COVID-19 stimulus package: FG set to spend another N128bn or more

News Agency of Nigeria reported that about 2.4 million households, who are small scale farmers with farmlands ranging from one to five hectares across the 36 states of Nigeria and the FCT, will get the Federal Government COVID-19 stimulus package.

This claim was made by Dr Andrew Kwasari, Senior Special Assistant (SSA), to the President on Agriculture to mitigate the effects of COVID-19 pandemic on Nigerians and the economy.

According to Kwasari, the COVID-19 stimulus package will be provided through the Agric for Food and Jobs Plan (AFJP), under the Agricultural Sector of the Nigerian Economic Sustainability Plan (NESP). He added, “The Economic Sustainability Committee needed to be very strategic in utilising the minimal resources, overall, not only for the agriculture sector.

So, for the agric sector, we decided that we would use this strategy to utilise available cash to work with financial institutions, led by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), to see how we can get stimulus packages to about a minimum of 2.4 million households or to fund 2.4 million hectares of land that will be cultivated during this  2020 wet and dry season farming.

To say the least that if 2,400,000 households are to get N5,000 each. Mathematically, Government will be spending nothing less than N128 billion on the just-announced scheme. With no modus operandi of disbursement, the Federal Government are expecting returns from the agrarian households that it invests upon.

The Nigerian National Oil Organization (NNPC), on Sunday, said it made a sum of $4.60billion from raw petroleum and gas sent out between June 2019 and 2020.

The shape of disruption in the retail space: how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters

You won’t find too many jokes about ‘digital transformation’. It’s a serious business. And if you ask who is doing it, every corporate will raise their hands – but there’s little agreement around exactly what it is, the implications for the organisation, how to go about it. RMB’s recent retail client webinar, featuring Wits’ Prof Brian Armstrong, provided strong direction.

Nigeria’s GDP Shrinks by 6.10% in Q2 2020 – NBS

Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) decreased by -6.10% year-on-year) in real terms in the second quarter of 2020, ending the 3-year trend of low but positive real growth rates recorded since the 2016/17 recession.

Market Cap of the World`s Five Largest Automobile Manufacturers Plunged by $63bn in 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a severe impact on the global automotive industry, causing supply chain disruptions and factory closures. All of this placed intense pressure on the market already coping with a downshift in global demand.

Digital Ticketing Sales to Grow 150% by 2022, as Passengers Return to Travel

Hampshire, UK – 24th August 2020: A new study from Juniper Research has found that digital ticketing transaction volumes will exceed pre-COVID levels by 2022; rising from 12.7 billion in 2020 to 32 billion in 2022. It anticipates that continued easing of global travel restrictions will drive increased demand for mobile ticketing in the rail, metro and bus sectors, as commuters return to work.

IITA empowers Ogoni youth on agribusiness for sustainable livelihoods

The Federal Government of Nigeria, through the Ministry of Environment in partnership with IITA, under the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), commissioned a cassava processing factory in Korokoro Community, Tai Local Government Area of Rivers State.

Aruba Research: Network as A Service Adoption to Accelerate by 38% Within the Next Two Years as Businesses Adapt to COVID-19

74% of organizations reported moderate to significant impact to their employees due to the pandemic

VAT escalates, Company Income Tax decreases as FG allocates N676bn for July

The Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) was, on Wednesday, reported to have shared N676.407 billion as federation allocation for the month of July 2020.

VAT escalates, Company Income Tax decreases as FG allocates N676bn for July

The Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) was, on Wednesday, reported to have shared N676.407 billion as federation allocation for the month of July 2020.

A statement from the Federal Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning explained that the amount included VAT.

The Federal Government received N273.189 billion, the States received N190.849 billion, the Local Government councils got N142.761billion, while the oil-producing states received N42.851 billion as derivation (13% of Mineral Revenue) and Cost of Collection/Transfer and Refund got N26.757 billion.

The communique issued at the end of the virtual meeting, gross revenue available from the Value Added Tax (VAT) for July 2020 was N132.619 billion against N128.619 billion distributed in the preceding month of June 2020, resulting in an increase of N3.793 billion.

The distribution is as follows; Federal Government got N18.500 billion, the States received N61.668 billion, Local Government Councils got N43.168 billion, while Cost of Collection/Transfer and Refund got N9.283 billion.

The distributed Statutory Revenue of N543.788 billion received for the month was higher than the N524.526 billion received for the previous month by N19.262 billion, which the Federal government received N254.688 billion, States got N129.181 billion, LGCs got N99.593 billion, Derivation (13% Mineral Revenue) got N42.851 billion and Cost of Collection/ Transfer and Refund got N17.474 billion.

