Professor Yemi Osinbajo, Nigeria's Vice President |
Critics of the Muhammadu
Buhari administration’s anti-poverty battle plan got a reply yesterday. The government will go
ahead with two of its key programmes to fight the scourge. They are:
- one-meal-a-day for school pupils; and
- Conditional Crash Transfer (CCT) for 25 million “extremely” poor households.
To
benefit from the CCT, there are two conditions. Beneficiaries must be
vulnerable and fullfil their civic responsibilities. They must participate in
polio vaccination, school enrolment and support other government programmes.
Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo, who spoke on the administration’s plan, said the
government would carry out “social sector investment”.
The Nation report continues:
Osinbajo
spoke at the 45th Annual Accounting Conference of the Institute of Chartered
Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) in Abuja on “Repositioning Nigeria for
Sustainable Development: From Rhetoric to Performance”.
He
stated why poverty rate remained high despite rising oil prices, Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) and foreign reserves in the last 16 years.
In
his view, the main reasons are: corruption, lack of transparency and unstable
power supply.
“So
why are most (of our people) poor despite rising revenues and GDP growth? Our
main revenue earners, the extractive oil and gas economy, do not by themselves
create many jobs,” Osinbajo said, adding: “Such is the irony of a top-down
economic model when the major revenue earner is extractive and the value chain
is poorly developed.”
The
Federal Government, he said, will carry out social sector investment –
investing in the people, education, job creation, national school feeding
scheme, conditional cash transfer and reflating economies of the states. These
are indices that will boost the economy, he declared.
According
to him, the government has already put in place a bailout package for workers
being owed salaries to reflate the economy.
“One
of the most important interventions required in the education sector is
capacity building to improve teacher quality. This programme is intended to
drive teacher capacity development; boost basic education and attract talents
to the teaching profession.
“Better
educated population increases economic potential for productivity,” the Vice
President noted.
He
said the All Progressives Congress (APC) made a commitment to provide
one-meal-a-day for all primary school pupils – a programme that will create
jobs in agriculture – poultry, catering and delivery services.
The
multiplier effects of the introduction of the scheme, he said, include 1.14
million new jobs; increased food production – up to 530,000 mt/a; attracting
investor by investment – up to N980billion.
Osinbajo
also identified conditional cash transfer as another avenue for alleviating
poverty.
He
said that the programme was intended to support the 25 million poorest
households to incentivize vaccination, education and production.
The
multiplier effects of the introduction of the programme, he noted, would
include: lifting millions out of poverty; putting millions into rural
production; and boosting rural economy.
He
said the government needs to improve the power sector; have a one-stop shop for
approvals; innovation and fighting piracy; diversify the economy in agriculture
– self-sufficiency in rice and wheat (staples) production, manufacturing,
entertainment and technology.
On
the power sector, Osinbajo said: “Despite the challenges, there have been
measurable improvements over the past three months (June to August 2015).”
“A
26% increase in operational generation capacity (June to August 15, 2015
compared to January to May 2015); decreased pipeline vandalism boosting gas
supply; a 10% reduction in transmission losses (June to July 2015 compared to
January to May 2015); reduction in red tape to remove delays blocking the 450MW
Azura-Edo IPP and the 500MW Exxon Mobil Qua-Iboe IPP; the imposition of a
September 2015 deadline for the submission of the DisCos’ revised tariff
trajectories”.
Also
yesterday, President Buhari expressed his commitment to boosting national
productivity. He vowed to end incessant strikes by workers in vital sectors of
the economy.
He
spoke during a meeting with the Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of
Labour and Productivity, Dr. Onubuogo Clement Illoh, and other officials of the
ministry.
Buhari
said he was disturbed by the seemingly endless strikes in the health sector which
have contributed to the fall in health services.
He
directed the ministry to liaise with other stakeholders to work out proposals
for ending the recurring strikes in the health, education, transport, oil and
gas, power and other critical sectors of the economy.
Osinbajo,
who was also at the meeting, urged the ministry to make an input into ongoing
plans for the extension of welfare services to the poor and the disabled.
Illoh
attributed incessant strikes to the inclination of some government officials to
enter into agreements with financial implications without carrying the
ministries of Finance and Labour along.
The
Ministry of Labour he said, has introduced a Code of Conduct for government
negotiators, barring them from entering into agreements with financial
implications without the consent of the President.
Illoh
told reporters that “at the end of discussion, the president and the vice
president showed critical interest in three areas. First is the issue of
national social insurance trust fund, that has to do with social security and
social welfare.
“At
the moment, the agency covers all sectors, both private and public, that is organization employing five or more persons. You will also know that the ruling
party has as its manifesto, the issue of providing social welfare. We have
keyed into this.
“The
second area is incessant strikes and lockouts with special reference to health
sector. We listed the causes of strikes and how we can quickly ameliorate this
in all sectors. One way of doing that is to curb impunity.
“And
establish rule of law in the management of trade disputes. Towards this end,
the institution for the management of trade disputes will be strengthened.
Institutions of conflict mediation,industrial arbitration panel, up to the
industrial court of Nigeria, there need for capacity development to be able to
cope with the challenges associated with knowledge, technique, attitude and
behaviour because if you look at the causal factor responsible for strikes and
lockouts.
“It
can be categorized into three individual. Some individuals have propensity for
trouble making. There are policies that encourage strikes between management
and workers and there are external factors.
“For
instance, when Nigerians go on strike because of increase in prices of
products, those are not directly related to work. These are factors outside the
work environment but bear great influence to industrial relations and harmony.
“The
third area is employment opportunities, which is the greatest problem
challenging Nigeria. We are ready to show with statistics the different levels
of unemployment from 2011 to June 2015 and shows the very dangerous trend.
“No household today in
Nigeria that does not have unemployed persons in spite of the new tabulation of
what unemployment means in reality, we know it is a concrete problem.
President
and vice president want to know our efforts in tackling this issue and we have
a classified document that was developed through the instrumentality of
international labour organization that projects employment issues in 12
critical sectors of the economy with high propensity for job
creation-entertainment industry, tourism, energy, ICT and maritime,” he said.
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