Business
LCCI Decries High Cost Of Doing Business In Nigeria
The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has decried the high cost of doing business in Nigeria and has therefore called on the incoming administration to address the issue.
A communiqué issued at the end of the chamber’s meeting recently in Lagos, said both high cost of doing business and low productivity are intermingled with macroeconomic factors, institutional challenges and structural issues, which constitute the fundamental problems the incoming government must solve.
LCCI noted that the outlook for many macroeconomic indicators is not bright with foreign reserves dropping below 30 billion and persistent pressure in the exchange rate.
The communiqué said that the chamber wants the incoming regime to ensure the blocking of all fiscal leakages and wastes in government especially in respect of the management of petroleum product subsidy, pension fund, import duty waivers, ghost workers in the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).
The chamber equally wants prioritisation of government expenditure to boost investment in critical areas as well as performance audit of key regulatory institutions whose activities impact on the private sector with a view to ensuring that these institutions deliver the desired value to the private sector and economy at large.
Other expectations by the chamber include acceleration of reforms on the oil and gas sector in order to attract more private investments in both the upstream and downstream segments stressing that this would save the economy the current huge foreign exchange used for importation of petroleum products.
The LCCI called for a level playing field for all investors across all sectors with regard to import tariffs, funding opportunities, tax incentives etc as well as the sustainability of selected policies and programmes which offered value to the economy under the outgoing regime.
The chamber wants a robust consultation with the private sector for inputs into policy formulation processes, and investment incentives should be universal application to all investors in the private sector.
Business
Tinubu’s RHI Doles Out N50m To 1,000 Kwara Petty Traders
Business
UBA To Educate SMEs, Business Owners On Withholding Tax
Business
Nigeria Losing $40b Annually From Maritime Sector – NIMENA
-
Nation5 days ago
Soldiers Destroy 13 Illegal Refineries, Arrest 15 Oil Thieves
-
News3 days ago
Violation: JAMB Suspends Law Programme In 8 Institutions
-
Politics2 days ago
2025 Budget: Reps Dismisses Bribery Allegations
-
Rivers5 days ago
RSG Partners Coy To Train 10,000 Rivers Youths In Skill
-
Rivers2 days ago
Not Too Young To Lead Founder Extols Fubara’s Virtues
-
Nation2 days ago
EFCC Vs Yahaya Bello: Court Adjourns To April 3 As First Witness Testifies
-
Editorial5 days ago
Hurray, Siminalayi Fubara Is 50!
-
News2 days ago
UK Appoints British-Nigerian As Trade Envoy To Nigeria