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Home Blog Page 6435

Is Nigeria Doing Enough to Avoid Another Recession?

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Finance Minister, Nigeria

The odds seem to be camping around efforts by the federal government to stop Nigeria’s economy from plunging into recession for the second time in five years. The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, said that the worst will happen if coronavirus doesn’t end in six months.

During her appearance on Channels Television’s Politics Today, Mrs. Ahmed warned that the coronavirus pandemic has come with an economic storm that may hit Nigeria hard if it continues.

“We are hopeful that this pandemic will be limited in time. If it is an average of three months, we should be able to close the year with positive growth. But if it goes longer than that – six months, one year – we will go into recession,” she said.

Nigeria is not the only country to feel the negative economic impact emanating from the scourge of COVID-19 pandemic, every country in the world has a stake to save, and many are taking drastic measures to prevent the worst from happening.

On Friday, president Trump signed an unprecedented $2.2 trillion economic package into law; the bill was swiftly passed by both chambers of the congress in a show of commitment that defied partisanship. The $2.2 trillion was meant to alleviate the economic chaos that coronavirus will unleash on the American economy, and the people at large.

“This bill is not only a rescue package, it’s a commitment – a commitment that your government, and the people whom you elected to serve you, will do everything we can to limit the harm and hardship you face, both now and in the foreseeable future,” said Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, of the Republican Party.

The collective rapid passage of the bill on Wednesday, signals a state of emergency in the economy and healthcare sector.

“Today we’ve all acknowledged our nation faces an economic and health emergency of historic proportions. Americans deserve a full-on government response to address these threats to their lives and their livelihood and they need it now,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

While Nigeria cannot be compared with the United States in terms of economic power, other small nations with relative economic capacity are taking drastic measures to limit the harsh impact of the pandemic on their respective economies.

Early last week, Ghana cut the key rate to 8-year low of 14.5% from 16%, becoming the first sub-Saharan African country to cut rates in response to COVID-19 pandemic, reducing its benchmark to 8-year low. Ghana’s economy was beginning to leap through tourism-based diversification at the end of 2019, but was totally brought to zero as travels and tours got canceled upon the spread of coronavirus.

The country is however making projections based on the anticipation of 5% to 2.5% decline in gross domestic product.

On March 25, the leadership of the national assembly invited the Minister of Finance, CBN Governor and the Nigerian National Petroleum Commission (NNPC)’s GMD to deliberate on the impact of COVID-19 on Nigeria’s economy and to proffer solutions.

Part of the result of the meeting is the federal government doling out N10 billion to the Lagos State government, coronavirus most affected state in the country, and N5 billion to the Nigerian Center for Disease Control (NCDC).

Other measures taken by the federal government to tame the harsh realities of the pandemic include the creation of a N50 billion targeted credit facility through the NIRSAL Microfinance Bank, for households and SMEs. And the interest rate cuts on all applicable CBN facilities from 9% to 5%, N20 reduction of petrol pump price and a one year moratorium on loan servicing.

While these measures appear proactive, experts believe they are far from being the succor to the inevitable bleak economic realities wildling through the stimulation of coronavirus.

Though there have been some other measures proposed by the Crisis Management Committee inaugurated by president Buhari, which are believed will bring relief if implemented alongside other measures taken so far.

The Committee proposed an Integrated Policy Framework that will redesign the already existing economic infrastructure plan for the year 2020. The new framework will review the 2020 budget with a new oil benchmark of $30 per barrel, the aim is to stimulate cost saving measures that will reduce the midterm expenditures. The proposal is streamlined to touch many areas of the economy and will require legislative consent. It is highlighted as follows.

Increase revenue by reducing NNPC’s expenditures associated with oil – this will require cutting PMS under-recovery payment from 457.5 billion to zero. Reducing other federally funded upstream projects such that aggregate NNPC deductible expenditures are cut by 53%. Revising the 2020 budget using a $30 per barrel benchmark to prepare for the worst case scenario, though oil production volume will stay at 2.18mb/per day. Acceleration of marginal field late and other licensing rounds.

Ramping up oil production on shit down wells, reducing budgeted customs revenues from N1.5 trillion to N943 billion. Cutting privatization proceeds by 50%, reducing MDAs Administrative Capex by 20%. The reduction of Administrative Capex and overheads for top 10 GOEs in the 2020 budget by 25%.

Applying similar cutting measures to all other GOEs and thereby increasing revenue generation by N67 billion, controlling the fast growing personnel cost by efficiency measures such as non-essential recruitment, restructuring Social Intervention Programme. Design and launch other policy measures to be agreed with strategic MDAs.