The communique also revealed that Oil and Gas Royalty, Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT), and Value Added Tax (VAT) increased considerably, while Companies Income Tax (CIT), Import and Excise Duty recorded decreases.

The increase could be as a result of policy stipulated by the federal government that commercial properties pay the increased 7.5% tax on all rents since the policy took a full-fledge in July.

HEADLINES YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED FROM BRAND SPUR

NNPC generates $4.60bn revenue from 19.104bn litres of crude oil, gas export in one year

The Nigerian National Oil Organization (NNPC), on Sunday, said it made a sum of $4.60billion from raw petroleum and gas sent out between June 2019 and 2020.

The shape of disruption in the retail space: how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters

You won’t find too many jokes about ‘digital transformation’. It’s a serious business. And if you ask who is doing it, every corporate will raise their hands – but there’s little agreement around exactly what it is, the implications for the organisation, how to go about it. RMB’s recent retail client webinar, featuring Wits’ Prof Brian Armstrong, provided strong direction.

Nigeria’s GDP Shrinks by 6.10% in Q2 2020 – NBS

Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) decreased by -6.10% year-on-year) in real terms in the second quarter of 2020, ending the 3-year trend of low but positive real growth rates recorded since the 2016/17 recession.

Market Cap of the World`s Five Largest Automobile Manufacturers Plunged by $63bn in 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a severe impact on the global automotive industry, causing supply chain disruptions and factory closures. All of this placed intense pressure on the market already coping with a downshift in global demand.

Digital Ticketing Sales to Grow 150% by 2022, as Passengers Return to Travel

Hampshire, UK – 24th August 2020: A new study from Juniper Research has found that digital ticketing transaction volumes will exceed pre-COVID levels by 2022; rising from 12.7 billion in 2020 to 32 billion in 2022. It anticipates that continued easing of global travel restrictions will drive increased demand for mobile ticketing in the rail, metro and bus sectors, as commuters return to work.

IITA empowers Ogoni youth on agribusiness for sustainable livelihoods

The Federal Government of Nigeria, through the Ministry of Environment in partnership with IITA, under the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), commissioned a cassava processing factory in Korokoro Community, Tai Local Government Area of Rivers State.

Aruba Research: Network as A Service Adoption to Accelerate by 38% Within the Next Two Years as Businesses Adapt to COVID-19

74% of organizations reported moderate to significant impact to their employees due to the pandemic

Insider Dealing: Heineken Brouwerijen B.V acquires additional 6,894,409 units of Nigerian Breweries shares

Heineken Brouwerijen B.V has increased its stake in Nigerian Breweries Plc.

Heineken Brouwerijen B.V (one of its major shareholders), acquired the new additional stake in shares of Nigeria Breweries Plc, according to its most recent filing signed by Uaboi G. Agbebaku, Company Secretary, with the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE).

The Dutch brewer acquired 6,894,409 shares of the brewer’s stock, valued at approximately ₦ 245,923,569.03 (at N35.67 per unit (average).

The company acquired the shares in three different transactions from 19th – 21st August 2020 as shown below:
  1. 55,000 shares at N35.13 per unit
  2. 66,887 shares at N35.89 per unit
  3. 6,772,522 shares at N35.95 per unit

Prior to the latest acquisitions, Heineken’s holdings were held by Heineken Brouwerijen B.V., 37.76 per cent; Distilled Trading International BV, 15.47 per cent and Heineken International B.V., which held 2.72 per cent.

Insider Dealing: Heineken Brouwerijen B.V acquires additional 6,894,409 units of Nigerian Breweries shares

Every additional share increases Heineken’s control on the Nigerian subsidiary. The single largest domestic stake in the widely dispersed Nigerian Breweries’ shareholding is 0.44 per cent held by Odutola Holdings Limited.

Nigerian Breweries’ turnover dropped by N18 billion to N152 billion in the first half of 2020 as Nigeria’s largest brewer continued to struggle with macroeconomic headwinds, which were exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Key extracts of the interim report and accounts of Nigerian Breweries for the six-month period ended June 30, 2020, showed that turnover declined to N152 billion in first-half 2020 as against N170 billion recorded in the comparable period of 2019. Net profit closed first half 22020 at N5.7 billion.

Siemens Gamesa donates vital supplies to support African communities 

0

More than 100,000 beneficiaries in Africa heavily impacted by the crisis across Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, South Africa and Kenya have benefitted from Siemens Gamesa’s medical, food and sanitary product donations.

