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Business Environment Update For The Month Of October 2021

Global Times

  The quality of the business environment is a critical factor in the acceleration of economic recovery, growth of investment and job creation. The Business Environment Update is an assessment of the key investment climate variables impacting business performance. These are essential factors that business owners or managers have no control over but which have a significant impact on the sustainability of the investment.
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Understanding the business environment variables are very important for public policy advocacy engagements with the government and also critical for business strategy. These factors include macroeconomic dynamics, regulatory concerns, institutional challenges, and structural issues. Investors, especially those in the real sector space, identified access to foreign exchange, exchange rate depreciation, high inflationary pressures, the crisis at the ports, high cost of diesel, skyrocketing gas prices, and insecurity as the most critical challenges of business in the last couple of months. Others lamented the severe impact of the punitive transit duty imposed by the Benin Republic on transit goods passing through the country by road. The duty is estimated at an average of N9 million per truck. This duty payment is significantly impeding trade across the West African sub-region. Meanwhile, the tempo of economic activities had increased following the progressive relaxation of the COVID-19 restrictions which had restricted activities in some sectors of the economy. The economy witnessed an improvement in the activities and gradual recovery in the entertainment, hospitality, aviation, transportation, trade and commerce, food and beverage sectors, among others.

Macroeconomic Environment

The rebound in oil price has improved the outlook for foreign reserves as well as the capacity of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to fund the foreign exchange market. As of October 2021, the foreign reserves has crossed the Forty one-billion-dollar threshold. The impact on revenue outlook is also positive. These developments would impact positively investor sentiments.

Inflation

Although the inflation rate has decelerated over the past couple of months, inflationary pressure remains a major cause for concern for investors in the Nigerian economy. Headline inflation as of September was 16.63% while food inflation was 19.57% and core inflation was 13.74%. In all of these, there are worries about the implication of the inflationary situation for the Nigerian economy. Inflation had the following impact in the period under review: The key drivers of inflation were exchange rate depreciation, the illiquidity in the foreign exchange market, insecurity in the farming communities and structural constraints impacting negatively on productivity in the economy.
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Downside Risks To The Economy

The economy continues to face headwinds even as some degree of recovery is being reported. Some of these headwinds and shortcomings include:

The Foreign Exchange Market

The biggest challenge reported by investors across all sectors in the past couple of months was around the foreign exchange. Practically all investors expressed serious concerns over this predicament. The concerns were around the following:

The Port Situation and Cargo Clearing Challenges

The challenges of cargo clearing persisted in the month of October and importers continued to face the following constraints or obstacles:

Prohibitive Charges By The Benin Republic On Nigerian Transit Cargo

In June this year, the Benin Republic Customs imposed an outrageous transit duty of an average of N9 million per truck for vehicles originating from Nigeria and crossing the Benin border to other west  African countries. This continues to make it very difficult for companies exporting or importing by road to do so. It is essentially a blockade of the movement of trucks through the Benin border. There is the theory that this is a retaliatory action by the government of the Benin Republic following the border closure by Nigeria about a year ago[which had since been relaxed]. This is in total disregard for the ECOWAS Protocol on trade and movement within the sub-region. This development has been taking a huge toll on Nigerian businesses involved in cross border trade within the sub-region. Investors would like to see a more effective intervention by the Nigerian government to put an end to this punitive and obstructionist action by the government of the Benin republic.

Conclusion

We will implore the government to take a critical look at the concerns that have been expressed by business operators and address these concerns in the interest of the investment environment and the advancement of the Nigerian economy. Featured Image Source: Global Times
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