Mrs. Kemi
Adeosun, the Minister of Finance, revealed that Nigeria in the last 12 months,
has approximately spent N1.2 trillion on capital projects.
Adeosun revealed this yesterday
in Lagos at the 2017 Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE)/ Bloomberg CEO
Roundtable with theme, “Innovating
out Nigeria’s recession: Exploring new paradigms for Nigeria’s economic
growth”, said the FG had spent on roads alone over N200 billion and
this is in contrast to N19 billion expended on roads in 2015.
The minister said, “In 2016, transport and
aviation received N143 billion compared to N6 billion in 2015, this
drive is coupled with important reforms in the ease of doing business
and each will address the soft infrastructure that will enable
businesses and commercial activities to flourish. We recognise that
there is no point doing one without doing the other and two must be done
at the same time.”
The minister noted Nigeria’s infrastructure
deficit is so deep and so critical that the government cannot do it
alone even if it is to dedicate the entire budget to capital projects.
“Therefore, it is critical that we must
engage with the private sector and to this end, we intend to revive
public private partnerships in Nigeria. We are presently reviewing the
PPP framework but also we are trying to resolve outstanding issues with
existing and even failed PPP projects and we do this because we
recognise that until some of those legacy projects are resolved, no new
investors will come in. So, we are moving backwards in order to move
forward”, she explained.
She added that, investor confidence will
grow as a function of how the government rectify the inherited proxy
situation rather than how quickly it can open up opportunities.
Continuing, Adeosun argued that Nigeria’s
private sector is extremely efficient, resilient and creative and there
is a huge opportunity to partner with the private sector in the
provision of infrastructure and social projects across many sectors but
this needs to be de-risked. “We are working to achieve this and hope to
introduce a new asset class of guaranteed instruments that will provide
adequate safe guards for the engagement of private capital.”
However, the minister recognised that
government ambitions cannot be financed by oil revenue and so the need
for diversification.
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