Provide fiscal relief for Taxpayers and key economic sectors, incentivize employers to retain and recruit staff during the economic crunch. Review non-essential tax waivers to optimize revenues, complement monetary and trade interventions to respond to the crisis.

To implement this framework, incentives are required to reduce the weight of the dwindling economy on many corporations. So the federal government is proposing granting job creation tax rebates for employers, accelerating the construction of over 70 km roads and bridges under the Road Infrastructure Tax Credit Scheme and review of sectors eligible for pioneer tax holidays.

Apart from that, negotiation of a break on debt servicing with multilateral and financial institutions is included. Import duty waiver for essential input for pharmaceutical firms, tax waiver on new health equipment, deferment of tax to increase production. There is also proposed implementation of tax holidays and import duty waivers in the agric sector, aimed at enhancing production and creating more jobs, which part of it means accelerating the ease of doing business by reducing rigid protocols through new packages that will be introduced soon.

While there is hope that these measures, if implemented, will assuage the anticipated pain, there is also doubt that it will not help the majority of poor Nigerians.

Former vice president Atiku Abubakar had recommended the distribution of N10,000 to 30 million households as food stuff supplements, reduction of pump price and total removal of stamp duty. Atiku also called on the federal government to provide 100 million mobile subscribers in the country with N1,500 airtime each, in order to prepare them for emergency situations. He believes it is one way government’s austerity measures could be felt by the people.

Mrs. Ahmed said that the Finance Ministry is considering the Atiku’s recommendation but checking to see if there will be consequences if it is implemented.

Much of the concerns about the measures that the government is proposing stem from the oil benchmark which is still wobbling around $22. The budget review will mean cutting the original benchmark of $57 to $30, in anticipation of a miracle that will up oil price soon. With no hope that coronavirus will end soon, that dream is far from reality. Experts believe that the possibility of generating revenue from other sectors to make up for the deficit is thin, therefore, the chances of Nigeria falling into another recession is wide open.

Letter To Registrants of Facyber Cybersecurity Education

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Hello,

You have registered at Facyber.com to explore or take our cybersecurity programs on policy, technology, management, etc. I am writing to share some updates:

  1.  We just noticed that after a migration to Amazon AWS that new users did not receive activation emails. We have activated all new registrations, and you can login now here https://www.facyber.com/login/index.php

  2. But if you have forgotten your password, please let me know; I will send a password you will use until we fix the SMTP problem with Amazon. The Forgotten Password feature is not working due to the email issue. Just email me – I will send you login details while we deal with this issue. The issue does not affect learning; only creating new users.

  3. Meanwhile, watch a video overview of Facyber training program on our homepage with sample certificate https://www.facyber.com/ . We have also updated all contents with new cases.

  4. From now till April 30, 2020 we are offering a 20% discount, making the program to cost $72 (or local currency equivalent) for Certificate program or $152 for Diploma program. Register here via payment options
  5. Infoprive.com, a Lagos-based cybersecurity firm which secures Flutterwave, Air Arabia, banks, and telcos are offering our graduates opportunities. Read here for more. We have a PDF brochure there also. . For those that have completed Facyber program, hit back. Infoprive Academy is like Andela for Cybersecurity; it will handle the deeper practical aspect of your cybersecurity development and work on international career placements.

  6. Again, my apologies for the login issues. We totally missed that as we thought it was working. I expect to read from you and get you into our program with these discounts.

  7. Finally, if you register for the 2nd edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA, you will be enrolled for free in any selected Facyber Certificate program. Tekedia Mini-MBA is an online 4-month management program, coordinated by Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe and other global faculty. It costs $140 or N50k per person.

Please if you have any questions, let me know.

Regards,

Team Facyber

How World Reacts to WHO’s 3TI Approach for Coronavirus Containment

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Since the emergence of Coronavirus in December 2019, the World Health Organisation has been the coordinating health institution for health ministries, departments and agencies of governments in the developed and developing continents. Among other responsibilities, the global health body has disseminated and still disseminating various messages on the containment of the virus to the public through its communication channels. 

Recently, one of the messages on social media platforms called the attention of the stakeholders in the health sector to the need to adopt a comprehensive approach tagged ‘test, trace, treat and isolate’. The post says “We can still beat COVID-19 with a comprehensive approach: test, trace, treat, isolate. In this video, Dr Maria Van Kerkhove talks about numerical forecasts of the coronavirus’s trajectory and reminds us that we can all prevent the worst, following WHO guidance.”

In our efforts of bringing insights from various perspectives on the containment and mitigation strategies being employed by the stakeholders, we analysed the views of 25 global citizens that trailed the institution’s message. Knowcovid-19 Nigeria learnt that a significant number of the citizens expect provision of more testing materials and adequate protective equipment for the health workers treating the infected people across the world. They also want strict adherence and enforcement of social distance, while everyone should be tested irrespective of whether the person shows the symptoms of the virus or not.  