Food and hygiene products’ donation in Jordan

Siemens Gamesa has put in place several social responsibility programs to fight the consequences of the COVID-19 crisis; A sum of €350,000 was dedicated to African countries severely impacted by COVID-19; The initiatives included mainly food and sanitary product donations benefitting more than 100 000 individuals in Morocco, Egypt, South Africa, Kenya and Jordan.

Medical equipment donation to a hospital in Ras Ghareb in Egypt

Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy (SGRE) has launched a series of social impact projects to contribute to the fight against COVID-19 around the world, including a series of initiatives to help African nations impacted by the crisis.

Wind farm in the Western Cape, South Africa

Siemens Gamesa global campaign covered donations of €1 million worth of healthcare supplies and other relief to hospitals and communities with an allocated sum of €350,000 dedicated to African countries severely impacted by COVID-19. These donations are in addition to the company’s pledge to match staff donations up to €1 million for the International Federation of Red Cross (IFRC) ‘COVID 19 Emergency Appeal’ campaign.

Rapid response for Midelt’s rural communities in Morocco

African governments and health authorities are striving to slow down the spread of COVID-19 that is sending shock waves through their health systems, economies, and societies. Many of Africa’s healthcare and social systems are not prepared to handle the crisis, and extreme poverty affects 34% of the continent’s population, which could lead to even worse effects. Difficulties will increase for those working in the informal sector, which makes up 80% of Africa’s employed population.

The aid that Siemens Gamesa provided across many African nations benefitted more than 100.000 individuals in Egypt, Morocco, South Africa, Kenya, and Jordan through donations of food, sanitary product donations and warm clothing.

The specific donation campaigns included:

In Egypt, Siemens Gamesa is taking long-term actions such as providing medical equipment to Ras Ghareb Hospital that will not only benefit COVID-19 patients, but also provide the hospital with a set of permanent resources after the pandemic.

Through the company’s SGRE Impact social commitment initiative which focused this year on alleviating the effects of COVID-19, food bags and sanitary products have been distributed alongside tree planting campaigns benefiting vulnerable rural households in Morocco, South Africa and Jordan. Another project targeted Kenya’s Kakuma refugee camp and aimed to provide equal access to medical care and sanitary products, training courses on health and nutrition as well as water and community toilets for the 45 500 refugees.

In Tangier, where the first blade factory in Africa and Middle East is located, the company has provided €100,000 worth of temporary shelter benefitting local authorities in the region. The team has also organized a food and sanitary donation for 1000 families lasting a month and a blood donation campaign where 35% of the workforce participated in.

“We feel it is our responsibility to contribute where we can and help mitigate the effects of this crisis as much as possible. The team at Siemens Gamesa is very proud to work at a company that places value on community,” said Sonia Adnane, Head of Communications and Public Affairs Africa. “We hope these acts of social commitment will lay the foundation for a greater spirit of community to support long-term sustainable development across the continent.”

HEADLINES YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED FROM BRAND SPUR

NNPC generates $4.60bn revenue from 19.104bn litres of crude oil, gas export in one year

The Nigerian National Oil Organization (NNPC), on Sunday, said it made a sum of $4.60billion from raw petroleum and gas sent out between June 2019 and 2020.

The shape of disruption in the retail space: how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters

You won’t find too many jokes about ‘digital transformation’. It’s a serious business. And if you ask who is doing it, every corporate will raise their hands – but there’s little agreement around exactly what it is, the implications for the organisation, how to go about it. RMB’s recent retail client webinar, featuring Wits’ Prof Brian Armstrong, provided strong direction.

Nigeria’s GDP Shrinks by 6.10% in Q2 2020 – NBS

Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) decreased by -6.10% year-on-year) in real terms in the second quarter of 2020, ending the 3-year trend of low but positive real growth rates recorded since the 2016/17 recession.

Ecobank launches virtual card for online payments

0

Ecobank has launched the virtual card, a digital payment solution for safe online payments, integrated into its digital banking channel, Ecobank Mobile. The Ecobank Virtual Card was rolled out in the recently released version of the award-winning Ecobank Mobile app which is available for download at the Google Play and App Stores. All Ecobank current, savings and Xpress account holders who are onboarded on the Ecobank Mobile app can now access a virtual card for their online payment needs.

