These
sectors include: Railway; Inland waterways; Road Authority; Roads Funds;
National Transport Commission; Ports & Harbour reform; Federal Competition
and Consumer Protection and Postal bill.
Mr.
Benjamin Dikki, the Director General of the bureau, disclosed this during the
end year workshop of the Commerce and Industry Correspondence Association of
Nigeria (CICAN) in Lagos, saying “Government is riding on the success story of
the previously privatised Public Enterprises, PEs, such as banking, power,
telecom, marine, steel sectors of the economy, etc.
According
to him “Today,
the banking and finance sector is the most developed sector in
Nigeria, efficiently and effectively responsible for implementing all
government’s economic and financial policies under the regulation of the
Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN
‘The
reform of the telecom sector remains the most successful in terms of its impact
on the economy. For example, Nigeria’s tele-density has been raised from
450,000 telephone lines in 2001 to over 134.5 million as at September, 2014;
today, telecom contributions to the GDP is now 8.53 per cent , compared to less
than 3 percent in 2001.”
Still
stressing on the benefits of the reforms and privatisation, he said “Eleme
Petrochemical Company has been revitalised and producing at over 99 percent
capacity and has been consistently paying over N4, 000.00 as dividend per share.
Cement companies have been revived, expanded and made profitable, etc.”
Dikki,
stated that to sustain the gains of past reforms and privatisation and enhance
the enabling environment for private capital participation in the Nigerian
economy, BPE has prepared eight critical bills targeted for passage into law.
The
bills are roads authority bill, railway bill, port and habour bill, inland
water ways bills; Roads fund bill; National transport commission bill, federal
competition and consumer protection bill as well as postal bill.
Additionally,
Dikki said that besides these bills, the bureau is working with the relevant
ministries to reform Sports, Tourism, Health and Housing sectors of the country
by reviewing the policy, legal and regulatory frameworks for these sectors.
In
her presentation, Dr. Gloria Elemo Director General, Federal Institute of
Research Oshodi (FIIRO, said that research and development are a very potent
benefit of research to economic development is the transformation substitution
industrialization to export oriented industrialisation.
According
to Elemo, it is on record that whereas Research and Development, R&D
investments in most European Union, EU and some Asian countries lies between
1.5 percent and three percent of the GDP, most developing countries invest much
less than one percent of GDP in R&D accounting for a meager 0.11 percent of
GDP. The R&D investments in Nigeria only accounts for 0.01 percent of
global expenditure on R&D. Consequently, Nigeria ranked 94 out of 134
nations in the global competitiveness index in 2010 and has no university
ranked in the world’s top 500.
Vanguard
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