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Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) has
on Tuesday disclosed that the continuous fall in crude oil price at the
international market will not ground the Lagos State economy.
Agency reports Fashola said this at the formal
presentation of the state`s 2012-2025 Development Plan in Ikeja.
According to him, the Lagos economy
was not built to rely on earnings from any extractive resource.
“The uncertainties in the oil market
cannot have serious effects on the state`s economy.
“The state`s economy thrives on its
diversity, its rich human resources, strong immigrant capital and government`s
sound fiscal policies.
“Whatever happens to oil, the state
will survive. This is because the state`s economy is not built on extractive
resources, but on very strong foundations that had ensured continuous
development,” he said.
Fashola said that the drafting of
the new economic plan for the state was to promote the state`s development and
make it an African model megacity by 2025.
He said though, some of the
components of the plan were already being implemented by the state government
and assured that the complete implementation would transform the state
massively.
The governor listed the 70 million
Adiyan Water Works, the Island Power Plant and the Alausa Plant, as some of the
components of the plan that had been implemented by his administration.
Governor Fashola enjoined residents
to take responsibility of the plan and work with the state government to ensure
its successful implementation.
Earlier, Mr. Ben Akabueze, the
Commissioner for Budget and Economic Planning, said that the development plan
was borne out of the need to harness the various documents articulating the
vision.
He said that the plan provided the
framework to guide private and public investments in government programmes.
“The purpose of the Development Plan
is to provide overall direction for the growth and development of the state.
“It will provide a framework by
which all sectors of the economy can direct their energies and contribute to
the improvement of the quality of lives of people in the state.
In his remark, Mrs. Jariya Hoffman,
the Country Director of the World Bank, commended the state government for
coming up with the plan, saying that it would further promote development.
She said that the success of the
plan would largely depend on its implementation, urging the state to muster the
necessary courage to implement the document.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
reports that some of the policy targets contained in the document by 2025
included decent housing for all residents and increasing to 40 per cent the
contribution of the manufacturing sector to the state’s GDP.
Others are a 40 per cent reduction in traffic
offences and an employment rate of more than 90 per cent.
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