“The Ecobank Virtual Card is a safe and secure way to make online payments without having to use your plastic debit, prepaid or credit card,” said Korede Demola-Adeniyi, Head, Consumer Bank, Ecobank Nigeria.
Further, she noted that “customers may use it for their online shopping needs, share or create gift cards for loved ones who can benefit from this innovative form of payment. The Ecobank Virtual Card is stored on the mobile banking profile of each Ecobank customer who requests one. Access to the card is password protected and encrypted for user safety. Deleting or blocking a virtual card is very easy and can be done so at the touch of a button when logged into the Ecobank Mobile App.”
According to Mrs Demola-Adeniyi, “the Ecobank virtual card supports recurrent payments and can easily be used for Apple Music, Netflix or other online subscriptions. The Ecobank Virtual Card is prepaid and users simply fund each card with the amount they would like to spend online or gift someone else. This gives the cardholder the flexibility and control overspending. Users also receive an SMS and email notification for every transaction done which enables easy tracking of transactions.”
She noted that the bank is “able to offer co-branded virtual gift cards to large e-commerce merchants which can be restricted for use on their websites or apps. We welcome them to contact us to discuss further. Getting an Ecobank Virtual Card is also a very convenient process and does not require a trip to a branch to activate or pick up.”

HEADLINES YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED FROM BRAND SPUR

NNPC generates $4.60bn revenue from 19.104bn litres of crude oil, gas export in one year

The Nigerian National Oil Organization (NNPC), on Sunday, said it made a sum of $4.60billion from raw petroleum and gas sent out between June 2019 and 2020.

The shape of disruption in the retail space: how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters

You won’t find too many jokes about ‘digital transformation’. It’s a serious business. And if you ask who is doing it, every corporate will raise their hands – but there’s little agreement around exactly what it is, the implications for the organisation, how to go about it. RMB’s recent retail client webinar, featuring Wits’ Prof Brian Armstrong, provided strong direction.

Nigeria’s GDP Shrinks by 6.10% in Q2 2020 – NBS

Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) decreased by -6.10% year-on-year) in real terms in the second quarter of 2020, ending the 3-year trend of low but positive real growth rates recorded since the 2016/17 recession.

Market Cap of the World`s Five Largest Automobile Manufacturers Plunged by $63bn in 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a severe impact on the global automotive industry, causing supply chain disruptions and factory closures. All of this placed intense pressure on the market already coping with a downshift in global demand.

Digital Ticketing Sales to Grow 150% by 2022, as Passengers Return to Travel

Hampshire, UK – 24th August 2020: A new study from Juniper Research has found that digital ticketing transaction volumes will exceed pre-COVID levels by 2022; rising from 12.7 billion in 2020 to 32 billion in 2022. It anticipates that continued easing of global travel restrictions will drive increased demand for mobile ticketing in the rail, metro and bus sectors, as commuters return to work.

IITA empowers Ogoni youth on agribusiness for sustainable livelihoods

The Federal Government of Nigeria, through the Ministry of Environment in partnership with IITA, under the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), commissioned a cassava processing factory in Korokoro Community, Tai Local Government Area of Rivers State.

Aruba Research: Network as A Service Adoption to Accelerate by 38% Within the Next Two Years as Businesses Adapt to COVID-19

74% of organizations reported moderate to significant impact to their employees due to the pandemic

 

Key South African Retail Trends Amid COVID

Retail trends – COVID-19 impacts drive transformation

You won’t find too many jokes about ‘digital transformation’. It’s a serious business. And if you ask who is doing it, every corporate will raise their hands – but there’s little agreement around exactly what it is, the implications for the organisation, how to go about it. RMB’s recent retail client webinar, featuring Wits’ Prof Brian Armstrong, provided strong direction.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic turmoil, retailers are some of the most visibly impacted businesses. As suppliers of essential grocery, medical, apparel and other goods – the items needed for everyday living – they have had to move quickly to address many unexpected demands, from online shopping to sanitization and supply chain challenges.

Now, with a glimpse of what it means to transform, consumer trends point to a future where digital may play an even bigger role. What awaits?

Key South African Retail Trends Amid COVID – July 2020
RMB and Wits’ Dr Brian Armstrong talk disruption and retail trends for South Africa.

“Disruption and digital transformation are very broad terms. To move forward, business leaders in retail and other sectors want a clear and practical overview of what awaits and how to measure their responses,” says Debbie Law, Sector Head for Retail at RMB. “Prof Armstrong brings a wealth of insight to these topics—and some pragmatic solutions.”

“COVID-19, Eskom’s failure. These are shocks to the system,” says Armstrong. “They are causing businesses to reforecast, rebudget and restrategise. Technological change is also a profound disruption but is some ways it’s not the same. In many cases, it’s taken for granted and businesses just carry on. Yet it’s accelerating and it’s relentless. It can be hard to see past this persistent grind to appreciate the real impact of disruption on business and industry. This makes it important for a business to understand the shape of disruption – how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters,” says Armstrong.

