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Federal Government of Nigeria to Unveil Strategy For E-Commerce Growth

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With more and more Nigerians gaining access to mobile phones and the internet, e-commerce activities in the country have been on the rise over the last couple of years. Nigeria is reportedly one of the leading countries in Africa in e-commerce, with an estimated market projection of US $8.52bn in 2022.

However, despite the exponential growth of the e-commerce sector in the country, the federal government of Nigeria recently disclosed its plan to establish a strategy to boost the growth of the sector, as the country is still yet to harness the inherent opportunity in the e-commerce value chain.

The government disclosed that there was no better time than now to diversify the nation’s economy away from the oil sector, by building a dynamic, profitable, and efficient non-oil sector to place the economy on a sustainable growth path. It is reported that Nigeria is currently actively participating in the ongoing negotiation at the World Trade Organization to boost e-commerce.

According to the minister of industry, Trade, and Investment, Otunba Niyi Adebayo who was represented by the director, commodities and export department of the ministry, Suleman Audu, while at a stakeholders dialogue on e-commerce and digital trade policy for Nigeria, he disclosed that despite the giant strides recorded in the e-commerce industry, Nigeria is still yet to fully harness the inherent opportunities in the e-commerce value chain due to inadequate investment and information, coupled with several other challenges.

See what he said;

”Nigeria has yet to fully harness the inherent opportunities in the e-commerce value chain, largely due to inadequate investment, coupled with inadequate information on the opportunities in the sector and the inability of the government to provide the required enabling environment.

”As such, the government has identified e-commerce as a major priority program that will play a critical role in the promotion of commodity trade, especially with the realities of the unprecedented COVID-19 global pandemic.

”The Federal Government is also committed to developing an e-commerce strategy in line with the Federal Government’s post-COVID-19 recovery plan, to encourage investment in the e-commerce value chain. The current e-commerce spending in Nigeria is estimated at $13bn per annum and is projected to rise to about $75bn in revenues per annum by 2025.

”The market outlook for Nigeria’s e-commerce shows that the number of online shoppers in the country, which was at 76.7 million in 2021, is expected to hit 122.5 million by 2025. The figures from the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System also show that Nigeria’s e-payment transactions increased by 85.5 percent year-on-year to N171.99trn in August 2021.”

The e-commerce companies in Nigeria have no doubt proven to be critical enablers of economic growth and social development for the country, despite the myriad of challenges these companies are faced with, due to a tough operating environment.

These companies have continued to promote the growth of SMEs in the country, by offering sellers their online platforms in order for them to reach a wider target audience.

Even though these e-commerce companies continue to defy certain odds in the country, however, there is a strong need for the government to fix up a whole lot of things that have somehow limited the growth of the sector.

A clear example is the case of Nigeria’s poor infrastructure which calls for serious attention. Aside from the fact that the FG still has a lot to do in order to fully develop its digital infrastructures to support a vibrant digital economy, one major constraint of the e-commerce sector is the poor road network.

Not all parts of the country are accessible by road. Getting goods to remote areas of the country can be a very daunting task. As a result, people living in such areas may be required to pay more or wait for long periods to get their goods delivered. Hence, they may find it difficult to patronize e-Commerce stores.

It is however gratifying that the federal government has convened, to unveil strategies for e-commerce growth in the country. Hopefully, all these constraints limiting the sector in one way or the other, will be totally eradicated, thereby boosting the sector for an explosive exponential growth.

“The Abundance Is Here” – Watch Tekedia Capital OPEN Video

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Greetings! Tekedia Capital held the latest Tekedia Capital OPEN on Saturday, August 27, 2022. Through this open event, we explain our mission and answer questions from the general public. If you missed it,  watch the video below.

The video explains how we see the market and our approach to investing. 

To join Tekedia Capital syndicate, click here.

Who would you hire as CEO for this big “company” called Nigeria?

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Young People, do not follow the path of insult. Do not follow the path of attack. Keep this campaign clean, and make a case: who can make your life better? Who can make your community better? Who can make your nation better? I am an optimist and I believe that the future is full of abundance even in Nigeria. This life is sweet, and you do not need to have blue blood to experience that sweetener. One leader can change the destinies of people.

Do you know what it means to graduate from a university, do your youth service – and in 3 months, you get a decent job? Do you know the liberation that comes when those digits drop in your bank account? Do you know the hope you give people who depend on you? Do you know how that first job opens your life playbook? People, there is power in a paycheck!

As you look at Atiku, Tinubu and Obi, forget their tribes, forget how they pray, but focus on one thing: if you are to hire a CEO for the most important company in Africa, who will you give that job? I run a fund which invests in startups. One thing that is evident is this: we want to make as much money as possible – and to do that, no one cares anything but the person that will deliver the alpha returns.

Would you go for alpha for Nigeria – the most important company in Africa? Who would you hire to lead that company? That is what is at stake in this election. Who would you hire for this big “company” called Nigeria?

