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The Battle of Fire and Water: A fable of Leadership and Emotional Intelligence

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A long time ago before the manifestation of the material forms, two spirits, fire and water had been designated to watch over the heavenly gate, and had in their custody a divinely sealed box which contained the plans and order of the material forms.

One day, the two spirits became very curious about the material world and their purpose in it. So they got into a squabble of superiority, each giving its own reasons why it should have more dominance and power in the material world.

Fire, easily irritated and angered, flared up amidst the argument and took the box and smashed it to the ground. Then all the material creatures sprang forth from the box, running determinedly and unstoppably outside the heaven’s gate.

The two spirits became confused about how to control the situation. Consequently, they resolved to take the matter to their master in the most elevated realm of the heaven.

Hearing this, the master felt disappointed about their incompetence, especially about the lack of emotional intelligence of Fire. So the master gave his verdict.

Fire was sentenced to life imprisonment and denied the right to having a definite space in the material world. However, due to its original inclusion in the order of the material form, fire was given the privilege to come to life only where it’s activated or ignited.

For its calmness and composure, Water was rewarded with a larger space and dominion in the material world, but this came with a burden for water to always seek to tame fire and order it back to the prison whenever the latter surfaces in the material world.

The moral of this legend: Anger and violence are destructive elements of life. And while we keep our calm as we watch our neighbour exhibit these destructive elements, we may not be totally absolved of the consequences.

Nigeria’s Next President to Inherit N77trn Debt – Debt Management Office

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The Debt Management Office (DMO) has revealed that President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration will bequeath N77 trillion debt to the next administration, as it borrows more to fund budgets’ deficit.

Director General of the Debt Management Office Patience Oniha, disclosed this on Wednesday in Abuja, while addressing the press during the public presentation and breakdown of the highlights of the 2023 Appropriation Act. This came after the N819.5 billion 2022 Supplementary Budget and the N21.83 trillion 2023 Appropriation Bill were signed into law by Buhari on Tuesday.

The Appropriation Act has an overall deficit of N11.34 trillion for 2023, which represents 5.03 percent of Nigeria’s GDP. The total revenue available to fund the 2023 budget is estimated at N10.49 trillion, according to the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed.

She said the budget deficit would be financed mainly by borrowing. She said the federal government will borrow from domestic sources the sum of N7.04 trillion; foreign sources, N1.76 trillion; multilateral loan drawdowns, N1.77 billion; and privatization proceeds, N206.18 billion

“The gap between the revenue, additional financing and total expenditure, amounting to N553.46 billion is expected to be financed by additional revenue from spectrum fees and tax on the maritime sector,” Ahmed explained.

Earlier, Buhari had written to inform the National Assembly that the federal government will be taking additional N1 trillion from the central bank as part of its Ways and Means loan to fund the budget deficit. This would take the total Ways and Means loan from the CBN to N23 trillion. The federal government said it plans to convert it to a long term (40-year) bond.

But Oniha explained that the move by the federal government to securitize the Ways and Means loans would push the country’s debt profile up to about N77 trillion.

“There are a lot of discussions on the Ways and Means. In addition to the significant cost saving in loan service we would get by securitizing it, there is an element of transparency in the sense that it is now reflected in the public debt stock.

“Once it is passed by the National Assembly, it means we will be seeing that figure included in the public debt. You will see a significant increase in public debt to N77 trillion.

“The other area of the debt stock we are trying to highlight is to say the debt stock is also growing from the issuance of promissory notes, which are not true borrowing as such by the government,” Oniha said.

The Minister of Finance said the Ways and Means is currently running at interest rates averaging 18.5 percent. She however explained that with legislative backing, which will help stretch the repayment window to a 40-year period, the Ways and Means would have its interest rate dropped to about nine percent.

“Currently, the Ways and Means is running interest rates, which today is averaging 18.5 per cent. That’s a very, very harvest, so if this is not affordable, the interest rates accruing again and adding to the Ways and Means anything from N1.8 trillion to N2.2 trillion. So, that will be the consequence.

“I’m sure they will understand. So, once that approval is given, it will benefit from a lower interest cost of nine per cent and will benefit from a stretched initiated plan of 40 years with a three- year moratorium which will provide very significant relief to the federal government,” she said.

However, the minister reiterated that Nigeria does not have a plan to restructure its debt, adding that the country is committed to meeting its domestic and external debt obligations. But she said that Nigeria would continue to utilize appropriate debt management tools to streamline the cost and risk profile in the debt portfolio, including through concessional loans, spreading out of debt maturities to avoid bunching, and re-profiling of the debt maturities by refinancing short-term debt using long-term debt instruments.