KEY SOUTH AFRICAN TRENDS AMID COVID – JULY 2020

  • Consumers are spending less due to falling income, rising unemployment, etc
  • There are purchasing triggers – consumers are put off by the fear of contracting COVID-19
  • Higher precautionary savings due to heightened macroeconomic uncertainty, job insecurity
  • Price sensitivity is noticeable
  • ‘Healthification’ – increased demand for organic food
  • Online buying and delivery continue to be embraced
  • Regional malls favoured over supermalls focus on convenience shopping

Exponential thinking required

He highlights the 6 Ds of Tech Disruption’ as a guide to the change we are seeing right now. The Ds move from digitisation, the transition from physical to digital (think sound, images, biotechnology), to deception, or denial – the early stages of exponential growth that incumbents often do not notice. Then comes the disruption (bye-bye newspapers, CDs, Kodak), demonetisation (the cost of cloud storage and computing power just keep dropping) and dematerialisation (radio, GPS, maps now all fit on your smartphone).

Even slow rates of decline can be very disruptive as illustrated by the fate of telco incumbents that did not shift fast enough in response to technological change. Side-stepping the pain of disruption requires exponential thinking.

Strategic and deliberate change

“Just mastering the technology is not good enough,” says Armstrong. “Businesses need to change how they do business but also, in many instances, what business they do.”

He offers two examples. The South African Post Office is failing is because its core function – managing mail – has dematerialised. It will need to reinvent itself by diversifying, creating new products for new market segments. And consider the automotive sector: electric vehicles (EVs) last longer and need less maintenance. So even if incumbents manage to keep pace with design and technology, they face a huge profit loss in terms of aftersales and service. This calls for new business models and offerings.

“It’s all about how and when we respond,” says Armstrong. “Digital transformation is the process of moving from A to B; it’s taking a deliberate, scientific approach to achieve digital maturity that will enable transformation and make it sustainable.”

Key factors driving maturity include strategy, leadership, culture, innovation model and risk appetite, business alignment and adoption, investment and ROI, compliance and risk, operating model and organisation.

A deliberate scientific approach – it’s multi-factored

Transformation cannot be left to the technologists alone. Responding to technological change often involves responses which are about business strategy, business models, organisational models, culture, leadership, customer insight and alignment, and much more.

Armstrong suggests following classical business and changes management models, such as Kotter’s 8-step change model, or more “digitally” tailored versions such as Westerman’s Digital Transformation Compass.

This proposes four main phases of the digital transformation journey, namely:
  • Frame the digital challenge by understanding the opportunities and threats and benchmarking the organisation’s digital maturity.
  • Focus investment – create a roadmap, put in governance structures and fund your transformation.
  • Mobilise the organisation – engage the workforce, evolve the organisation toward a more innovative culture.
  • Sustain the transition – build the necessary skills, create reward structures to overcome barriers, and monitor and measure progress.

The way forward

In 2001, Steve Ballmer of Microsoft said: “Google’s not a real company; it’s a house of cards”. In 2008, Jim Keyes, CEO of Blockbuster, said: “Neither RedBox nor Netflix are even on the radar screen in terms of competition”. Today, we predict the future with greater caution. For businesses across industries, being part of a digital future requires a clear understanding of the opportunity and measured, strategic action to grasp it,” says Law.

NEPZA boss woos Halal investors toward FTZs

The Managing Director of Nigerian Export Processing Zones Authority (NEPZA), Prof Adesoji Adesugba has called on investors in Halal industry from all over the world to patronise Nigeria’s free trade zones ahead of the commencement of the African free trade zone agreement (AFCTA).

Adesugba made the call while delivering his address titled: “The Role of Free Trade Zones in Booming Halal Global Business’’ to investors audience via webinar on Saturday in Lagos.

The NEPZA boss said the free trade zones offered juicy incentives to halal investors who could use Nigeria as a location for the production of a variety of business value chains.

NEPZA boss woos Halal investors toward FTZs

Adesugba, who reeled out some pertinent statistics that confirmed Nigeria as a huge market compared to other countries in the West African sub-region, said the country’s business environment held a lot of promises as it was fully linked and intertwined.

According to Adesugba, investors should not just consider the Nigerian population but strategically review the entire West African market extending to entire sub-Saharan Africa as markets of opportunities which can be serviced through the Nigerian production point.

“Investors should see beyond Nigerian huge population. Nigeria is almost representative of the African market. So investing in Nigeria is a bold entrance into the African market. Halal investors should count on robust investment infrastructure provided by the over 40 free trades zones dotted across the country.

