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Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Bobloco(op): 5:40am On Jun 19, 2024
DIAGEO, the United Kingdom-based owner of the iconic Guinness brand became the latest multinational to dilute its shareholding in a major outfit in Nigeria. This again points to the grave failings of the policy environment that have spooked multinational organisations with serious implications for new investments, employment, and the economy at large.

Eyebrows were raised recently when Diageo sold 58.02 per cent of its shareholding to Tolaram, a multinational. Diageo still produces several beverages in Nigeria.

However, some multinationals completely exited Nigeria. Those leaving cited higher operating costs that have eroded profits, inability to access forex, and a harsh regulatory environment as major reasons. Foreign direct investment into Nigeria fell by 26.7 per cent to $3.9 billion in 2023 from $5.3 billion in 2022. Household names like Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Kimberly Clark, GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi Aventis have exited fully or converted their business models to import and distribution. Jumia Foods and Bolt Foods are gone.

Microsoft and Meta have downsized their operations. PZ Cussons Plc is considering leaving Africa as a whole, partly due to its Nigeria woes, which have resulted in a 48 per cent drop in sales. The CEO, Jonathan Myers, cited macroeconomic challenges and complexities.


Most worrisome is the departure of Shell, TotalEnergies, ExxonMobil and Equinor. The IOCs are divesting their assets away from Nigeria with investments in other African countries with better business environments. Oil theft, insecurity, and hostile communities are chasing these companies away from a sector that accounts for 95 per cent of Nigeria’s foreign exchange earnings.

TotalEnergies recently announced a commitment of $6 billion to developing the Kaminho oil project offshore Angola after dumping Nigeria as an option. It is investing $600 million in Congo. The company’s boss, Patrick Pouyanne, blamed the decision on Nigeria’s erratic policy environment that has made investments untenable.


The government says these issues will be resolved with the ongoing economic reforms and has acknowledged that the absence of a liquid foreign exchange market is a key factor in the exit of the multinational. Minister of Finance, Wale Edun, is optimistic that things will improve. We do not share such optimism.

Multinationals play a key role in job creation, technology transfer, contribution to the tax pool, CSR programmes, and signalling for foreign investors. These departures have a negative multiplier effect on small and medium-scale companies, which are their suppliers and service providers. Thousands of jobs have disappeared.

It is incongruous that this administration has been busy globetrotting, seeking new investors while the existing ones are fleeing. That the government does not see the urgency of the situation is shocking. The fiscal policy and tax reforms that ought to provide a clear new direction and remove regulatory and tax bottlenecks should have been implemented by now.

Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote revealed that the Federal Government takes 52 per cent tax on every N1 his company earns in profit and that policy inconsistencies could easily lead to business bankruptcy. This sums up a picture of why Nigeria cannot be an investment destination of choice unless these issues are addressed quickly.

For a government that has sold itself as business-friendly, it must prioritise measures that support businesses, such as lowering taxes, streamlining business processes, trade facilitation, and creating a regulatory environment that is not predatory but delivers on enterprise development.

The focus should not be on how much government can extract from businesses. Businesses need to be thriving to recruit and pay employees, meet tax obligations, and undertake CSR. Policies should be clear and consistent.

Security must be improved to support agriculture and the oil and gas sector. The government needs to upgrade existing infrastructure. There is no point committing N15 trillion to the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Road when the existing highways are shabby.
https://punchng.com/nigerias-worrisome-corporate-exodus/

Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Justiceganduje: 5:41am On Jun 19, 2024
By the time Ebola Tinubu finishes with Nigerians, We will even be begging Ghana must go bag not to exit from Nigeria too. This is just the beginning.
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by mrvitalis(m): 5:45am On Jun 19, 2024
You know Peter Obi said everything on this editorial

It's sad that 500 million dollars credit facilities in a form of interest free loan would have prevented this companines from leaving instead expanded them heavily

Your economy is shrinking, revenue is less then debt servicing +recurrent expenditure, unemployment is growing, currency is loosing value...........

And your biggest expenditure is to build a 10 billion dollars road that already has multiple alternatives?

