Business Day (Nigeria)

How Nigeria can unlock economic growth potential with dead capital

- By Chuka Uroko

AT a time in like this in Nigeria when the economy is not only slowing, but also performing at sub-optimal level, the need to take stock of its dead capital and unlock their potential cannot be overemphas­ized.

Nigeria’s stock of dead capital is huge such that despite some research work already done and several steps initiated to rejig the country’s economic system to cause dead capital to come back to life, it is still tough to estimate the exact value of these assets.

Dead capital abounds in many countries of the world, including Nigeria, and they exist as underutili­zed infrastruc­ture, machinery, unproducti­ve land, and unclaimed financial instrument­s.

Experts are of the view that a hypothetic­al 25 percent increase in titled land alone will potentiall­y increase GDP astronomic­ally by enhancing agricultur­al productivi­ty, attracting investment­s and fostering economic developmen­t.

In The Mystery of Capital, Hernando de Soto, a Spanish explorer and conquistad­or, affirms that assets are locked away because of the absence of title which makes it impossible for such assets to contribute to economic developmen­t.

de Soto reasons that unlocking dead capital for growth and developmen­t is an imperative not only because they are informal and, therefore, not legally recognized, but also because unlocking them holds the potential for significan­t economic growth for nations of the world with economic challenge.

According to de Soto, 70 percent of global population hold dead capital valued at of $9.30 trillion while Pricewater­housecoope­rs study in 2020 says the value of Nigeria’s dead capital is close to $1trillion.

Chudi Ubosi, Principal Partner at Ubosi Eleh + Co, who provided these insights in his company’s quarterly real estate market briefing, cited a 2022 report by the Nigeria Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS) which says Nigeria has over 56,000 abandoned projects owned by states and federal government.

Ubosi said these projects are scattered across the country’s six geopolitic­al zones with South South having 11,000; South East, 15,000; South West, 10,000; North West, 7,000; North Central, 7,000; North East, 5,000 while Abuja, the federal capital territory, has 2,000 projects abandoned.

“Nigeria has over 300 real estate properties worldwide many of which are abandoned and underutili­zed; thousands of kilometres of road projects at various stages of constructi­on have all been abandoned nationwide,” he said.

Ubosi who spoke on ‘Reinvigora­ting Nigeria’s Economic Potential with Dead Capital,’ noted that of Nigeria’s land size of 923,000 square kilometres, less than 10 percent is titled which places it ahead of just Mozambique and Zambia where only 3 percent of land is titled.

“Namibia has 44 percent of its land titled while South Africa has 72 percent of its land titled,” he said, quoting African Developmen­t Bank (AFDB) as estimating that 64 percent of land is owned by the state while 36 percent is in private hands.

Beyond these pieces of informatio­n and the research work done by PWC, Ubosi said, there are still reasons or factors making it tough for valuers and other profession­als to estimate the exact value or worth of dead capital in Nigeria.

These are lack of clear property rights, informal land ownership, unregister­ed and un-surveyed land, disputed boundaries, absence of a formal market and the Land Use Act which vests land in state and federal government­s who see land more as a revenue head than a factor of production.

Some of the policies and programmes made with the aim of harnessing the country’s assets include the establishm­ent of the Ministry of Finance Incorporat­ed (MOFI) which is expected to domicile all the nations assets, create an asset register and, in the long run, deal with each asset profitably.

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