The Minister of Finance,
Mrs Kemi Adeosun, on Friday outlined a 10-point fiscal roadmap to reset the
Nigerian economy to a path of growth.
Speaking at the session
which was attended by industry leaders across key sectors of the economy
including oil, banking and telecoms, Adeosun said “The Federal Government’s Fiscal
Roadmap is addressing barriers to growth that will drive productivity, generate
jobs and broaden wealth creating opportunities to achieve inclusive growth”.
She stated that the
President Muhammadu Buhari administration is determined to convert Nigeria to a
productive economy rather than one that is consumption driven. To do so,
Government would tackle the infrastructure deficit to unlock productivity,
improve business competitiveness and create employment. She stated that
Government would actively partner with the private sector to achieve this by
use of a number of new funding platforms. These include the Road Trust Fund,
which will develop potentially tollable roads, and the Family Homes Fund which
is an ongoing PPP initiative for funding of affordable housing.
In addition she detailed a
revision to the Tax provision that allows companies to receive tax relief for
investment in roads on a collective basis. She explained that the existing
provision that enabled companies to claim relief for road projects had only
been taken advantage of by two companies, Lafarge and Dangote Cement. This was
because few companies were large enough to fund roads alone. The revision would
now allow collective tax relief such that companies will be able to jointly
fund roads, subject to approval by FIRS and the Ministry of Works, and share
the tax credit. This would be particularly attractive to firms in clusters such
as industrial estates, many of which are plagued by poor road conditions.
She emphasised the role of
infrastructure in creating inclusive growth, explaining the current barriers to
growth in agriculture, solid minerals and manufacturing. She stated that the drivers of inflation were
structural and were being addressed through the focus on power, rail and road
infrastructure.
The Minister also outlined
measures planned to deal with the problem of hidden liabilities, which were
affecting the banking sector and efforts to revive the economy. The Minister
explained that the conversion from cash accounting to IPSAS (International
Public Sector Accounting Standards) had unveiled unrecorded debts owed to
contractors, oil marketers, exporters, electricity distribution companies and
others. These liabilities were estimated at N2.2 Trillion and would be
addressed with a 10 year Promissory Note Issuance programme in conjunction with
the Central Bank of Nigeria. This measure would be subject to a rigorous audit
process of all claims to ensure validity and mitigate against fraud and the
impact of past corrupt practices. Henceforth, the Minister said that measures
would be put in place to prevent recurrence of such a problem by ensuring that
contracts are managed in a manner that firms have assurance over when they
would be paid. She cited the fact that many contractors were owed as a reason
that many of those recently paid by Government were slow in remobilising to
site: “Some contractors had not been paid in the past 4 years and in some cases
the banks they were owing refused them access to the funds released, causing
delays”. She explained further that those receiving the Promissory Notes would
be expected to provide a material discount to government. The issuance was a
solution to a long term problem that was ‘a drag on economic activity’.
Adeosun concluded her
remarks by assuring that, despite the current economic challenges facing the
Nigerian economy, the outlook is positive due to the strong fundamentals of
Nigeria and the ongoing reform programme. She reiterated that Government is
determined to create an enabling environment and put in place supportive
policies to return to growth in 2017 including greater alignment of monetary
and fiscal policies.
The fiscal roadmap is detailed in the attached 10-point plan
Fiscal
Roadmap 2017
|
Fiscal Policy Initiative
|
Expected Impact
|
1.
|
Recognise inherited debt
profile after a robust audit process:
§ Introduce promissory note program to
finance verified liabilities
§ Issue debt certificates to contractors,
Ministries, Departments & Agencies (MDAs), and State Governments
|
§ Improve cash flow of businesses
§ Improve Banks’ Non-Performing Loans
(NPLs)
§ Free up Banks’ balance sheet for lending
to private sector
§ Improve Government’s business interaction
with the private sector
|
2.
|
Mobilise private capital
to complement Government spending on infrastructure:
§ Roads Trust Fund
§ Family Homes Fund
§ Extend infrastructure tax relief to a
collective model to attract clusters of corporate entities
|
§ Expand the provision of infrastructure
§ Drive growth of non-oil sector.
§ Drive economic growth
|
3.
|
Strengthen
fiscal/monetary handshake:
§ Replace administrative measures on list
of 41-items with fiscal measures to reduce demand pressure in parallel market
§ Encourage domestic food production
through specific incentives e.g. accelerated depreciation on food
manufacturing equipment and Zero (0%) duty on green houses
§ Planned revitalisation of refineries
§ Increase Diaspora remittances via
participation in the buyer support scheme for the Family Homes Fund
|
§ Reduce demand for US Dollars
§ Increase supply of US Dollars
|
4.
|
Incentivise exports:
§ Restructure the Export Expansion Grant
(EEG) to a tax credit system
§ Rationalise tariffs and waivers in key
export sectors
|
§ Encourage/incentivise non-oil exports
§ Drive import substitution
|
5.
|
Encourage investment in
specific sectors through fiscal incentives:
§ Accelerated depreciation on equipment in
strategic sectors e.g. food processing, mining and power
§ Rationalise tariffs and waivers in
priority sectors
|
§ Drive investment in strategic sectors
|
6.
|
Continue expansion of
fiscal space through revenue
enhancement and cost consolidation:
§ Customs Single Window (being implemented
through a Private Public Partnership (PPP) scheme)
§ Template for non-allowable expenses for
Government Agencies.
§ Overhead cost control by the Efficiency
Unit
§ Continuous risk based audit by the
Presidential Initiative on Continuous Audit
|
§ Revenue enhancement
§ Cost containment
|
7.
|
Improve fiscal
discipline at Sub-National level:
§ Extension of efficiency unit at
Sub-National level
§ Fast track municipal bond issues to
deepen the bond market
§ Conversion to International Public Sector
Accounting Standards by all State Governments.
|
§ Improved fiscal position at Sub-National
level
|
8.
|
Enable and accelerate
Recoveries process:
§ Whistle-blower scheme
§ Centralised database on recovered assets
§ Asset tracing
§ Professional management of recovered
assets
|
§ Increased efficiency of Recoveries
process
§ Increased budgetary funding availability
from Recoveries
|
9.
|
Rebalance debt portfolio
to extend maturity and optimise debt service cost:
§ Rebalance public debt portfolio with
increased external borrowing (60:40 target)
§ Extend maturity profile of public debt
portfolio
§ Deploy long-term debt instruments
including Infrastructure and Retail Bonds
§ Maximise use of concessionary loans
|
§ Rebalanced debt profile withimproved debt
service to revenue ratio
|
10.
|
Catalyse Micro, Small
and Medium Enterprise (MSME) growth through
specific measures to improve capacity and access to finance:
§ Development Bank of Nigeria (US$1.3bn)
§ Increase share of business awarded to
MSMEs from Government contracts
§ Tax harmonisation and tax incentives
§ Accelerated depreciation
|
§ Acceleration of MSME growth
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