Besides revenue shortfalls emanating from non-remittance of funds by revenue-generating agencies, Ahmed reiterated that the federal government lost N6 trillion to various tax incentives and waivers in 2021. To address that, the minister said the federal government would phase out the Integrated Corporate Income Tax, otherwise known as Pioneer Tax Incentives, for industries that had grown in the 2023 Appropriation Act.

Nigeria’s oil revenue has lost its steam to the non-oil sector which accounted for the larger percent of the federal government’s total revenue in 2022. This is believed to have prompted the government to increase attention given to revenue-generating agencies.

Ahmed said there would be tighter enforcement of the performance management framework for Government-Owned Enterprises (GOEs) in order to increase operating surplus/dividend remittances in 2023.

This has become necessary as more than 70 percent of the budget revenue is expected from the non-oil sector.

“Total revenue available to fund the 2023 budget is estimated at N10.49 trillion. This includes the gross revenues of 63 GOEs totaling N3.87 trillion.

“Of this, oil revenue share is projected at N2.29 trillion, non-oil taxes are estimated at N243 trillion, and independent revenues are projected to be N2.62 trillion. Other revenues total N762 billion. In aggregate, 22 percent of projected revenue is expected from oil-related sources, while 78 percent is to be earned from non-oil sources,” Ahmed said.

Nigeria is facing a double tragedy of rising debt amid dwindling revenue. The situation sets her up to a negative debt service-to-revenue ratio. The federal government spent 80.6% of its revenue on debt service in 11 months of 2022, which amounts to N5.24 trillion out of N6.5 trillion, according to Ahmed.

The 80.6 percent debt service-to-revenue ratio, which is far above World Bank’s suggested 22.5 percent for low-income countries like Nigeria, bequeaths a dire economic inheritance to whoever becomes Nigeria’s next president.

Cash flow vs Capital Gain Investing — Insights By Author and Business Coach, Robert Kiyosaki

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“One of the reasons so many people lose so much money investing, or think that investing is risky, is because they invest like ranchers. They invest to slaughter rather than to milk” — Robert Kiyosaki.

Knowledge of investing is an essential part of financial intelligence and financial success. However, despite the awareness of the role of investment in the financial and economic success of the individual, people often invest wrongly due to wrong orientation about money or they rather avoid investing their money due to lack of exposure to intelligence and proper mentorship.

The author of Rich Dad Poor Dad Robert Kiyosaki, offers interesting insight on how investment can be better perceived and approached. The following insights are courtesy of Robert Kiyosaki:

“I learned the difference between cash flow investing and capital gains investing from a herd of cows.

“When I was 16 years old, rich dad took his son and me to visit a cattle ranch. The ranch was a beautiful place to visit.

“On this visit to the ranch, we happened to see cowboys herding cattle from the feed yard to the slaughterhouse. Although rich dad took us away before we could see any cattle being slaughtered, we knew what was going to happen… and so did the cattle. It was an experience I will never forget.

“A few months later, rich dad took us to a dairy farm. Early in the morning, we saw the farmer herding his cows into the barn for milking. These cattle behaved very differently.

“The financial lesson rich dad wanted us to learn was that, while both the cattle rancher and the dairy farmer count their cattle as assets, they treat their assets differently, and they operate via different business models.

“The visits to the ranch and the farm were to emphasize the very important difference between two investing strategies: Capital gains versus Cash flow.

“Simply put, a cattle rancher can be compared to a person who invests for capital gains. He has to keep finding and raising new cows. It’s non-stop.

“A dairy farmer is more like an investor who invests for cash flow. He only needs to maintain his cows rather. It’s much easier work.

“One of the reasons so many people lose so much money investing, or think that investing is risky, is because they invest like ranchers. They invest to slaughter rather than to milk.

“I invest to milk. Milk makes ice cream” Kiyosaki said.

Foreclosure in Mortgage; ways to avert in Nigeria

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When you approach financial institutions to get a loan or grants i.e. financial facilities, most often than not they will ask you to present a property that is worth more than the loan you are requesting which will serve as collateral or security for the mortgage sum; the reason for collateral is because of the presumption that you may likely not want to pay back within the time frame you are given to pay back or you may elope with their money; so when you refuse to pay back within the time frame the collateral or security you presented will be foreclosed or taken over by the lenders. The money lender can either keep security for themselves or sell it off as a way of recovering back the money they lent to you.

The money you were given is called the loan or mortgage sum, the property you used to secure the loan is called the collateral or security, and the act of taking over your property i.e. the collateral by the lender for your failure to repay the loan within the expected time frame is called foreclosure.

