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AfDB Denies Calling Off $400m Loan for Nigeria

African Development Bank, AfDB, Headquarters
African Development Bank, AfDB, Headquarters

 

AfDB Denies Calling Off $400m Loan for Nigeria

African Development Bank (AfDB) has said it has not called off $400m loan it has scheduled to release to Nigeria to shore up 2017 budget.

There were reports in the media that the AfDB has called off the support for Nigeria.

a statement by Victor Oladokun, Director, Communication and External Relations of AfDB this afternoon said: “The African Development Bank wishes to categorically refute the statement that it has ‘called off loans to Nigeria’, as reported in Reuters and credited to AfDB Vice-President for Power, Energy, Climate and Green Growth, Amadou Hott.

“The African Development Bank is highly encouraged by the economic recovery of Nigeria from recession and salutes the Government’s efforts towards diversification of the economy. The Bank also strongly supports the Economic and Growth Recovery Plan of the Government and efforts to stem corruption and strengthen fiscal consolidation and efficiency”.

Hott, in an interview during a Nordic-African business conference in Oslo was reported to have said: “Rather than loan Nigeria money to fund its budget, the African Development Bank is likely to take at least some of that money and “put it directly into projects”. 

Because prices for oil, on which Nigeria’s government relies for about two-thirds of its revenues, have risen and the naira-dollar exchange rate has improved, the country is relying less than expected on external borrowing, Hott said.

Nigeria’s 2017 budget, 7.44 trillion naira, is just one in a series of record budgets that the government has faced obstacles funding, pushing it to seek loans from overseas.

In late 2016, the AfDB agreed to lend Nigeria a first tranche of $600 million out of $1 billion. But negotiations over economic reform later bogged down, blocking attempts to secure the second tranche of $400 million, sources told Reuters then.

Earlier this month, the head of Nigeria’s Debt Management Office said the country is still in talks with the World Bank for a $1.6 billion loan, which will help plug part of an expected $7.5 billion deficit for 2017.

 

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World Bank, NGF, FIRS, Others Partner to Raise States’ IGR

DG, Nigeria Governors' Forum, Asishana Okauru
DG, Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Asishana Okauru campaigns for growth of IGR

 

World Bank, NGF, FIRS, Others Partner to Raise States’ IG

In their bid to help pull Nigeria out of economic lull, the World Bank, Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF)and Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) are partnering to peer-learn and brainstorm on how to raise Internally Generated Revenue(IGR) of various states of the federation.

Other partners in the programme holding in Abuja, Nigeria, are the Joint Tax Board and the UKAid.

The programme is meant to share some success stories of some states and the FIRS so that other states could learn and apply in their revenue generation strategies.

This is the second time the NGF is anchoring this programme.  First one was in 2015, a result of which, the NGF Director-General, Asishana Okauru, said 23 states recorded improvement in their IGRs in 2016.

“Last year alone, 23 states recorded growth in IGR, despite the recession. Overall growth in IGR was 20 percent—from N687 billion in 2015 to N821 billion in 2016—far up from a 3 percent contraction recorded previously”, Okauru said.

A document received from the NGF by this newspaper showed that despite the economic downturn, some states recorded improved performance in their IGR in 2016. Kwara State had 140 percent growth in 2016, Kano had 127 percent, Ogun 111 percent, Zamfara had 74 percent, Bauchi, Akwaibom and Kaduna had 61 percent, 57 percent and 48 percent respectively.

The reforms that triggered the growth, according to the NGF are: greater autonomy for State Boards of Internal Revenue (SBIRs), improved taxpayer mapping (incorporating the informal sector), adoption of modern technologies for curbing fraud, strategic re-organisation and capacity building in SBIRs, community engagement, presumptive tax implementation and review of obsolete tax laws.

The paper also indicated that the trend has continued to 2017.

The Executive Chairman of the FIRS, Tunde Fowler called on the general public to give total support to tax authorities.

