Friday, 7 October 2016

We need Infrastructure, Not iPhones,' Minister Tells World Bank

The Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun has said that Nigeria is in dire need of infrastructure that can drive growth and not "iPhones and expensive suits which only raise consumption."

Adeosun stated this on Wednesday night, October 5, at the World Bank Headquarters in Washington DC, United States.
She said there is nothing left for investors in the West, adding that they have to come to Africa, but not to come and sell high-end consumables, rather commit to infrastructural development that will empower its people.
The Minister said: "We have just started a journey of transition, which will take us from an economy that was really dependent on oil, primary commodity, to a more productive economy, and we recognise that the differentiator will be infrastructure.
"We have come from spending 90 percent of our budget on recurrent and only 10 percent on capital. We are trying to move to 70:30, which is not enough.
"From the numbers that we have done, the infrastructure gap that we face, even if we devote our budget [to capital] for the next three years, it is not enough. So we’ve got to look for creative ways to mobilise additional capital.
"We are hungry for infrastructure. We have got 170 million people who don’t have power in sufficient quantities. We don’t have a rail system; we don’t have a road structure. We believe that if we solve those infrastructure challenges, the entire productivity, agriculture, solid minerals, manufacturing, our unemployment problems could all be solved.
"It seems very simple, in terms of what needs to be done. We are quite excited about negative interest rates. We like that you’re not earning any money.  We are happy to take your money and give you very small positive interest rate.
"We think that the time has come; everyone is thinking out of the west. There is nothing left in the west, everybody has to now come to Africa, but we don’t want investors to come to Africa to sell us iPhones and many expensive suits.
"We want to become productive, and so we want this investment to come into infrastructure, that will enable us to compete and really enable Africans to stay in Africa."

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