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Bureau of Public Enterprises NIDO Americas Convention Nigerian Professionals in the Diaspora’s involvement in National Economic Development Lai Yahaya Director General’s Office 14th December, 2002 Washington DC Agenda • Current Economic Situation • Imperative of Privatisation and Market Liberalisation • Role Nigerians in the Diaspora can play Current Economic Situation • Opportunities abound, but • • • • • • Poverty is pervasive – 70% incidence Physical infrastructure in disrepair Attention to social sector deteriorated Social capital has been depleted Real sector growth has been elusive External and domestic debt burdens remain Current Economic Situation • • • • • Real GDP growth – about 3% (we need 10%) GDP per capita <$300 (was $1,200 in 1980) Foreign Debt - $30bn (2.5 x exports and rising) Domestic debt – N1.4tn and rising Blind signatory to WTO – open borders, dead industries, exported jobs, dilapidated infrastructure • Mono-product economy – fiscal crisis of 2002 and beyond – will continue unless we import less and export more Current Economic Situation • Budget Implementation • Revenues hardly pay salaries of public service: • Overheads cannot be fully funded even at 50% levels • Pensions will be first to suffer – N1.1 tn needed for FGN • Pet projects which are non-regenerative continue to be proposed – Ministers are still in dreamland • 40,000+ ghost workers cannot be flushed out • Reserves are going down and quietly • USD 10bn at Dec 2001 has become USD 6bn+ Aug 2002 • Reserves depleted @ USD 500m monthly for consumption only • Further draw-down to fund NEPA etc., will accelerate depletion • Very difficult fiscal situation awaits next administration. How did this happen? • • • • • • • • • World oil market trends and quota content changes Lack of policy initiatives and loss of policy focus No teamwork Inconsistency of economic policies Weak judiciary and protection of rights Weak attention to social services Non-conducive style of leadership and little teamwork Political parties and other political institutions are weak Government dependency continues: • Inefficient public enterprises – 40% of economy • Corrupt, parasitic and rent-seeking elite that prefers status quo • Non-functioning institutions at all levels – family, community, LG, state, nation Public Enterprises in Nigeria • • • • • • • • 590 public enterprises (160 in economic activities) Over 5,000 board appointments – enormous patronage power Control funds of over N1 trillion – more than Federal Budget Transfers of US $3bn (1998), $0.8bn (1999), and about $1.4bn (2000) – about $4bn in 2001. Accounted for budget deficit of 5% of GDP (1998) and growing Over 55% of non-performing debts (London and Paris Clubs) are PE debts (Hilton $300m, Sheraton $250m, Paper $1bn, etc.) Almost all government owned industries and businesses operate at sub-optimal levels of capacity and among the most inefficient in the world. (NEPA, NPA, NITEL, Paper Mills, Steel, Sugar) No government business in Nigeria makes true profit today – and none has ever ever made real profit unless managed by Technical Partners (the NITEL, Nigerdock and NAFCON stories) Challenges Ahead • Accordingly, we need to: • drastically reduce the size and dominance of government • through privatisation of public enterprises, de-monopolisation and deregulation of economic sectors What role for Nigerians in the diaspora? • Critical role to play in the privatisation programme as:• Advisers • Investors • Consensus builders Appointment of Advisers • Routinely engage transactions advisers (financial lead, accounting, legal, asset valuation, technical, marketing) • Five main considerations: • need for high quality services to ensure the successful conclusion of the eventual • • • • • divestiture; need for economy and efficiency in the selection process; importance of transparency and accountability in the selection process; BPE interest in encouraging the development and use of Nigerian consultants and domestic capacity building; and opportunity for value-added through the training or transfer of knowledge to BPE staff and/or Nigerian consultants Typically use Quality and Cost Based Selection method Adviser Selection Process Advertisement for Expressions of Interest published in local and international press Applicants evaluated, pre-qualified and short listed Requests for Technical and Financial Proposals (RFPs) issued to approved shortlist of applicants Technical Proposals evaluated and applicants shortlisted Public opening of Financial Proposals Contract and appointment Investors • Typically each transaction involves:• Transfer of major equity stake to core/strategic investor • Public offer of remainder Core Investor Sale (Issues) • Core investors needed with right technical, managerial and financial mix • Difficulties in getting foreign investors due to (often misguided) perceptions of political & commercial risk • Role of Nigerian investors is therefore critical Core Investor Sale (Bidding Process) Solicitation, receipt and evaluation of Expressions of Interest Qualified ? Inform applicant of nonqualification Issue Bidding Documents, Bidding Process Guidelines & Information Memorandum to qualified Bidders Allow at least 4 weeks due diligence period for all bidders Verification of Bidders’ Credentials Core Investor Sale (Bidding Process) Bidders submit Technical and Financial Proposals (& bid bond) Evaluation of technical proposals and shortlisting Qualified bidders invited to public financial bid opening Financial bid opening (optional multiple rounds) Preferred bidder payment within specified period Financial Close Commence Transitional Procedures and Transfer of Management Control Reserve bidder Public Offer (Process) SELECTION OF ADVISERS OFFER PREPARATION SELECTION OF PRINTERS, COURIERS & REGISTRARS DUE DILIGENCE & FINANCIAL ANALYSIS PRODUCE OFFER DOCUMENTS FILINGS OFFER OPENS OFFER CLOSES TRANSACTION MARKETING ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTE OFFER DOCUMENTS Public Offer (Process) RECEIVING AGENTS ISSUING HOUSES JIH COLLATE DATA ALLOTMENT PROCESS BPE RECEIVES PROCEEDS SEC APPROVAL ISSUE SHARE CERTIFICATES NSE COMPLIANCE TRADING COMMENCES REGISTRAR Public Offer (Participation) • BPE trying to devise modes of participation for • • • • • Nigerians in the diaspora Estimated 15 million Nigerians in diaspora Remit in excess of of US$1.4 billion annually Design of technology solution to allow for purchase of shares in primary market issuances Create virtual marketplace via the internet Need to review international securities laws governing trading of securities over the internet Consensus Building • External • Marketing of the programme • Revising misperceptions of political risk • Lobbying foreign governments and donor agencies • Internal • Convincing Nigerians of the benefits of privatisation • Encouraging government to remain focussed Check our website: www.bpeng.org for details and updates Thank You