 “I like to use this opportunity to call on the general public to give total support to tax authorities and all revenue agencies to enable us efficiently discharge our duties by collecting the needed revenue to fund Government’s projects and service delivery.

 “As tax administrators, we have created a platform where other revenue agencies such as Nigeria Customs Service, Nigeria Immigration Service and Federal Road Safety Corps work hand in hand in order to optimise revenue collection.

Also, I call on the members of the JTB to intensify efforts towards meeting our revenue targets, I enjoin the various State Governments to enhance funding of the tax authorities so as to achieve the desired objectives”, said Fowler.

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Safe Nation Needs Economic Prosperity, Fowler Tells NDC Class

Tunde Fowler, Chairman, African Tax Administration Forum. Photo credit/FIRS
Tunde Fowler, Chairman, African Tax Administration Forum. Photo credit/FIRS

Safe Nation Needs Economic Prosperity, Fowler Tells NDC Class

 

The Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) Tunde Fowler, yesterday urged a class of Course 26, Nigeria Defence College, Abuja to spread the ‘gospel’ of the importance of taxation to their colleagues, friends and family members because no nation is ever safe without economic prosperity.

Fowler said taxation is the only source of revenue for the government which can guarantee economic prosperity.

The FIRS Chairman was a guest lecturer in the Academy and he spoke on the relationship between taxation and development in Nigeria.

“Economics has a lot to do with politics. You may have the best leader with the best ideas but if the leader does not have the resources to run the government, his ideas will be meaningless”, said Fowler.

Congratulating the Nigeria’s defence infrastructure for keeping Nigeria safe, Fowler noted: “There is no safe nation without economic prosperity. And it is only taxation that can do this”.

Fowler told the NDC class that Nigeria has to be self-dependent as the era of aids and grants has gone. He noted that African countries should know that and begin to work on how to fund their respective budgets themselves.

He noted that the need to create tax awareness in Nigeria has encouraged the FIRS to create a new department, Federal Education and Enlightenment Tax Team (FEETT) whose responsibility is to go to streets and markets and remote places to talk about taxation.

The FIRS boss also said he is deploying massive Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in the administration of the FIRS and collaborating with the Joint Tax Board in order increase tax revenue.

The Commandant of the NDC, Rear Adm.Adeniyi Osinowo thanked Fowler for making himself available to lecture the class on the all-important issues—taxation.

Osinowo said Nigeria has the potential to grow its revenue bigger, through taxation.

 

 

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Nigeria Aims at 1.8M bpd January

Ibe Kachukwu, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Nigeria
Ibe Kachukwu, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Nigeria

 

Nigeria Aims at 1.8M bpd January

Nigeria’s oil output may have started looking upwards as the country is aiming to raise its oil production to 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) in January, just three months away.

Currently, oil production output in Nigeria is between 1.6 million to 1.7 million bpd.

But Nigeria said it would not breach the ceiling of 1.8m set agreed with the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

“If we get to 1.8 million, then we need to say: ‘hey, close off the taps,’ because we need to comply,” Nigeria’s Minister of States for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu said.

This is coming the United States’ Secretary of Energy, Rick Perry, said his country has interest in investing in the country’s oil and gas sector.

Meanwhile, Kachikwu has said about 26 firms have indicated interest to participate in the overhauling of Nigeria’s four refineries, which will require investment of about $2billion (N720billion).

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), has four refineries, two in Port Harcourt Refining Company Limited (PHRC 1&2), and one each in Kaduna Refining & Petrochemical Company (KRPC), and Warri Refining and Petrochemicals Company Limited (WRPC). The refineries have a combined installed capacity of 445,000 barrels per day (bpd).

 Kachukwu spoke with reporters at the just-concluded Africa Oil Week in Cape Town. He said “Nigeria is almost at the threshold of finalising the process, adding that selection may be announced by January or February next year, in efforts by Africa’s biggest economy to reduce its reliance on imports”.

He noted that oil prices were increasing and assured that the Dangote’s 650,000 bpd refinery is due to come on stream by the end of 2019.

