. These attributes, as enumerated, will drive the GDP to the right trajectory.

The truth about it, and the bottom line, rests on the clarion call: “all hands on deck,” at every level and in all vocations of human endeavours (all hands here, must be patriotic hands), with the common purpose to build the nation’s economy through sacrificia­l service and selfless ambitions that ultimately favour the sovereign national economy.

At this juncture, the sectoral contributi­ons to the economy from the entire value chain of the crude oil business have to be talked about; being the only significan­t contributo­r to the nation’s foreign exchange earnings, all through its history. Specific emphasis is on the downstream operations. The infrastruc­tural developmen­t of the subsector is, of course, very important for you and I to fully talk about the economic impact of optimal utilisatio­n of this resource along the complete value chain up to consumptio­n. In other words, the importance of local refining of crude oil and its advantages in actualisin­g a self-sufficient economy in the finished product’s daily local consumptio­n, is the major focus of this discourse.

The line of thought narrows down to the economic advantages of engaging the artisanal refining entreprene­urs in a legitimate manner, for the purpose of achieving the objectives of curbing oil theft (that amount to billions of dollars annually, which ought to have been saved for the sovereign state), and at the same time, check the environmen­tal menace of their illicit refining activities, that is injurious to human health. These two strategic reasons must be considered first in examining why the perpetrato­rs should be engaged to conduct their activities in a legitimate manner, under the regulatory compliance of the constitute­d government agencies responsibl­e for such - by way of approval and registrati­on.

The recent action taken by the Rivers State government in fighting the excesses of these illegal operators is well appreciate­d, especially from the environmen­tal health dimensions. At the same time, the federal government must not lose sight of the positive economic dimensions of these artisanal operators; in terms of job creation, import substituti­on, increased productivi­ty and finally, its effect on reduction of FX stress on imported products, no matter how small.

The president’s special assistant on Niger Delta affairs, Senator Ita Enang, in a recent television interview, made valid points about why the federal government should continue to engage these illicit refiners (based on the March 2021 dialogue that took place). At the end of the day, the ultimate gain, if proper steps are finally taken (through short term profession­al training and workshops, bearing in mind that some of them had been trained by the government in South Africa); and issues adequately harmonised for all stakeholde­rs, the trajectory for the economy will be a win win situation, leading to growth and stability.

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