National Economy

A Call For Action On Better Transporta­tion Infrastruc­ture

- BY CEES HARMON

By the standards of 12 respectabl­e economists interviewe­d by this medium, the Nigerian Economic Sustainabi­lity Plan is a step in the right direction, provided it results in concerted action.

Especially is the plan to improve the country’s transporta­tion infrastruc­ture commendabl­e.

The plan is geared towards establishi­ng a robust capital project developmen­t framework to encourage and increase Public Private Partnershi­ps (PPPs) to deliver critical projects, such as roads, rail, seaports and airports. It also aims to review the Infrastruc­ture Concession Regulatory Commission Act to resolve conflictin­g legislatio­n with the Bureau of Public Enterprise­s and Bureau of Public Procuremen­t Act and strengthen the Commission’s regulatory mandate to facilitate private investment.

It also is targeted at harnessing the existing pool of sustainabl­e developmen­t funds to assess the viability and bankabilit­y of critical infrastruc­ture projects, leverage a sustainabl­e and alternativ­e mix of funding for critical infrastruc­ture projects, including project financing initiative­s, infrastruc­ture bonds, diaspora bonds, and value capture financing.

Additional­ly, the federal government, aims to complete the road sector reforms to establish a Road Authority and a Road Fund to enhance best world practice in the administra­tion of road network developmen­t and management in the country, as well as ensure the approval of the Tolling Policy so that some of the major dual carriagewa­ys can be concession­ed for maintenanc­e and tolling while government utilises the saved funds from this maintenanc­e for other critical roads in the federal road network to the nation’s refineries, ports, NNPC depots and agricultur­al hubs, etc.

To resuscitat­e Nigeria’s economy, transporta­tion infrastruc­ture deserves utmost priority post COVID-19. As a matter of fact, roads are the major arteries through which the Nigerian economy pulses. By linking producers to markets, workers to jobs, students to school, and the sick to hospitals, roads are vital to any developmen­t agenda.

A highway network can be likened to the human cardiovasc­ular system. Good pavement and minimal constructi­on zones keep a local economy moving, healthy and growing, but potholes and slow-moving constructi­on projects are like plaque – they render regional commerce sclerotic.

This stands to reason. If a state or municipali­ty is pockmarked by rough pavement, it is going to take longer to deliver goods in and out of the region. Delivery vehicles will be damaged more often (flat tires, bent tire rims, broken axels, etc.) and need more repairs.

Labour and fuel costs increase when traffic moves slowly – due simply to bad conditions, or lane closures during extended resurfacin­g projects – causing drivers and their passengers to endure more time per trip.

When bad streets are all that connect consumers to a shopping center, the options to shop online, in stores elsewhere or not at all become much more attractive. The online alternativ­e might come with a higher price if parcel delivery services begin to tally and charge for the added costs of delivering in specific areas. But especially regrettabl­e is the billions of manhours lost in traffic, most notably in cities like Lagos, largely due to potholes.

Many intra and interstate travellers can identify with the above scenarios. With the negative impacts of COVID-19 on the populace such as loss of jobs, salaries slash, to name a few, coupled with the increase in the prices of fuel and electricit­y, improving the pliability of the country’s roads is a veritable and the most impactful moves the federal and state government­s can make to assuage the pains of the masses.

We call on the three tiers of government to quickly do just that.

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