It can never ever make any economic sense at all
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Bulldozer90:
Lagos economy right now

Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by lonelydora: 5:47am On Jun 19, 2024
No backing down!

Whoever that is tired of standing on his mandate should carry chair and sit down.

Have you seen any Igbo man complain about the economy? No tribe is better prepared for the worst in Nigeria than the Igbo people.

You all thought you are doing Peter Obi and Obidients. Ngwanu... Tinubu must finish his two terms o.

Una never see anything.
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Noneroone(m): 5:48am On Jun 19, 2024
Interesting
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by OneNigerianist: 5:53am On Jun 19, 2024
Economic depression loading.
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Justiceganduje: 5:54am On Jun 19, 2024
lonelydora:
No backing down!

Whoever that is tired of standing on his mandate should carry chair and sit down.

Have you seen any Igbo man complain about the economy? No tribe is better prepared for the worst in Nigeria than the Igbo people.

You all thought you are doing Peter Obi and Obidients. Ngwanu... Tinubu must finish his two terms o.

Una never see anything.
I have even bought two crutches to help me continue standing gidigba on his mandate. Tinubu is that good.
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by DMerciful(m): 6:04am On Jun 19, 2024
Tinubu’s supporters ignorantly say it doesn't matter.

They're rejoicing even though Tinubu’s illegitimate presidency is being buried alive!
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by kettykin: 6:09am On Jun 19, 2024
When I forecasted this last year , I was called all sorts
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by princepeter566: 6:10am On Jun 19, 2024
Tinubu is a disaster, not just to Nigeria alone but to Africa and the rest of the world
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by hegelian: 6:17am On Jun 19, 2024
These companies leaving have much more than failing of the government.. There is something they are seeing that we are not seeing and is much more than govt policies..I sincerely hope Nigeria is save in years to come.. I hope we are not in the final stage of serious looming of anarchy.. I seriously fear for the innocent lives that will be affected including mine.. Something is seriously brewing for multinational to start protecting itself.. They see very far ahead and plan seriously before it.. We are seeing 1 to 4 years and they are seeing decades ahead and more..
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Chinjo2: 6:18am On Jun 19, 2024
Simply caused by Emilokan.
Funny enough, most of his supporters are already out of jobs as a result of these companies moving out of Nigeria.
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by kingsways: 6:18am On Jun 19, 2024
Too bad
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by RighteousDemon: 6:18am On Jun 19, 2024
Make I relax here

Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Bobloco(op):
The great Tinubulation is upon us
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by MrEverest(m): 6:29am On Jun 19, 2024
Yet some bigots are still supporting the evil drug lord who has destroyed Nigeria.

Karma is coming to take revenge with full force on you all.

Wasted generation!!!
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Goodvibes007: 6:30am On Jun 19, 2024
So why did Tolaram buy the shares?
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Goodvibes007: 6:31am On Jun 19, 2024
lonelydora:
No backing down!

Whoever that is tired of standing on his mandate should carry chair and sit down.

Have you seen any Igbo man complain about the economy? No tribe is better prepared for the worst in Nigeria than the Igbo people.

You all thought you are doing Peter Obi and Obidients. Ngwanu... Tinubu must finish his two terms o.

Una never see anything.
You say wetin?
Una just dey set yourself up.

Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by MrEverest(m): 6:34am On Jun 19, 2024
The last paragraph is exactly what Obi said. Obi raised the alarm that Nigeria does not need to spend 15 trillion that would still be stolen in the name of coastal road when a fraction of that money is enough to fix the existing terrible roads. But as usual, the foolish bigots and bastards were busy insulting their fathers, thinking they were doing Obi.

Bobloco:
DIAGEO, the United Kingdom-based owner of the iconic Guinness brand became the latest multinational to dilute its shareholding in a major outfit in Nigeria. This again points to the grave failings of the policy environment that have spooked multinational organisations with serious implications for new investments, employment, and the economy at large.

Eyebrows were raised recently when Diageo sold 58.02 per cent of its shareholding to Tolaram, a multinational. Diageo still produces several beverages in Nigeria.