“You are offered opportunities that guarantee ease of take-off and flourishing operations. We offer a tax-free regime and free import duties on imported raw materials. You will be able to access generous incentives”, the managing director said.

Elaborating further at the webinar attended by stakeholders from all over the world, the NEPZA Chief Executive, stated that the free zones authority under his leadership was opened to local and foreign investors in the halal industry.

The NEPZA also said that it was heartwarming to see that the sector was growing exponentially worldwide.

“I agree, we need to address the issue of standardisation and regulations. But we want to assure investors that Nigeria through NEPZA is open for business. You are free to enter an existing zone or you can even apply for a private zone. All opportunities are at your doorstep,’’ Adesuga said.

The webinar organised by the Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry was attended by the Grand Mufti of Nigeria, Sheikh Sahrif Saleh; Naccima President, Hajia Sarah Iya Aliyu; President, Abuja Chamber of Commerce Prince Adetokunbo Kayode and other stakeholders.

Lagos, NEPZA strike partnership to deepen FTZ, economic growth

The Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu has assured the Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority (NEPZA) of the State’s preparedness to collaborate with the Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority (NEPZA) to create an enabling environment that could position Free Trade Zone scheme to drive economic growth through private enterprises.

Sanwo-Olu made the remark when Prof. Adesoji Adesugba, NEPZA’s Managing Director paid him a courtesy visit on Thursday at the Lagos House Marina.

Sanwo-Olu said that the free zone scheme could be used as a catalyst for exports and development, adding that it could become the country’s economic engine room when properly managed.

Lagos, NEPZA strike partnership to deepen FTZ, economic growth

“What you see around the world is that many countries have been able to turn their free trade zones into a catalyst for export and development. It is only when those kinds of things happen that you can see the real growth of the economy attracting Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) and creating a competitive environment.

“Lekki Free Trade Zone is the biggest in the country and for us, it has come into reality. We are indeed happy in term of investment that is coming there and those that would still be attracted to space.

“We are going to partner with Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority to build a good platform for foreign businesses and international direct foreign access to come to this environment and the country and our people would be the direct beneficiaries of those investments,’’ the governor said.

Sanwo-Olu also said: “we can see real growth happening in our economy and we can open up the economy bigger and better than where we get it.”

On forming a partnership with NEPZA, the governor said the need for such collaboration with the federal agency was the right synergy that could move the country’s economy forward.

“I think it will be a big shame for all of us in our own time if we cannot double or triple what we met on the ground. We need to improve on what we met and take it bigger and higher,’’ he said.

The governor further said: “we need to have a zone that is alive that people can see real genuine opportunities and will not constitute a problem to the wheel of progress’’.

“Lagos is indeed ready to collaborate with Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority to create a platform where businesses can thrive in the country because it is a critical authority and an intervention agency that can take this country forward.

“Indeed, if we use the free trade zone scheme very well, it can become part of our developmental strategy. We need to build virile enterprises and begin to look beyond oil. We need to look for other non-oil export and the free zone can give us all that opportunity,’’ Sanwo-Olu said.

The NEPZA said that the Authority had a conspicuous presence in the state, adding that 14 out of 42 free zones in the country were located in Lagos.

Adesugba explained that zones presented huge potentials for economic growth, adding that if fully put to use could provide both direct and indirect employment for thousands of the state’s teeming population.

“We truly need to work together to get it right. Free zones concept should be supported by the government. We are very positive that the collaboration between the agency and Lagos State Government will be helpful to both the state and the country,’’ he said.

In another development, Adesugba had solicited the intervention of the Federal Airport Authority (FAAN) to consider temporarily writing-off rent and other charges for some struggling airline service enterprises operating within the free trade zones scheme at the airports as palliatives for lack of operations occasioned by Covid-19 pandemic.

The NEPZA boss made the remark while on a working tour of Newrest ASL, LSG Sky Chefs Things Remember, Quits Aviation Services, NAHCO and Servair Pan African Catering Service Free Trade Zones on Thursday also in Lagos.

Adesugba also said that it was possible for all enterprises operating in the country’s zones to benefit from the Federal Government palliatives extended to some sectors of the economy.

“I will discuss the possibility with the Honourable Minister of Trade, Industry and Investment, Otumba Adeniyi Ademola if this can be activated through the Presidential Committee on Covid-19.

“Some critical sectors of the economy have benefitted from the largesse.

Enterprises operating in the zones are critical to the industrialization of the country, and therefore, required support at this difficult times,’’ Adesugba said.

He, however, expressed satisfaction how all the companies had comported themselves during this pandemic, adding that it was heartwarming that they had not considered embarking on mass retrenchment which could impact negatively on the county’s unemployment situation.