Mortgage in a simpler term is a legal agreement by which a bank, building society, financial institutions, government etc lend money at interest in exchange for taking the title of the debtor’s property, with the condition that the conveyance of title becomes void upon the payment of the debt and the borrower have the right to repossess his property after repayment of the loan sum and the interest.

It is an agreement between a person and a lender that gives the lender the right to take over the borrower’s property if the borrower fails to repay the money he borrowed with the interest.

Foreclosure, on the other hand, is, therefore, a term for the processes used by a lender, mortgage-holders, or mortgagees, to take over a collateral or mortgaged property from a borrower who defaults on their mortgages.

You have no legal rights in law to stop or resist a lender from taking over your properties or foreclosing on the collateral when you have failed to pay back the mortgaged sum with the interest within the time frame you were given; although you may be granted extra time to pay and put a hold on the foreclosure, but that can only happen in the court of equity and not in the court of law. 

The purpose of this piece is to let you know that inasmuch as you are taking loans or financial facilities from financial institutions, agree on a repayment plan that will work for you because failure to pay back the loan on the expected time frame, the property you used as collateral will be foreclosed on by the lender and there is nothing you can do about it; you do not even have the legal rights to resist or stop the lender from possessing your property and the court of law cannot help you.

7 Fun Ideas To Help You Personalise Your Work Space

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Creating a vibrant and inviting workspace can be great for your motivation and productivity. Whether you’re working from home or at the office, personalising your space can help make it an enjoyable place to work in. In this blog post we’ll give you some fun ideas to help personalise your workspace. We will also discuss the importance of creating an organised and comfortable work space. So if you’re looking to spruce up your work space, here are 7 fun ideas that you can use.

1) Use Playmats For Your Desk

If you have an empty desk surface, why not use a colourful playmat to bring it to life? Depending on your style, you could choose from themes like fantasy, sports or even abstract. This will instantly make your workspace look much more inviting and fun. You can find desk size playmats that are made especially for this purpose. For example, if you’re a gamer, you could opt for a gaming-themed playmat. Or, if you prefer more calming colours, a nature-inspired design like bamboo or leaf patterns might be a great choice. Additionally, you can also use the playmats to colour code your desk, depending on the activities that you do in each area. This way, you can easily find the items and papers that you need.

2) Add Some Greenery To Your Desk

Adding greenery to your workspace is a great way to make it feel more inviting and vibrant. You can opt for real plants, or if you don’t have the time to take care of them, you could choose artificial plants instead. Not only will they spruce up your desk, but studies have also shown that having plants in the office can help reduce stress and improve air quality.

3) Hang Up Artwork or Inspiring Posters

If you’re looking for an easy way to brighten up your workspace, why not hang up a few pieces of artwork or inspirational posters? You could opt for classic movie posters, landscapes, abstract art, or whatever else inspires you. This will help create a more inviting and unique space that reflects your personality.

4) Invest In A Comfortable Chair And Desk Set-Up

Creating a comfortable work environment is essential if you want to stay productive and motivated throughout the day. Investing in a good quality chair with adjustable height and armrests can be particularly beneficial if you spend long hours sitting at your desk. Additionally, make sure that you have the right desk set up for your body type.

5) Use Customisable Desk Accessories

Want to add subtle touches of personality to your workspace? Why not use customisable desk accessories like mouse pads, pen holders or even a mug with your favourite quote on it. This will help make your workspace more unique and personalised. Plus, it’s an easy way to add colour and bring life to an otherwise dull desk space.

6) Incorporate A Few Fun Items That Make You Smile

Having some fun items in your work space can help make it feel less stuffy and formal. Whether it’s a toy car, a mini-figure of your favourite character or even a funny quote on your wall, having these small reminders of why you do what you do can help keep you motivated and energised. Also, if you’re working from home, incorporating some fun items like these in your workspace can help create a more relaxed environment and make your home office feel more inviting.

7) Rearrange Your Desk On A Regular Basis

Finally, if you’re feeling uninspired with your workspace, try rearranging it on a regular basis. Moving around furniture such as desks or chairs is an easy way to create a new look without spending too much money. Additionally, changing up the environment every now and then can help give you a fresh perspective and make working more enjoyable. For instance, you can move your desk to the window, switch up the wall decorations or even rearrange your plants and desk accessories. Furthermore, having a clean and organised work space can help declutter your mind, giving you more focus and energy.

Creating an inviting workspace doesn’t need to be expensive or complicated – all it takes is some creativity and effort! By following these tips, you can personalise your work space in a fun and easy way that will make it feel more like home. Not only will this help you stay productive and motivated, but it can also provide a much-needed break from the mundane tasks of the day. So, don’t be afraid to get creative and transform your work space into a space that you love!

We hope these tips have inspired you to make your work space a little more inviting. Thanks for reading!