However, some multinationals completely exited Nigeria. Those leaving cited higher operating costs that have eroded profits, inability to access forex, and a harsh regulatory environment as major reasons. Foreign direct investment into Nigeria fell by 26.7 per cent to $3.9 billion in 2023 from $5.3 billion in 2022. Household names like Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Kimberly Clark, GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi Aventis have exited fully or converted their business models to import and distribution. Jumia Foods and Bolt Foods are gone.

Microsoft and Meta have downsized their operations. PZ Cussons Plc is considering leaving Africa as a whole, partly due to its Nigeria woes, which have resulted in a 48 per cent drop in sales. The CEO, Jonathan Myers, cited macroeconomic challenges and complexities.


Most worrisome is the departure of Shell, TotalEnergies, ExxonMobil and Equinor. The IOCs are divesting their assets away from Nigeria with investments in other African countries with better business environments. Oil theft, insecurity, and hostile communities are chasing these companies away from a sector that accounts for 95 per cent of Nigeria’s foreign exchange earnings.

TotalEnergies recently announced a commitment of $6 billion to developing the Kaminho oil project offshore Angola after dumping Nigeria as an option. It is investing $600 million in Congo. The company’s boss, Patrick Pouyanne, blamed the decision on Nigeria’s erratic policy environment that has made investments untenable.


The government says these issues will be resolved with the ongoing economic reforms and has acknowledged that the absence of a liquid foreign exchange market is a key factor in the exit of the multinational. Minister of Finance, Wale Edun, is optimistic that things will improve. We do not share such optimism.

Multinationals play a key role in job creation, technology transfer, contribution to the tax pool, CSR programmes, and signalling for foreign investors. These departures have a negative multiplier effect on small and medium-scale companies, which are their suppliers and service providers. Thousands of jobs have disappeared.

It is incongruous that this administration has been busy globetrotting, seeking new investors while the existing ones are fleeing. That the government does not see the urgency of the situation is shocking. The fiscal policy and tax reforms that ought to provide a clear new direction and remove regulatory and tax bottlenecks should have been implemented by now.

Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote revealed that the Federal Government takes 52 per cent tax on every N1 his company earns in profit and that policy inconsistencies could easily lead to business bankruptcy. This sums up a picture of why Nigeria cannot be an investment destination of choice unless these issues are addressed quickly.

For a government that has sold itself as business-friendly, it must prioritise measures that support businesses, such as lowering taxes, streamlining business processes, trade facilitation, and creating a regulatory environment that is not predatory but delivers on enterprise development.

The focus should not be on how much government can extract from businesses. Businesses need to be thriving to recruit and pay employees, meet tax obligations, and undertake CSR. Policies should be clear and consistent.

Security must be improved to support agriculture and the oil and gas sector. The government needs to upgrade existing infrastructure. There is no point committing N15 trillion to the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Road when the existing highways are shabby.

https://punchng.com/nigerias-worrisome-corporate-exodus/

Cc: seun OAM4J Nlfpmod fergie001
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by ScratchDtoto: 7:08am On Jun 19, 2024
Banana Republic
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by OmotolaDeniro(f): 7:08am On Jun 19, 2024
Ebimpawa ooooo Tinubu

Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Nackzy: 7:10am On Jun 19, 2024
Citizens and companies are exiting this shit hole
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by EyeCumInPiss: 7:10am On Jun 19, 2024
Thïefnubu is a Plague upon Nigeria.
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by datola: 7:10am On Jun 19, 2024
It's very bad
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Kukutente23: 7:10am On Jun 19, 2024
Tinubu is supposed to attract investors o

He better change his perfume and lingerie
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by Snowx: 7:11am On Jun 19, 2024
Watch and see how some shameless BATIDIOTS will be defending BAT and supporting the Exodus..thunder fire you people
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by UnitedKingdom: 7:14am On Jun 19, 2024
Nigerians never see anything yet. The worst is yet to come. If you have means just try and Japa before the wave hit you. Nigeria is gone.
Re: Nigeria’s Worrisome Corporate Exodus - Punch Editorial by ipobarethieves: 7:14am On Jun 19, 2024
angry
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