The winner of Nigeria’s 2023 Presidency must draw new electoral maps

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Rabiu Kwankwaso was in Borno State  yesterday; he commissioned the New Nigeria People Party (NNPP)’s office and launched NNPP activities in the state. Despite massive rain, the believers showed up. Kwankwaso is the presidential flagbearer for NNPP in Nigeria 2023 elections.

The former governor  of Kano State overcame stupid political own-goals by the state government which sealed the party office but later reversed when  citizens protested. APC’s vice presidential candidate, Kashim Shettima, is from Borno State.

This outing has shown one clear sign: among Atiku, Obi and Tinubu, anything can happen. Even Borno State is not safe for APC despite the success of Governor Zulum (governor is becoming too political these days; never imagined he would approve to seal an opponent’s campaign office! So, if NNPP eats into some of these strongholds, APC and PDP will need new maps to win. Nigerians are looking for change and this election will surprise many.

Yes, this is the most open election since 1999 in Nigeria; the winner must draw new electoral maps.

Nigerian Presidency is Wide Open As Mobile Internet Could Disintermediate Old Political Structures

Is Nigeria working for you?

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A Nigerian youth seen waving the Nigerian national flag in support of the ongoing protest against the unjust brutality of The Nigerian Police Force Unit named Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) in Lagos on October 13, 2020. - Nigerians took to the streets once again on October 13, 2020, in several cities for fresh protests against police brutality, bringing key roads to a standstill in economic hub Lagos. Demonstrations organised on social media erupted earlier this month calling for the abolition of a notorious police unit accused of unlawful arrests, torture and extra-judicial killings. The government gave in to the demand on October 11, 2020, announcing that the federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) was being disbanded in a rare concession to people power in Africa's most populous nation. (Photo by Benson Ibeabuchi / AFP) (Photo by BENSON IBEABUCHI/AFP via Getty Images)

I got a call earlier that I have to be in Lagos in the next 4 hours for an urgent business meeting. I cleared my schedule and logged on to airline websites to purchase an airplane ticket from Abuja to Lagos. I was shocked to my bone marrow to see an economy ticket price to be at the rate of N120k while a business class ticket is at the rate of N180k. 

I quickly called an airline agent who used to make ticket reservations and bookings for me to enquire why that outrageous price because I know that the recent “usual” price for an economy ticket ranges from N80-100k and I was told that it was because it’s “rush hour or dye minute booking”. 

This is when it hit me so hard that the Nigerian economy has become totally shitty and is really going down the drain. I never imagined that the price of an economy ticket in Nigeria would be over 100k. I remember just a few years back when flight tickets used to be N10k, then it went up to 15k-20k. Just in February this year, I purchased an Airpeace economy ticket from Abuja to Lagos for N23k. 

Most times when you complain about the current cost of airplane tickets some children of doom will be quick to ask you to use the road instead. Like really? Use the road and risk getting kidnapped to end up raising N100m for ransom, that is if you are lucky to be kept alive by your abductors. 

No matter how rich you are in Nigeria I’m sure that you are already feeling the harshness of the economic reality and if you are yet to feel it, I’m not a prophet of doom but I can boldly prophesy to you with my two eyes open that it will get to you soon. Just soon. No matter how much you make or earn you will surely feel it. Imagine paying over 100k for a one-leg ticket to travel and go and do a job and pay another N100k to go back home. 

The bigger problem is individual earnings; the minimum wage is yet to be adjusted to accommodate this recent hike in the prices of items in the market. Not just airlines are hiking their flight prices, the cost of food in the market is also outrageous; all the restaurants and supermarkets I patronize in Abuja also hiked the price of their items. 

Is Nigeria really working for anybody at this point in time? 

Is Nigeria working for you? Are you having a good time?

Is anybody really having a smooth sail in Nigeria currently? 

Are those praise singers that come on radios, televisions, and social media to sing praises to this government honest about the situation of things in their immediate environment, or are they hired by the government to raise propaganda in favor of the incumbent government?

I have friends and acquaintances in different trades and professions. I have doctors as friends running their own hospitals, I have business owners as friends, I have CEOs, I have civil servants as friends and sometimes I do ask each of them how they are coping and none is having a good time currently even the ones that are politicians are also complaining. 

Petrol stations also raised the price of petrol. N10k worth of fuel used to get my car tank filled up and it will last me for five days but right now, I spend N15k in getting my car tank filled up for the same car. 

Schools also raised the price of their fees. No matter how much you are earning in Nigeria at the moment you must feel the harshness of the economic reality unless you don’t want to be honest with yourself. 

It is just the economic situation that we are talking about here, we are yet to talk about the security situation, let us not even go down the education lane, health care nko?, lack of jobs, and survival of businesses, etc.  If we delve into all those topics now we may end up weeping all through the day. 

But the hope we have is that 2023 is around the corner. Another opportunity for Nigerians to decide. I’m sure everyone has suffered enough so no one needs to be preached to anymore to make a good decision with their votes. You can as well choose to vote wrong again and let us tie ourselves down with another 4 years of hardship and anguish. 

The ball is in your court.