The chief executive officer(CEO) of the Center For The Promotion Of Private Enterprise(CPPE), Dr. Muda Yusuf, has called for repositioning of the power sector as well as address lingering downstream oil sector challenges to enable major investment inflow into the country by 2023,leadership report.

Yusuf said, as Nigeria ends the year 2022 with fragile growth performance, government should take firm stand on power sector reforms and full implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act(PIA) to unlock investments in the coming year.

Reviewing performance of the economy in 2022 while also setting agenda for 2023, Yusuf recalled that the poor growth performance was a reflection of the diverse headwinds bedevilling the Nigerian economy.

He listed the factors to include: the macroeconomic instability, shrinking fiscal space, soaring public debt, heightening inflationary pressures, currency depreciation and foreign exchange illiquidity.

Other are; surging energy cost, weakening purchasing power, legacy structural constraints, lingering insecurity, and crippling trade facilitation issues.

Yusuf, who is a former director general of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry(LCCI), however, noted that, in order to unlock growth and investment in 2023, the government must undertake some urgent reforms.

He posited that the enactment of the PIA was a major step towards the reform of the oil gas sector which promises to transform the sector through the creation of a legal and regulatory framework that would inspire much higher levels of investors’ confidence.

He said, Nigerians would want to see greater commitment to the implementation of the PIA, adding that, “the deregulation of the petroleum downstream sector is a major economic reform imperative.  This is inevitable if we must unlock investment in the sector and put an end to the perennial fuel scarcity and the monopolistic structure of the sector.”

He further notes the need to also consolidate the power sector reform.

Yusuf, said: “an enabling environment must be created to sustain current private sector investment in the sector and attract new private capital to the electricity sector. Urgent reforms are vital with respect to electricity tariff, metering and deepening of energy mix. We need robust incentives [fiscal and monetary] to boost private investment in renewable energy.”

He also urged adequate reform of the budget and appropriation processes to prioritise infrastructure financing and human capital development.

This, in his opinion, would boost productivity and competitiveness of the economy.

“Adoption of these reform initiatives would guarantee progression towards fiscal consolidation, reduction in fiscal deficit, diminishing need for borrowing and abating debt service burden.” he said.

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