“That should be enough to meet local needs. The market is balancing fast. But do we need to see more cuts? We’ll see,” he said.

 

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Again, ECOWAS Single Currency Flops

Marcel De Souza - ECOWAS

 

Again, ECOWAS Single Currency Flops

 

The single currency initiative of for member countries of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), has again fell flat.

Leaders of the 15-nation West African bloc took another shot at the initiative today in Niamey, Niger Republic, ahead year 2020 deadline after it had failed at three other deadlines, but again, the idea flopped.

ECOWAS leadership told regional leaders that the goal of establishing a single currency among their economies in 2020 had failed.

“The roadmap has not been implemented vigorously,” Marcel de Souza, president of the ECOWAS Commission, told a summit in Niamey, the capital of Niger.

“We cannot move to the single currency in 2020,” he said.

Four goals had been set down for introducing a single currency but “there are not the results to match,” de Souza said.

“From 2012 to 2016, none of our countries has been able to persistently uphold the prime criteria in the programme for macro-economic convergence,” he said.

The summit aims at assessing progress towards a single regional currency 30 years after the goal was first sketched.

ECOWAS — the Economic Community of West African States — was set up in 1975.

Today ECOWAS comprises Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo, which together have 300 million inhabitants.

The goal of a common currency for ECOWAS, known as Eco Currency, was officially stated in December 2000 in connection with the formal launch of West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ).

However, challenges to implementation of the proposal have lied on member-countries meeting the criteria for the launch.

The four primary criteria to be achieved by each member country are: a single-digit inflation rate at the end of each year; a fiscal deficit of no more than 4% of the GDP; a central bank deficit-financing of no more than 10% of the previous year’s tax revenues and Gross external reserves that can give import cover for a minimum of three months.

There are other six secondary criteria to be achieved by each member country—prohibition of new domestic default payments and liquidation of existing ones; tax revenue should be equal to or greater than 20 percent of the GDP; wage bill to tax revenue equal to or less than 35 percent; public investment to tax revenue equal to or greater than 20 percent; a stable real exchange rate and a positive real interest rate.

Deficient in meeting the criteria, launch of ECOWAS Currency has been postponed three times: from 2013 to 2014 to 2015 to 2020.

It is in connection to meeting the requirements for the 2020 launch of the currency that the heads of ECOWAS government have billed to meet in Niamey on Friday, to take another shot at.

In 2001, the West African Monetary Institute (WAMI) was set up with headquarters in AccraGhana. It is to be an interim organisation in preparation for the future West African Central Bank. Its function and organisation are inspired by the European Monetary Institute. Thus, WAMI is to provide a framework for central banks in the WAMZ to start the integration and begin preliminary preparations for the printing and minting of the physical currency , just as EMI did before in the Eurozone before the introduction of the euro.

Tuesday’s announcement came after a string of revisions and postponements to the monetary integration plan over the years.

In 2013, ECOWAS tasked Niger and Ghana with “coordinating” the single-currency campaign, and in 2014, a “task force” was set up to provide them with guidance.

But De Souza listed a number of setbacks, including failures to harmonise monetary policies between the eight currencies used by ECOWAS economies, and to set up a “monetary institute” — a forerunner of a common central bank.

Eight ECOWAS countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo) jointly use the CFA franc.

They are moored to the single European currency and are gathered in an organisation called the West African Monetary Union, or WAMU.

But the seven other ECOWAS countries have their own currencies, none of them freely convertible amongst themselves.

Presidents Mahamadou Isoufou of Niger, Alassane Ouattara of Ivory Coast, Nana Akufo Ado of Ghana, Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria and Faure Gnassingbe of Togo took part in the summit.

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African Tax Experts elected Vice Chairmen

Tunde Fowler, Chairman, African Tax Administration Forum. Photo credit/FIRS
Tunde Fowler, Chairman, African Tax Administration Forum. Photo credit/FIRS

African Tax Experts elected Vice Chairmen, UN Tax Committee

 

For the centrality of tax to development today; and that developing tax now involves more countries and more civil societies, the newly inaugurated Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters, yesterday elected its leadership to advance these fronts.

