ABUJA —The Federal Government, yesterday,
approved the request for three loans worth $1.3 billion for the newly
established Development Bank of Nigeria, DBN, to kick off. The Federal
Executive Council, FEC, formally granted the approval at yesterday’s meeting
presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
FEC also gave its nod for the registration of 200,000 personnel of the Nigerian
military, cutting across the Army, Navy and Air Force into the Integrated
Personnel Payroll Information System, IPPIS. Finance Minister, Mrs Kemi ADEOSUN
This, the council did by approving the award for the procurement of project
managers and verification consultants for a total cost of N550 million to bring
the personnel onto the IPSS platform, hoping to bring in all the military by
third quarter of 2017.
IPPIS is one of the transformation agenda of the Federal
Government, with the aim of creating a centralized database system for Nigerian
Public Service with a single, accurate source of employee information that
provides integration with other business application. Minister of Finance, Mrs.
Kemi Adeosun, made the disclosure while briefing State House correspondents at
the end of FEC meeting. Adeosun, who was in company of Minister of State
for Health, Osagie Ehanire, and Senior Special Assistant to President Buhari on
Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, said the World Bank had made available
for Nigeria the sum of $500 million repayable over 21 years. She added African
Development Bank was also giving the country $450million, while KfW Development
Bank based in Frankfort, Germany, would lend Nigeria $200million. Similarly,
she said French Development Agency had earmarked $130million for the country as
well. According to her, the loans are at concessional rate. Adeosun explained
that it was necessary to give the approval and forward same to the National
Assembly for ratification to enable the government access the loans, saying
they would greatly assist in the drive to reposition the Small and Medium Scale
Enterprises, SMEs. She said: “I have two memos approved by the FEC. The
first was the approval of the award for the procurement of project managers and
verification consultants to bring 200,000 of our military onto the IPSS
platform. We are hoping to bring in all the military by Q3 of 2017. “We have
assurances about the savings that we’ll typically generate when we bring
agencies on IPPIS. Generally, when we bring agencies onto IPPIS, the payroll
goes down. Efforts to sanitize our payroll and make sure that the money we are
spending on salaries is very accurate. So, bringing the military on board is a
big step in that area. “The other memo was an approval for credit facilities
totaling $1.3billion to support the Development Bank of Nigeria. As you know, the
Development Bank of Nigeria recently received its license and it’s being funded
by some long term loans from some of our development partners. “So, the World
Bank has given us $500 million repayable over 21 years and all of this is at
concessional rate. “The African Development Bank is giving us $450million and
KfW Development Bank are giving us $200million and the French Development
Agency are giving us $130million. “To access this money, we are ready to
disburse but there were two requirements that we need to make and one of them
is the legal opinion by the Attorney General of the Federation and the other is
the National Assembly approval. “Before it goes to the National Assembly, it
needs to be approved by FEC and the FEC simply approved today that these loan
requests should go to the National Assembly for approval so we can access this
money and the Development Bank of Nigeria can take off fully as it is expected
to transform Financing to our MSME sector. “The council enthusiastically
approved these facilities which are long tenured meaning that the DBN will be
able to lend to our MSEs over much longer periods and at much lower rates. So
the impact on the SMEs will be quite considerable.” Fielding questions from
Journalists, the Finance Minister underscore the advantage of borrowing, saying
Nigeria stood to benefit from it. She said: “Currently out debt to GDP ratio is
just 13% while many African countries are 60 and in the West some we have 100
percent and above. So the question is what are the loans being used for and
will actually generate growth in the economy that will therefore aggregate
additional taxes which will be used to pay them back? The answer is yes,
because we are very specific on what we are borrowing for, we are borrowing for
things that will generate wealth in the economy. “Take this loan today for
instance, $1.3billion, 45% of Nigeria’s economy is SME and only 10% can get
loans at the moment. It is either they don’t have loans and they are asked to
go and bring one document and the other that they don’t have or the interest is
so high. “In other countries like Brazil about 99% of the SMEs have bank loans.
Majority of smaller businesses in Nigeria today are under capitalized. So they
can make much more money if they have long term cheap funding and that will
make them profitable and they will then pay more taxes which will be used to
service the loans. We have to borrow, we don’t have a choice. “These are
concessional loans with interest of two percent in some cases for 21 years. You
can’t get that kind of money anywhere in the world and it is going directly to
the people that need it. Adeosun added that the IPPIS contract totaled N550
million. “The total number for all are drawn from the Army, Navy, Air force and
it is put at 200,000. So, when we begin to verify then we will know whether
they are more or less. “There are three contracts totaling N550million,” she
said.
Source: Vanguard

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