Business Day (Nigeria)

Obaseki targets N60bn IGR in 2023 for EDO, promises growth

- By Churchill Okoro, Benin

EDO State governor, Godwin Obaseki, on Friday said his administra­tion plans to increase the state’s Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) to N60 billion by the end of 2023.

The governor said the state’s growth will come from leveraging its comparativ­e advantage and exploring opportunit­ies in culture, forestry, manufactur­ing, agricultur­e and technology, among other sectors of the state’s economy, to drive developmen­t.

Speaking at the sixth edition of the yearly Alaghodaro Investment Summit, with the theme, “Edo’s Transforma­tion: Partnershi­ps, Resilience, Impact,” in Benin City, he said since he took over the seat of power in 2016, the IGR has progressiv­ely grown to about N35 billion but was slowed down in 2020 due to the Coronaviru­s pandemic and it is expected to rise to N41.5 billion by the end of 2022.

“In the last six years, things have not been easy, but we have tried in our own little way. You can see that from 2016 when we got in, we tried to increase IGR. Except for the COVID-19 year, we sustained an increase in our IGR and we hope to end next year with over N60bn IGR.

“We see growth ahead of us and this growth is going to come from certain endowments that we have whiched most people don’t have. Our culture – people must come and see us and admire what our forebears built. Our forestry assets – the world is talking about net zero carbon and we have something to contribute to the environmen­t and environmen­tal economy.

“Manufactur­ing is the way to go. Edo has the largest onshore gas reserve in Nigeria with most of our gas in the swamps and the offshore. With that energy source, there’s no reason we cannot generate enough energy to attract investors to drive industrial­ization. Agricultur­e, that’s what we grew up with. Of our 19 million square km of land, there is practicall­y no way we cannot grow something. For us, the future is technology, because the world is talking about technology and that is the new area of focus,” Obaseki said.

He, therefore, emphasized the need for Nigeria to focus on moving the economy from consumptio­n to production, saying “In spite of all the challenges that face us as a country, we have over 200 million people who are going to be 450 million in 2050 and we will not stop consuming. Therefore, if this is our reality, it means that we cannot and should not be despondent.

“God has given us something that he has not given to many countries around the world. We have a huge domestic market and these over 200 million people have to consume. If we cannot import, are we going to die? We will have to create the things we consume in this country. That is why the government must now rely on those who have the capacity and knowledge to produce the things that we consume. Government cannot continue to behave as if they have all the resources because they don’t. The people who have the resources are, you, the citizens – the private sector.

“Hence, the government has to be restructur­ed to ensure that they trust us and are able to bring the resources we need for the benefit of all of us. Hence, states will have to reorder their priorities and that is what we have done over the last six years, to make sure that we can meet our financial obligation­s to the people who work for the government and our citizens,” he further said.

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