Two African tax experts, Tunde Fowler, Executive Chairman, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), was elected as 1st Vice Chairman while Eric Nil Yarboi Mensah, the Chairman of Ghanaian Revenue Authority, GRA is the  2nd Vice Chairman of the Committee.

 The committee is meeting for the first time after the appointment.

This election took place yesterday in Geneva, Switzerland, where the global UN committee of tax experts is holding its meeting.

United Nations Secretary General, Antonio Guteress, announced the appointment of the 25 members in a United Nations Economic and Social Council notification dated August 10th, 2017. The 25 tax experts were headhunted across the globe to sit in the Committee and proffer solutions to issues on international taxation and cooperation.

Five, out of the 25 new entrants into the prestigious Committee are Africans: Tunde Fowler, the Executive Chairman of Nigeria’s revenue authority—Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS). He is also the Chairman of African Tax Administrations Forum (ATAF); Elfrieda Stewart Tamba, the Chairman of the Liberian Revenue Authority and Chairman of West African Tax Administrators Forum (WATAF); Margaret Moonga Chikuba, the Chairman of the Zambian Revenue Authority.

Others are Eric Nil Yarboi Mensah, the Chairman of Ghanaian Revenue Authority and George Omondi Obell, the Chairman of the Kenyan Revenue Authority.

The appointment is in accordance with the United Nations resolution—the Economic and Social Council resolution 2004/69—which established that “only 25 tax experts selected from among all countries of the world are needed to join the Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters, within an interval of every four years”.

Other tax experts in the Committee are: Natalia Aristazabal Mora (Colombia); Abdoulfatah Moussa Arreh (Djibouti); Rajat Bansal (India); Mitsuhiro Honda (Japan); Cezary Krysiak  (Poland); Eric Nil Yarboi Mensah (Ghana); Dang Ngoc Minh (Vietnam); Patricia Mongkhonvanit (Thailand); Marlene Patricia Nembhard-Parker (Jamaica); Carmel Peters (New Zealand)

Others are: Carlos E. Protto (Argentina); Antonio Deher Rachid (Brazil) Aart Roelofsen (Netherlands); Christoph Schelling; (Switzerland); Aleksandr Anatolyevich Smirnov (Russia); Stephanie Smith (Canada); Titia Stolte-Detring  (Germany); José Troya (Ecuador); Ingela Willfors  (Sweden); Yan Xiong (China) and Sing Yuan Yong (Singapore).

Their mandate is to brainstorm always and offer, from their wealth of experience, knowledge of how the world can manage taxation for international development and cooperation.

Guteress, who signed the notification of appointment stated that a total of 60 nominations were received for the 25 positions in response to a note verbale, dated 27 April 2017, in which the Secretary-General invited Member States to nominate qualified candidates for selection into the Committee.

Michael Lennard, Chief of International Tax Cooperation at the United Nations, in a brief remark as the meeting commenced, underscored the importance of the important work the team need to do given the centrality of tax to development today.

Said Lennard: “Developing tax now involves more countries, more civil societies, including NGOs more Small and Medium Enterprises, SMEs, more individuals, not just more Multinationals. More women. There is a lot more women on our tax committee this year. And more young people. There is a bigger debate.on.

“Enlarging the people involved in this debate not just in subject matter, but also generationally which I think is important in this matter.

“I also commend the organisers for addressing some of the trickiest, most nuanced areas of taxation, the ethical dimension, the issue of tax transparency and the issue of tax competition: a very, very difficult area. They are all the more important because of their difficulty.  

“Taxes are at the centre of conflict and development and lifting people out of poverty and degradation and helping them to meet their potentials for the benefit of everyone. Putting that into context, the discussions today and the work of Tax Coop (Cooperation) at the South Centre, it’s all the more important that it is held in the heart of the UN.

