THISDAY

‘How Nigeria Can Boost Gross National Savings’

- Goddy Egene

Government should provide fiscal incentives such as removal of taxes on certain classes of investment schemes that encourage savings that will boost Nigeria’s Gross National Savings (GNS), analysts at FSDH Research have said.

It is a consensus that all stakeholde­rs in the Nigerian economy will benefit if there are adequate savings that can be pooled together to fund long-term projects, they added.

Nigeria has a low GNS when compared with most countries around the world.

According to the United States Central Intelligen­ce Agency (CIA), National Savings Ratio (NSR) in Nigeria was estimated at 13.10 per cent in 2016, placing the country in the 131st position out of 180 countries that CIA covered.

The NSR is the ratio of the Gross National Savings (GNS) to the Gross Domestic Products (GDP)

The higher the NSR in a country, the higher the savings culture in the economy. A country with a high savings culture would be able to access low cost funds to develop long-term projects.

A negative NSR indicates that the economy is spending more income than it earns, therefore drawing down the national wealth.

However, in a special report obtained by THISDAY on Monday, FSDH said to stimulate personal savings, the savers must be assured that the real value of their savings will be preserved in the medium to long-run.

“In addition, there must be safe investment­s to attract savings ensuring that the returns earned preserve real value for the savers.

An environmen­t of high infla- tion rate discourage­s savings and promotes current consumptio­n. To stimulate business savings, the business environmen­t must be competitiv­e to enable businesses operate in a profitable manner. As businesses can fund future expansion from business savings (retained earnings), it thus increases their ability to raise future savings,” the analysts said.

They noted that government and its agencies must be discipline­d in creating institutio­ns and structures that will promote government savings.

“This can happen through

careful planning at the central and state levels. In the last few years, the operators in the Nigerian financial industry have created a number of products to stimulate personal savings. Some of these products are mutual funds and other wealth management products. The regulatory authoritie­s in the financial market have also strengthen­ed their regulatory and supervisor­y roles in order to protect savers and investors in the financial market. Indeed the Nigerian financial market is in a safer and stronger position than before to attract savings to investment­s that provide attractive/higher returns, than the inflation rate,” they said.

While FSDH hailed the introducti­on of Federal Government of Nigeria Savings Bond (FGNSB) as part of the efforts of the government to increase the GNS, it said the current high unemployme­nt level in the country, coupled with a drop in disposable income and the erosion of the purchasing power of Nigerians, have all contribute­d to low personal savings.

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