The Chairman of African proprietary investment company, Heirs Holdings, Tony O. Elumelu, CON has called on the government to prioritise SMEs, the Creative Sector and access to electricity to drive job creation, inclusive growth and the diversification of the economy. He made this call while speaking on the topic "Opportunities, Productivity and Employment: Actualizing the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan" at the opening plenary of the 23rd Nigerian Economic Summit with Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and Vice Chairman of General Electric, John Rice. Speaking on the topic, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo stated that though the government has put in place policies to drive productivity and ease of doing business in Nigeria, more still needs to be done. He cited the power sector as an area the government has consciously created initiatives to incentivise businesses along the value chain but noted that the sector lacked the right form of investments.
"Even
with increasing generating capacity, Tony's company and some others
have obviously improved generation capacity, and generation has improved
considerably, but that
last mile - distribution, is absolutely important. We need plenty of
investment, especially in distribution," he said. While commending the
government on its initiatives and N760billion intervention in the power
sector, Elumelu said that the sector should
be market driven to create sustainability.
He
urged the government to consider recapitalizing the leveraged DISCO
entities in the sector to allow capable and competent investors come in
to bail out the struggling
ones that are pulling the power sector back. as these investors are
"If we fix power in Nigeria, we will increase our ease of doing business
and make life significantly easier for investors, the SMES and
Entrepreneurs we are trying to nurture and indeed,
every Nigerian," he said.
Elumelu
also identified the creative sector as having a huge potential and the
capability to create millions of jobs if the government addresses its
some of its critical
challenges such as piracy and intellectual rights that will enable the
sector flourish. Addressing the urgent need to prioritise SMEs, Elumelu
noted that the country desperately needed a mechanism for job creation
to address inclusiveness and sustainable development.
The
Vice Chairman of General Electric (GE), John Rice, responded to the
need for localisation of the economy, urging the government to
focus on improving infrastructure
and the speed of government bureaucracy to attract and retain foreign
investors and partners.
"The
government needs to begin to measure itself on speed as it begins to
implement its reforms," he said. Elumelu, who is also the Founder of
The Tony Elumelu Foundation,
has been a prominent advocate for an entrepreneurially and private
sector-led economy as the key to unlocking growth and development. His
Foundation has committed $100million to mentor, train and invest in
10,000 African SMEs over a 10-year period with 3,000
entrepreneurs incubated so far. This
weekend, over 1300 entrepreneurs from 54 African countries, as well as
the full African entrepreneurship ecosystem, will gather in Lagos for
The Tony Elumelu Foundation
Entrepreneurship Forum - the largest gathering of African
entrepreneurs.
No comments:
Post a Comment