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How Agriculture Could Stem Human Capital Flight from Africa

Dr. Akinwunmi Adeshina, President, AfDB (middle)

 

How Agriculture Could Stem Human Capital Flight from Africa, by AfDB President

 

As African countries continue to top the list of countries affected by brain drain, the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), Akinwumi Adesina, has said making agriculture attractive to young people could help check emigration of Africans.

Adeshina, who is the immediate past Nigeria’s Agric Minister campaigned vigorously to attract young and urban mobile Nigerian youths to join Agripreneurship.

“We must get youths into agriculture and see it as a profitable business venture not a sign of lacking ambition”, Adeshina said today in Des Moines, Iowa, United States, on the occasion of the 2017 World Food Day.

The AfDB boss highlighted how Africa’s food security depends on attracting young people to agriculture and agribusiness and how the sector could potentially create wealth and employment for African youth, thereby stemming emigration. 

World Food Day, celebrated yearly on October 16, promotes worldwide awareness and action for those who suffer from hunger and the need to ensure food security and nutritious diets for all. This year’s theme focuses on the need to ‘Change the future of migration; Invest in food security and rural development’. 

A statement by the AfDB Communications office said the AfDB’s ENABLE Youth program, which is grooming a crop of young agriculturists, is on course to make this year’s theme happen.

“Mahmud Johnson, 26, is the Founder of J-Palm Liberia which works to improve income for Liberia’s smallholder oil palm farmers by 50-80%. He is also creating additional jobs for over 1,000 young people to work as sales representatives for his products”, the statement said.

It quoted Mahmud as saying: “Despite the tremendous odds, we (African youth) are determined to maximize our abundant agricultural resources to create wealth, jobs, and socioeconomic opportunities in our countries and across the continent. We need our stakeholders to view us as serious partners in Africa’s transformation, and to work with us to expand our enterprises.”

The statement added that Mahmud and some of his employees have benefited from capacity building programs under the AfDB’s Empowering Novel Agri-Business-Led Employment for Youth initiative.

“Like Mahmud, many African youth are passionate about staying back on the continent to create wealth and employment, if given the tools and opportunities to put their skills to use. Under the ENABLE Youth program, the Bank is working with the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA) to develop a new generation of young commercial farmers and agribusiness entrepreneurs.

“Our goal is to develop 10,000 such young agricultural entrepreneurs per country in the next 10 years. In 2016, the Bank provided US $700 million to support this program in eight countries and we’ve got requests now from 33 countries,” said Adesina.

The Bank considers investment in agriculture as key to making Africa youths prosperous, thereby stemming the tide of migration.

This goal, and theme of 2017 World Food Day, are well aligned with two of the AfDB’s High 5 development priorities –  Feed Africa and Improve the quality of life for the people of Africa – said Jennifer Blanke, Vice-President, Agriculture, Human and Social Development at the AfDB.

“A thriving business sector in Africa will provide the jobs and returns that will attract and retain Africa’s best talent on the continent, while improving the quality of life of all Africans,” she said.

With more than 70% of Africans depending on agriculture for their livelihoods, it is imperative for the sector’s full potential to be unlocked, and by doing so help to vastly improve the lives Africans. 

Accordingly, one of the goals of Feed Africa is to eliminate hunger and malnutrition by 2025. 

Due to the finite nature of mineral resources such as gold, diamonds, crude oil, among others, African countries must diversify their economies. This cannot be done without a significant emphasis on agriculture given that the great majority of Africans depend on it for their livelihoods. 

Increased food demand and changing consumption habits driven by demographic factors such as urbanization (internal migration) are leading to rapidly rising net food imports, which will grow from US $35 billion in 2015 to over US $110 billion by 2025 if trends are left unchecked. 

Given that African smallholder farmers are on average about 60 years old, Africa’s food security depends on attracting young people into agriculture and agribusiness and empowering them. Governments can support these shifts through the right enabling environments via policy reforms for increased private investment in agriculture and agribusiness. And also by better articulating the importance of agriculture for their economies in their interaction with the public.

