Buhari administration is transforming Nigeria ----Lai Mohammed
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, giving his keynote address at the 2018 "Africa Together Conference'' at the University of Cambridge, UK
(Nigeria) Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai
Mohammed, has said the Buhari Administration is steadily transforming Nigeria
through innovative measures that are yielding positive results.
In a keynote address he delivered at the 2018 'Africa
Together Conference' at the University of Cambridge in the UK on Saturday, the
Minister listed investment in people, changing the business environment and
building national infrastructure as some of the areas in which the
Administration has made a great impact.
He said by focusing on education and skills acquisition, the
administration is addressing the need to create opportunities for the country's
teeming youth population.
''In my country, school enrolment is a challenge we face.
And one of the main culprits is malnutrition. Government has stepped in: 8.2
million are being fed daily free meals in 45,000 schools. Not only does this
increase attendance and provide children with a – in some case only –
nutritious meal a day, it enhances learning efficacy in class and boosts
cognitive development over the long term,'' Alhaji Mohammed said
He said the Home-Grown School Feeding programme has yielded
other results, including the employment of 80,000 cooks and a ready-made market
for food crop farmers.
The minister said skill shortages in the labour pool are
being addressed through several measures, including the four-pronged N-Power
programme that is providing employment and vocational training for graduates
and others, access to loans for medium and small business as well as
conditional cash transfers to the most vulnerable members of the society.
He said the Administration is also changing the business
environment for good, focusing especially on removing the red tape that makes
it cumbersome for business and stifles innovation.
''Much of our programme has honed-in on business reform.
Nigeria has moved up 24 places on the World Bank Ranking of Ease of Doing
Business index – putting it amongst the top 10 global reformers, along with
Zambia, Malawi and Djibouti. The two areas we have prioritised are starting a
business and access to credit.
''In Nigeria, registering a business used to take months.
Now it takes 24-48 hours. Unwrapping the bureaucracy and streamlining processes
encourage an uptick in new official enterprises. We have introduced online
registration, with features such as the electronic stamping of documents. And
to ensure this brings with it the maximum benefit, Micro, Small and Medium
Enterprises clinics have been deployed across a variety of states to provide
regulators a contact point with informal business and budding entrepreneurs to
clarify any issues,'' Alhaji Mohammed said.
He noted that the challenge of access to credit is also
being frontally addressed by making it possible for MSMEs to register their
movable assets, such as vehicles and equipment, and use them as collateral to
raise loans and finance, thus removing the need for traditional assets (such as
real estate, offices and factories).
The Minister told his audience that the two most critical
impediments against business, decent transport connections and a reliable power
supply, are also been tackled by ensuring better roads and train networks, so
that goods and services can be moved around more cheaply and efficiently, and
businesses can plan for the future, knowing they will not be hampered by energy
outages.
''For instance, Nigeria earmarks 30 percent of its annual
national budgets for capital expenditure. That means N2.7 trillion has gone
towards our infrastructure in the last two years -unprecedented in our history.
Power generation has climbed to 7000MW (from just over 2500MW), to which we
hope to add another 2000MW by the end of the year. We have also laid down
thousands of kilometres of road.
''Also, the Government has now signed a concession agreement
with an International Consortium led by General Electric. This will breathe new
life into the tracks, increasing capacity and speed. Not only will this allow
for goods and services to be moved around cost-effectively, it will allow the
prosperity of the nation to be more equitably spread through increased
connectivity,'' he said, adding that the government is also constructing a new
standard-gauge railway.
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