Tuesday, 10 January 2012

TO REMOVE OR NOT TO REMOVE : OIL SUBSIDY ON BUSINESS

It is the bane of progress in Nigeria today. Proper dissemination of information coupled with ignorance among-st our people. We are a nation who likes to follow the crowd. We do not live on Facts but we live on rumors, hence taking us far away from the truth and the fact behind this truths.

Up from the colonials to independence, the citizens of Nigeria have been made to regularly swallow pills of rumor, thereby turning us against each others as enemies.

Really, if we come to think of this Nigeria as an economy, has more than enough resources to take care of its own but we have been deceived.
I don't have the answers to this great nations woes, as all the answers I thought I had in the past, have been proven not to work on the long run, why, I am not well informed on the ways of Nigeria, it's real politics, how things work. And even the most intellectual of them all, the poets, economists, pastors, imams, politician, academicians have found no clue to the complex situations we have buried ourselves in. And who are these people who bury the truth, I could not say, as it may all be rumours. I have compiled articles below from different sources it may help you make up your mind on what whether we should remove or not remove oil subsidy.                                                                                                       Bottom line is, if we remove it, many will suffer if we don't remove it many will still suffer in the end. I think the choice here is: Your decision above is based on what you know. Mourning May Endure for a Night But Joy Cometh in the Morning ( The Psalms )

“Why I Started War Against Subsidies”- Sanusi Lamido Sanusi









Sunday, 6 March 2011

Oloja.com on the streets of Nigeria

Oloja.com have been carrying out its awareness campaign on the internet for quite some time creating a presence on all the social networks (facebook, twitter e.t.c.) and over 250 search engines including Google, MSN, Yahoo, AOL.

It is only right in 2011 to take it's campaign to the streets of Nigeria visiting over 20 states and cities in the course of 12 months. Our campaign kicked off the first week of Feb 2011 where we visited 3 states and cities in one week (Ibadan – Oyo State, Abeokuta-Ogun State, Lagos-Lagos State)

The campaign intentionally kicked off in Ibadan because of her significance to Nigeria; being home to the first TV station (NTA Ibadan) in Nigeria and West Africa, and the renowned University of Ibadan.

Oloja.com is the online business directory of Nigerian businesses as well as an information broker between Nigerian business and global partners. The yellow pages of Nigeria.

Oloja.com showcases the products/services and contacts of Nigerian based businesses from Small Businesses; Printers, Plumbers and other sectors; Education, Health, Oil and gas, Finance, Media and Telecoms.



Here are a few pictures of our state visits:

It will be wrong to visit Ibadan and not stop over at Mapo Hall, Mapo Hall is the colonial style city hall, perched on top of Mapo Hill, in Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria. Mapo Hall was commissioned during the colonial era by Captain Ross in 1929. It was renovated in 2006.


On Iwo Road Ibadan Oyo state.


Team Oloja.com at Oba Lipede Ultra Modern Market Kuto Abeokuta - Ogun State
Newly refurbished Lagos City Hall 

Team Oloja at The Palm one of the Shopping Malls in Lagos State 



                  Met up with friends of Oloja.com the great Olufunmi and her husband Diran Olajoyigbe



More updates coming soon as the campaign progresses.

Thursday, 25 March 2010

Paucity of credit, policy somersault hinder business development in Nigeria, says survey

Lack of access to credit, policy inconsistencies, infrastructural deficiencies and corruption have been identified as major constraints to doing business in Nigeria.

This was revealed from a business confidence survey carried out on the Nigerian economy by the NOI Polls in partnership with the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) for the fourth quarter of year 2009, conducted in public and private owned companies selected across various fields of the Nigerian economy.




The sectors include banking, insurance, transport, oil and gas, agriculture, manufacturing, consulting, telecommunications, aviation, among others. Specifically, the survey, according to the NOI Polls, which works closely with Gallup Poll (USA) and the NESG, was conducted through interviews and questionnaires distributed to some top business executives.


The survey showed that 67 per cent of the respondents said lack of infrastructure, 50 per cent said access to credit, while 50 per cent said policy inconsistency was the obstacle to business and 47 per cent said corruption. Also, 90 per cent of the respondents noted that their businesses were hindered by power, 86 per cent said major hiccups from ports, 76 per cent said petrol/diesel supply and 67 per cent said insecurity was a major constraint to growth. The manufacturing and services sector said power was a major constraint for the businesses, as they had to generate their own supply.

 


The survey stated that though the global economy showed a remarkable resilience in its efforts to recover from the economic crisis, which started in 2007, with evident signs of an upturn in major industrialised economies, which manifested in slower rates of output decline and even marginal growth in some economies, but in Nigeria, the macroeconomic environment continued to deteriorate.


The survey in relation to other parts of the world showed that U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew by 3.5 per cent in quarter three of 2009, from 0.7 per cent contraction in quarter two; UK contracted from 5.5 per cent in quarter two to 5.2 per cent; while the Eurozone declined by 4.1 per cent in quarter three, from 4.8 per cent in quarter two. According to survey, these improvements were largely due to the injection of liquidity into the financial system and other stimulus programmes adopted by governments around the world.


But the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)-induced banking reforms, which resulted in a near total freeze on credit expansion, caused a slowdown in economic activity in the period under review, coupled with the low level of electricity generation, increased focus on taxation, enhanced government borrowing, reduction in spending, business closures and massive job losses (particularly in the banking sector), all combined to put further strain on Nigeria's dismal economic output.

 
The NOI Polls survey noted that the correction in the Nigerian stock market, which began in 2008, continued in 2009, despite regulatory interventions and was further compounded by the liquidity squeeze and dampened investors' appetite for equities, which resulted in the stock market losing 39.5 per cent of its capitalisation. It added that despite concerted efforts by regulators to restore domestic confidence, inject new liquidity into the banking system, interest rates (measured by inter-bank, prime and maximum lending rates) remained ascendant.


However, the survey showed that the foreign exchange market remained relatively stable for the most part of 2009, after an initial turbulence in the first quarter, following measures taken by the CBN. It stressed that as at end-December 2009, the Whole Dutch Auction System (WDAS) average exchange rate was N149.6 to a U.S. dollar compared with N126.48 per dollar at end of December 2008.


The survey puts it that in the next six months counting from January, 2010, 43 per cent of those interviewed sees their business remaining the same, while 30 per cent and 23 per cent sees their business becoming better and worse respectively. Furthermore, the NOI Polls survey showed that majority of respondents (80 per cent) said the business environment was either unsupportive or very unsupportive of their businesses, stressing that the recent reforms in the banking sector, access to credit was either tight or very tight for most business executives but that in the next six months, from January 2010, access would be average and easy.

 
In the areas of corruption as a hindrance to business growth in Nigeria, the survey showed that 53 per cent of the respondent said they made unofficial payments to government officials in the past six months prior to the conduct of the survey. In the area of inflation, 53 per cent of the respondents said they envisaged increase in inflation rate, while 40 per cent said they did not anticipate any changes, but seven per cent expected a decrease. A major reason cited for the expected increase in inflation was the planned deregulation of petroleum products prices.

(Source Guardian)