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Nigeria Explains The Unification of MultiChoice (DStv, GOtv), NTA, IrokoTV, etc [Video]

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I wrote on how the new Nigeria Broadcasting Code could destroy innovation in the PayTv sector. For the other side of that story, I have been waiting for when we would hear from the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), the custodian of the code. Mr. Armstrong Idachaba, the Director-General of NBC, has now responded via an interview at The Osasu Show. Of course, he defended the amendments to the broadcasting code which bans exclusive content on Pay TV among other components.

PayTV players like DSTV and GOtv are now banned from having exclusive sporting content in Nigeria. Upon paying pounds, euro and dollars, the companies are required to share content with local players like NTA. More so, if they pay for La Liga Spanish football league, they are required to spend at least 30% of the amount on the Nigerian league.

Yes, if everyone has access to the same contents, we can remove all the logos as all players have been unified. Why invest $1,000 to create content your competitor can get for $300 when you are done? The world lived as an inventive society for centuries, with no innovation, until property rights began to emerge in some areas. The difference between Elon Musk and Tesla is property rights.

Most men who pioneered the fundamental elements of chemistry and physics died poor as no one gave them money to commercialize their ideas. And the reason that happened was that the merchants who had the money did not see how they could recoup their investments if anyone could have access to steal the innovations after they had funded them.

Then, towards the end of the 18th century, property rights began to emerge, giving makers and their backers legal protections to maximally profit from their ideas. That singular move changed the world, turning it from an inventive society into an innovation one. If you look at the gross world product (the combined GDPs of nations) over the last 2,000 years, the curve moved from being flat to an exponential one, around 1800. What happened was evident: men and women became greedy for the love of money and went out and fixed market frictions via products and services, knowing that doing so would make them rich.

Who will waste time creating/acquiring content in Nigeria when everyone can get it for nothing? I get you…

2,000 Years of GDP (Source: Bloomberg, World Bank. Brookings)

Nigeria Strikes The Perceived Choiceless MultiChoice (DStv, GOTv)

The Gig Economy Under Threat As California Court Rules Uber Drivers As Employees

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In a landmark judgment, a California judge has ruled that Uber and Lyft drivers cannot be classified as independent contractors and issued a preliminary injunction to that effect.

The state of California had in May filed a lawsuit challenging the classification of Uber and Lyft drivers as non-employees. The lawsuit argued that it goes against the state’s new labor law (AB5), enacted in January. The law weighed in on a three-part standard to determine the status of an independent contractor.

  1. They are free from company’s control;
  2. They are doing work that isn’t central to the company’s business;
  3. They have an independent business in that industry.

The three-part standard stands in contrast with the gig economy and e-hailing companies are at the helm of it.

California is the parent state of both Uber and Lyft, and it is the biggest market for e-hailing services. The rule will ensure that hence, drivers and on Uber and Lyft platforms get employment benefits. But judge Ethan Schulman of the San Francisco superior court where the verdict was reached, gave a 10-days window for the enforcement, to give companies a chance to appeal.

Uber said it plans to appeal the ruling which it described as insensitive to the plights of drivers in the middle of a pandemic, when the government should be working on providing jobs for the people.

“The court’s ruling is stayed for a minimum of 10 days, and we plan to file an immediate emergency appeal on behalf of California drivers. The vast majority of drivers want to work independently, and we’ve already made significant changes to our app to ensure that remains the case under California law. When over 3 million Californians are without a job, our elected leaders should be focused on creating work, not trying to shut down an entire industry during an economic depression,” Uber’s spokesperson said in a statement.

In response to the California state’s new law, Uber announced new features on its app to help the drivers stay flexible. The updates which took effect mid-January include seeing trip information upfront to help drivers make informed decisions. The information will include trip time, distance, destination and fares. The update also empowers drivers to accept or reject rides without being punished. Uber promised to introduce more features that will make the job more flexible for drivers.

Lyft said the ruling undermines the wishes of the drivers who don’t want be employees, and enjoy working as independent contractors.

“Drivers do not want to be employees, full stop. We’ll immediately appeal this ruling and continue to fight for their independence. Ultimately, we believe this issue will be decided by California voters and that they will side with drivers,” Lyft spokesperson said.

The Guardian reported that Uber, Lyft and DoorDash have spent more than $100 million on a 2020 ballot that aims to incite voters against the AB5. But they were chided as the move was cited in the suit as “an aggressive public relations campaign in the hopes of enshrining their ability to mistreat their workers,” even in the middle of “a once-in-a century pandemic.”

However, the drivers are divided on what they really want. While many of them want such flexible work without entitlements that will hinder their independence, others want their efforts rewarded with employment benefits.

The judgment is the first of its kind for the gig economy in the United States, but not in the UK.

In 2016, Uber drivers in London, led by Yaseen Aslam and James Farrar, took to the streets to demand employment rights. The protests birthed a lawsuit that challenged the gig economy. The employment tribunal ruled in favor of the drivers, but Uber appealed the judgment and likewise lost in the appeal court. In its final attempt to save its business model and probably the gig economy, the ride-hailing company heads to the Supreme Court.

As the UK drivers wait on the verdict of the Supreme Court, the development in California is signaling the beginning of the gig economy’s disruption.

Uber has defended its business model saying that the majority of the drivers want to be treated as self-employed. But on the other side of the case, the claimants said the ruling will determine if workers will continue to be abused under the gig economy.