“Food security, rural development are closely interlinked with issues of migration, fragility and resilience. The Horn of Africa and the Sahel provide compelling examples of how global factors such as food insecurity, radical extremism and migration reinforce state fragility and have devastating effects on development,” said Khaled Sherif, AfDB Vice-President for Regional Development, Integration and Business Delivery. 

“The lack of economic opportunities, infrastructure, employment opportunities and unpredictable climactic changes in these countries are key sources of fragility that often times result in the forced migration of peoples seeking a desperate alternative. The Bank has, where appropriate, adopted risk-based approaches at both country and regional levels in addressing fragility.”

Ahead of the World Food Day, the AfDB joined Côte d’Ivoire’s Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development and other developing partners on October 14 in a day-long set of activities to promote agriculture as a business. They emphasized the need for governments to invest in agriculture to create jobs and stem the flow of migration that has undermined the security and economies of African countries. 

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Nigeria’s .ng domain name adoption hits 100,000

NiRA

 

Nigeria’s .ng domain name adoption hits 100,000 – NiRA

By The Guardian

The Guardian reports that the adoption and use of the Country Code Top Level Domain name (ccTLD), Nigeria’s .ng, is on the upward swing, as the figure hits 100, 000. This statistic, the paper said was given yesterday by the Nigeria Internet Registration Association (NiRA), when the management team paid a courtesy visit to Rutam House, headquarters of The Guardian newspapers.

“The increase witnessed in the adoption of .ng may have shown a gradual decline in the patronage of foreign domain names by individuals and businesses in Nigeria, which has been the norm for years and had subsequently, resulted in increased capital flight from the economy.

Countries around the world strive to promote their respective domain systems in order to retain substantial part of the Internet expenditure in-country.NiRA team, led by the President, Sunday Folayan, informed that Nigeria’s .ng ranked second largest after South Africa, which has about one million registered .za.in Africa.

Folayan, who described NiRA as one of the best successes and story of Public Private Partnership in Nigeria, said the new data showed an improvement in the number of domain registrations, stressing that Nigerians have re-strategised in their plans for promoting their online business and hence there is improvement in the domain name count.

The NiRA President commended The Guardian for championing the course of .ng in the country, especially, as it relates to adoption and several print privileges that the domain name has enjoyed through the platform.

Speaking more on the .ng adoption, Head, Business Development, NiRA, Mrs. Kemi Adepoju, said the association is doing everything possible to further populate its use in Nigeria, which include promotions, use of youths as ambassador, to identify and convince companies not using the domain name to adopt it; use of the social media platforms to passage messages and enlighten the public.

The Chief Operating Officer of NiRA, Mrs. Edith Udeagwu, informed that Nigeria will be hosting this year’s African Network Information Center (AFRINIC) open public policy meetings from November 27 to December 4th in Lagos. AFRINIC is the regional Internet registry (RIR) for Africa. It hosts two open public policy meetings every year in various locations throughout its service region.

Udeagwu, who disclosed that Folayan doubles as the Chairman of AFRINIC board, informed that several issues that borders on Internet Protocol (IP) development, especially migration from IPv4 to IPv6 will be discussed, where experts will sensitise on what Nigeria and other African countries must do to migrate as fast as possible to avoid Internet blackout.

Giving more insight on the dangers of not migrating, Head, Technical Department, Abubakar Muhammed, Nigeria must do everything possible to avoid Internet shut, saying that the consequences are dire.

Muhammed said the AFRINIC conference will be opening another vista in Internet development across the world, “so Nigeria must not be left behind in adoption.”


Folayan added that the AFRINIC meetings provide unique opportunities for Internet-related individuals and organisations to gather and to discuss the policies governing Internet number resource distribution in the African region. The meetings, he added, would serve as platforms to share technical knowledge, and to attend workshops and tutorials.

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