The NEPZA boss promised to continue to support and partner with the enterprises to solidify the free trade zone concept in the country, adding that all concerns raised by operators would be dispassionately looked into.

NNPC generates $4.60bn revenue from 19.104bn litres of crude oil, gas export in one year

The Nigerian National Oil Organization (NNPC), on Sunday, said it made a sum of $4.60billion from raw petroleum and gas sent out between June 2019 and 2020.

It said in June 2020, the export receipt was $378.42 million as against the $133.16million recorded in May 2020.

This was contained in the NNPC’s Month to month Money related and Activities Report (MFOR) for June 2020, delivered yesterday.

The Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Dr Kennie Obateru, NNPC, said the improvement in income profit was because of the simplicity of the COVID-19 pandemic worldwide lockdown and the resulting expanded interest and firmer costs for the dark gold in the universal market.

READ ALSO: Nigeria’s GDP Shrinks by 6.10% in Q2 2020 – NBS

In a breakdown, the report stated that the petroleum receipts for the month reflected crude oil earnings of $230.65million, with gas and miscellaneous proceeds standing at $75.97million and $71.80million, respectively.

Also, it said 1.34billion litres of white products were distributed and sold by NNPC’s Downstream subsidiary, the Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC), in the month under review.

It said this was aimed at ensuring continuous supply and effective distribution of petroleum products across the country.

According to the report, the figure was significantly higher than the 950.67million litres of white products sold and distributed in May 2020.

It indicated that from the figure, over 1.3billion litres of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), 5.10million litres of Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) and 1.65million litres of Dual Purpose Kerosene (DPK) were sold and distributed during the period.

“White products sale for the period June 2019 to June 2020, the report disclosed, stood at over 19.104billion litres, with PMS accounting for over 18.9billion litres or 99.36 per cent.

“In monetary value terms, the above volumes translated to a total sale of 134.22billion of white products by PPMC in June 2020, compared to 92.58billion sales in May 2020, it stated.

The report noted that the total revenues recorded from the sales of white products for the period stood at over $2.267trillion, where PMS contributed about 99.12 per cent of the total sales with a value of over $2.247trillion.

Similarly, it said in the month under review, 33 pipeline points were vandalized representing about 11 per cent decrease from the 37 points recorded in May 2020.

It said: “Mosimi-Ibadan accounted for 33 per cent, while Atlas Cove-Mosimi and Warri-River Niger recorded 27 per cent of the breaks each; other locations made up for the remaining 13 per cent.

HEADLINES YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED FROM BRAND SPUR

The shape of disruption in the retail space: how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters

You won’t find too many jokes about ‘digital transformation’. It’s a serious business. And if you ask who is doing it, every corporate will raise their hands – but there’s little agreement around exactly what it is, the implications for the organisation, how to go about it. RMB’s recent retail client webinar, featuring Wits’ Prof Brian Armstrong, provided strong direction.

Nigeria’s GDP Shrinks by 6.10% in Q2 2020 – NBS

Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) decreased by -6.10% year-on-year) in real terms in the second quarter of 2020, ending the 3-year trend of low but positive real growth rates recorded since the 2016/17 recession.

Market Cap of the World`s Five Largest Automobile Manufacturers Plunged by $63bn in 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a severe impact on the global automotive industry, causing supply chain disruptions and factory closures. All of this placed intense pressure on the market already coping with a downshift in global demand.

Digital Ticketing Sales to Grow 150% by 2022, as Passengers Return to Travel

Hampshire, UK – 24th August 2020: A new study from Juniper Research has found that digital ticketing transaction volumes will exceed pre-COVID levels by 2022; rising from 12.7 billion in 2020 to 32 billion in 2022. It anticipates that continued easing of global travel restrictions will drive increased demand for mobile ticketing in the rail, metro and bus sectors, as commuters return to work.

IITA empowers Ogoni youth on agribusiness for sustainable livelihoods

The Federal Government of Nigeria, through the Ministry of Environment in partnership with IITA, under the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), commissioned a cassava processing factory in Korokoro Community, Tai Local Government Area of Rivers State.

Aruba Research: Network as A Service Adoption to Accelerate by 38% Within the Next Two Years as Businesses Adapt to COVID-19

74% of organizations reported moderate to significant impact to their employees due to the pandemic

 

The shape of disruption in the retail space: how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters

Retail trends – COVID-19 impacts drive transformation

You won’t find too many jokes about ‘digital transformation’. It’s a serious business. And if you ask who is doing it, every corporate will raise their hands – but there’s little agreement around exactly what it is, the implications for the organisation, how to go about it. RMB’s recent retail client webinar, featuring Wits’ Prof Brian Armstrong, provided strong direction.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic turmoil, retailers are some of the most visibly impacted businesses. As suppliers of essential grocery, medical, apparel and other goods – the items needed for everyday living – they have had to move quickly to address many unexpected demands, from online shopping to sanitization and supply chain challenges.