“Our healthcare workers need PPE and we need more tests! We need to be testing people regardless if they have symptoms or not and mandate an isolate in place order, and close all noon essential businesses! Why are people still out shopping at the dang mall and visiting friends and family at their houses?. This stuff is never going to end, people are too dumb and selfish,” one of the citizens pointed out.

Another citizen from the United States of America notes that there are enough testing kits in every state “nor do we have enough PPE or ventilators.” Frowning at how people are violating social distance and movement restriction measures, another citizen notes that celebrities and other prominent people need to respect the measures by stopping going out unnecessarily and save the world from the severe consequences of their actions. 

Respect – The Brave, Essential Man

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I watched him through the window. He was a garbage collector. He was doing his job, picking and transferring garbage from the bins to the truck. I could not believe that someone would pick potentially coronavirus-contaminated garbage with such bravery. Since the virus broke, and out of my cowardice, I have had to use a sanitizer even after picking mails from the mailbox. Yes, I did not even trust the U.S. postal officer to be clean. But before me is a brave man, picking dangerous things.

Then, he drove off. And my mind flashed back to other families around here. One is a hedge fund manager. Another retired from American football. Another owns many convenience stores. There is an oil man with his big Hummer who knows Niger Delta more than I do. Then, professors, bankers, lawyers, and others. But today, they seem small because the only person working right now is the garbage collector. Fear has overtaken America and everyone is in his or her big hut!

The United States Government has considered the collector’s job ESSENTIAL when professors, hedge fund managers, footballers, etc have been told to stay home. Really? Yes, there are people who bring pieces that make our societies work, and unfortunately, many of us do not really appreciate or respect them. America can live now without professors, money men, and footballers, but without the garbage collectors, another dimension of paralysis will happen.

Our world is built on many pieces. There is a need for us to appreciate one another. While we can put all the smiley faces for the money men and women,it turns out that the garbage collector has a more important job for the functioning of our society than professors, venture capitalists, fashionistas, movie-gods and more, at least today. 

Who is a better friend now in Spain, Italy and New York City? Banker or a nurse? Most will pick a nurse. The private jets are now non-essential. Even Florida has told the money men who wanted to escape New York City to Florida to forget the idea. People, the money men are now small people, looking for where to hide, and they can’t buy that privilege with their money!

Respect. Respect. Respect – for a better world, for all. Our value to society must not be based on the size of our paycheck.

Public Places Fumigation: Key Needs and Issues Nigerians Want Lagos to Address

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From February 28, 2020, the date the first case of Coronavirus was reported in Nigeria, to March 28, 2020, the Lagos State Government under the leadership of governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has made frantic efforts to contain the spread of the disease. A number of strategic steps and measures have been taken towards the reduction of the virus that has claimed thousands of lives and hospitalised over 500,000. 

Majority of the steps and measures have been initiated and executed in collaboration with other stakeholders in the private and public sectors. From the captain of industries to the philanthropists, the state government has received and still getting a number of supports in monetary and material terms. The state government recently took delivery of disinfectant equipment as part of governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s aggressive efforts to combat the virus in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial city and gateway to West African countries.

The fumigation machines have been deployed to every part of the metropolis and being used for sterilization of public surfaces. Knowcovid-19 Nigeria analysed public views that trailed the step -fumigation of public places in the state and found that the majority of the people who expressed their feelings about the action appreciated governor Sanwo-Olu and called for equality in the exercise. According to them, some parts of the state should not be prioritised over others. 

“Thanks Mr Governor, but I have a reservation and a warning, let it not be that it is only Ikeja, Victoria Island, Ikoyi, Lekki, Aja and Banana Island that the government officials pay attention to. The virus is not a respecter of status, space or time. Cleanse all Lagos from Mowe to Badagry, Akute to Epe. Clean all local governments and streets. That’s my advice,” one of the people who follow the state government’s Facebook said.

Commenting on the need to train and equip the fumigants, and the residents with necessary facilities and information, another follower states that “Next is to quickly train the end-users and equip them with the recommended personal protective equipment to resume the exercise. Most importantly, the safety data sheet of the fumigants to be used should be risk assessed to ensure there are no significant health hazards on the citizens or the environment. Where hazards with insignificant impact values are documented, the recommended mitigations should be applied, including further sensitization of the people to remove all edible foodstuff usually displayed outside. I want to believe no one is displaying foodstuff for sale right now within the state. Factors like weather and wind speed and direction must be monitored prior to its application to retain the efficacy of chemicals. God bless and keep you and all our citizens living in Lagos State.”