“This is our final showdown with Uber but the stakes could not be higher for everyone. If Uber wins, there will be an unseemly rush by greedy employers to collapse employment as we know it and Uber-ize the entire economy. Uber drivers and other gig economy workers would be robbed of the right to unionize,” said Aslam.

The gig economy has denied many full-time workers employment benefits, including the protections that the law provides in times of crisis.

Mathieson, an associate of Bates Wells’ employment team said “this landmark case will have enormous implications for how well, or badly, workers in the fastest growing sector of the economy are treated.”

Tekedia Institute Has Started Approving Capstone Topics for The Certificate Programs

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We have started approving capstone topics for the Certificate programs. We have constituted a small committee which looks at the three proposed topics and then picks one. Once that is done, the member is asked to develop the topic. Here are options:

  • Submit a one-page study structure: tell us how you plan to approach this research or project.
  • Submit a work-in-progress table of contents: tell us potential topics of sections in this work.

While you can do both, we need just one. Once that is done, you will receive comments. Then, you begin your study. Please learn more on the Capstone here.

Tekedia Certificate courses are completely capstone-based. Tekedia capstone is a research paper or a case study exploring a topic, market, sector or a company.  You must have attended, begun or about attending Tekedia Mini-MBA to qualify to register. At the moment, we cover the following areas:

  • CLSM – Certificate in Logistics and Supply Chain Management

  • CSBM – Certificate in Startup and Small Business Management

  • CETS  – Certificate in Exponential Technologies and Singularity

  • CPCD  – Certificate in Personal Career Development

  • CPFM  – Certificate in Personal Finance & Wealth Management

  • CBIS  – Certificate in Business Innovation, Growth & Sustainability

Register here if you are interested in our Certificate programs.

Capstone for Tekedia Mini-MBA Certificate Courses

Nigeria’s Highest Earning CEOs – MTN, Oando, Seplat, GTBank, Unilever, …

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From Premium Times, here are the highest earning CEOs in Nigeria, at least for publicly traded or reported companies. Relatively, the numbers are not big when benchmarked with what men pocket in America. But by per capita, they are excessive as Nigeria is a small economy. 

As listed by the report, Nigeria’s top ten executive remunerations in 2019 were: Ferdinand Moolman, MTN, ?585.94 million; Adewale Tinubu, Oando, ?568 million; Ojenekwu Avuru, Seplat Petroleum Development Company, ?440 million; Segun Agbaje, GTBank, ?399.7 million; and Yaw Nsarkoh, Unilever, ?302.52 million.

Other are: Michel Purchercos, Lafarge, ?282.38 million; Jordi Borrut Bel, Nigerian Breweries Plc, ?271 million; Mauricio Alarcon, Nestle, ?218.08 million; Lars Richter, Julius Berger, ?217.07 million; Baker Magunda, Guinness, ?193 million; and Emeka Emuwa, Union Bank, ?172 million.

[…]

In the banking sector, the trio of Segun Agbaje of GTBank with ?399.7 million, Emeka Emuwa of Union Bank with ?172 million, and Yinka Sanni of Stanbic IBTC with ?155 million were paid the highest remuneration in 2019.

In comparison with previous years though, the executives paycheck for the year did not closely match the profit generated in 2019, save GTBank which recorded the second-highest profit before tax of ?243 million and paid its director the highest remuneration in the sector.

The Lagos’ 10% Service Tax on Uber, Bolt, etc with up to N25 Million License Fee

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Nigeria continues to innovate on revenue collection. From federal to state governments, if we have put the energies we have exerted on how to collect taxes and fees from citizens and companies, we would have advanced. The latest one is coming from the center of excellence, though nothing excellent on this playbook. Yes, Lagos will now collect 10% service tax on Uber, Bolt and all e-taxis. That is for Lagos. This new 10% does not substitute current fees and taxes!

More so, “the law now mandates operators to acquire a provisional license at N10 million (about US$26,000) per 1,000 vehicles or less; N25 million (US$65,000) for a fleet above 1,000 and renew annually at N5 million and N10 million respectively“, TC Daily summarizes.

Come August 20, Guideline for On-Line Hailing Business Operation of Taxi in Lagos will come into effect. It is the Lagos State government’s approach towards regulating the ride-hailing sector in the commercial city and has been the cause of concern since last year when its existence was first hinted at. Both motorcycle and taxi operators have been at regulatory loggerheads with the state government since 2018. In January, the state government announced the ban of motorcycles, including the tech-enabled operators, from major areas in the state to the outrage of users and the operators. There was a peaceful march afterwards to protest the ruling. As was speculated then, the law now mandates operators to acquire a provisional license at N10 million (about US$26,000) per 1,000 vehicles or less; N25 million (US$65,000) for a fleet above 1,000 and renew annually at N5 million and N10 million respectively. The state government is also asking for a 10% service tax on every ride the operators complete.

Sing Ease of Doing Business improving…hahaha. Except foreign companies, which Nigerian entrepreneurs can raise N25 million just to get a piece of paper? It may not be really bad for Uber and Bolt. At least, the government has killed any local challenger for good.

Technext presents the evidence.

Poor ride-hailing sector players. California is already hitting them hard; it seems there is no escape velocity for these human aggregators.

A California judge has ordered Uber and Lyft to stop classifying its drivers as independent contractors, handing the state a signal victory in a battle over the gig economy Monday.

After the state passed a law broadly requiring more workers to be treated as employees, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra and city attorneys sued the ride-hailing firms this year, arguing they were violating the law by deeming their drivers to be independent contractors. Becerra went to court for an injunction immediately compelling the companies to treat their drivers differently.