THISDAY

Group Tackles FG over Loss of Revenue to Foreign Software Providers

- Stories by Emma Okonji

The Institute of Software Practition­ers of Nigeria (ISPON) has blamed the federal government and its regulatory agencies such as the National Office for Technology Acquisitio­n and Promotion (NOTAP) and the National Informatio­n Technology Developmen­t Agency (NITDA), for the loss of about $400 million (N122.8 billion) annually to foreign software licence renewals and upgrades by companies operating in Nigeria.

President of ISPON, Dr. Yele Okeremi, who said this, pointed out that such amount could be averted if agencies like NOTAP and NITDA were able to up their regulatory roles in protecting indigenous software developers in the country.

Stakeholde­rs had raised the alarm that Nigeria loses as much as $400 million annually to foreign software upgrades and renewals. To avoid such huge loss, which they had described as waste to the Nigerian economy, they had unanimousl­y called for the adoption of indigenous software across financial institutio­ns and other sectors of the economy.

But speaking in an interview with THISDAY, Okeremi, urged the federal government through its regulatory agencies like NOTAP and NITDA, to up their regulatory roles in order to discourage the continuous patronage of foreign software, especially in solutions that are locally available and developed by Nigerians.

“Just like what other developed countries did, Nigeria can enact policy that will not allow inflow of foreign software into the country for a particular period of time like three years and make good efforts to encourage and protect indigenous software developers within the same period.

“If this is done, there will be a significan­t improvemen­t in the quality and standard of indigenous software and the poor perception about indigenous software will vanish into the thin air,” he explained.

Okeremi advised the regulators not to wait for companies who patronise foreign software to come to them for approval, but to rather reach out to all companies and organisati­ons that use software to drive their businesses.

“Nigeria should be able to rely on indigenous software developers, through the encouragem­ent of regulators like NITDA and NOTAP.

“These regulators should do more of engagement with companies that drive their businesses with software, for them to see the need to patronise indigenous software.

“Government and regulators should be able to identify where the huge amount of money is being spent out

side of Nigeria. When this is identified, government, through NOTAP should be able to identify sufficient skills and capacity for the country to be able to substitute the imbalance that has resulted in huge loss of money to the Nigerian economy, through foreign software patronage,” Okeremi said.

He expressed dissatisfa­ction over a situation where the country has regulatory bodies yet organisati­ons operating in Nigeria are still running foreign software at the detriment of indigenous software developed by Nigerians.

He cited the oil and gas sector of the Nigerian economy, where lots of foreign software applicatio­n still run, and called for a change in the country’s roadmap for software developmen­t, if Nigeria must make meaningful progress in software developmen­t.

Making a case for the adoption of indigenous software in Nigeria, the Director General of NOTAP, Dr. Dan-Azumi Mohammed Ibrahim, had said government must come up with workable policies that must be implemente­d.

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