Now, with a glimpse of what it means to transform, consumer trends point to a future where digital may play an even bigger role. What awaits?

The shape of disruption in the retail space: how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters

“Disruption and digital transformation are very broad terms. To move forward, business leaders in retail and other sectors want a clear and practical overview of what awaits and how to measure their responses,” says Debbie Law, Sector Head for Retail at RMB. “Prof Armstrong brings a wealth of insight to these topics—and some pragmatic solutions.”

“COVID-19, Eskom’s failure. These are shocks to the system,” says Armstrong. “They are causing businesses to reforecast, rebudget and restrategise. Technological change is also a profound disruption but is some ways it’s not the same. In many cases, it’s taken for granted and businesses just carry on. Yet it’s accelerating and it’s relentless. It can be hard to see past this persistent grind to appreciate the real impact of disruption on business and industry. This makes it important for a business to understand the shape of disruption – how it works, how to respond to it, and why it matters,” says Armstrong.

KEY SOUTH AFRICAN TRENDS AMID COVID – JULY 2020

  • Consumers are spending less due to falling income, rising unemployment, etc
  • There are purchasing triggers – consumers are put off by the fear of contracting COVID-19
  • Higher precautionary savings due to heightened macroeconomic uncertainty, job insecurity
  • Price sensitivity is noticeable
  • ‘Healthification’ – increased demand for organic food
  • Online buying and delivery continue to be embraced
  • Regional malls favoured over supermalls focus on convenience shopping

Exponential thinking required

He highlights the 6 Ds of Tech Disruption’ as a guide to the change we are seeing right now. The Ds move from digitisation, the transition from physical to digital (think sound, images, biotechnology), to deception, or denial – the early stages of exponential growth that incumbents often do not notice. Then comes the disruption (bye-bye newspapers, CDs, Kodak), demonetisation (the cost of cloud storage and computing power just keep dropping) and dematerialisation (radio, GPS, maps now all fit on your smartphone).

Even slow rates of decline can be very disruptive as illustrated by the fate of telco incumbents that did not shift fast enough in response to technological change. Side-stepping the pain of disruption requires exponential thinking.

Strategic and deliberate change

“Just mastering the technology is not good enough,” says Armstrong. “Businesses need to change how they do business but also, in many instances, what business they do.”

He offers two examples. The South African Post Office is failing is because its core function – managing mail – has dematerialised. It will need to reinvent itself by diversifying, creating new products for new market segments. And consider the automotive sector: electric vehicles (EVs) last longer and need less maintenance. So even if incumbents manage to keep pace with design and technology, they face a huge profit loss in terms of aftersales and service. This calls for new business models and offerings.

“It’s all about how and when we respond,” says Armstrong. “Digital transformation is the process of moving from A to B; it’s taking a deliberate, scientific approach to achieve digital maturity that will enable transformation and make it sustainable.”

Key factors driving maturity include strategy, leadership, culture, innovation model and risk appetite, business alignment and adoption, investment and ROI, compliance and risk, operating model and organisation.

A deliberate scientific approach – it’s multi-factored

Transformation cannot be left to the technologists alone. Responding to technological change often involves responses which are about business strategy, business models, organisational models, culture, leadership, customer insight and alignment, and much more.

Armstrong suggests following classical business and changes management models, such as Kotter’s 8-step change model, or more “digitally” tailored versions such as Westerman’s Digital Transformation Compass.

This proposes four main phases of the digital transformation journey, namely:
  • Frame the digital challenge by understanding the opportunities and threats and benchmarking the organisation’s digital maturity.
  • Focus investment – create a roadmap, put in governance structures and fund your transformation.
  • Mobilise the organisation – engage the workforce, evolve the organisation toward a more innovative culture.
  • Sustain the transition – build the necessary skills, create reward structures to overcome barriers, and monitor and measure progress.

The way forward

In 2001, Steve Ballmer of Microsoft said: “Google’s not a real company; it’s a house of cards”. In 2008, Jim Keyes, CEO of Blockbuster, said: “Neither RedBox nor Netflix are even on the radar screen in terms of competition”. Today, we predict the future with greater caution. For businesses across industries, being part of a digital future requires a clear understanding of the opportunity and measured, strategic action to grasp it,” says Law.