• A Disincentive To Industrialisation – Independent Newspaper Nigeria

    A disincentive to industrialisation independent newspaper nigeria - nigeria newspapers online
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    The Bola Tinubu administra­tion has since assumption of office been making pro­nouncements and effecting changes in several Ministries, De­partments and Agencies (MDAs) of the Federal Government in fur­therance of its electoral promises to provide enabling environments for private sector operators to lead the charge in revamping the nation’s economy.

    While these changes are expected to ignite positive strides in regulato­ry functions to provide necessary encouragements to existing and prospective investors in the nation’s economy, it is also important that ac­tivities of MDAs align the economic environment to local and interna­tional best practices.

    Given that a quarter of the admin­istration’s four-year tenure is already gone, it would not be out of place to begin to examine how regulatory activities of the MDAs at the federal and state levels are impacting on the growth or otherwise of the private sector and conversely the socio-eco­nomic wellbeing of the people in general.

    One recurrent complaint of the organized private sector in Nigeria and possibly several other African nations is ‘overregulation’ by gov­ernments and their agencies. This is often linked to price increases as the perceived costs of regulation are easily passed on to the eventual con­sumers of goods and services.

    Analysts have sometimes linked the perceived overregulation to at­tempts by MDAs to substantially increase their internally generated revenue due to continuous reduction in government funding year-in year-out; others point to ambiguity or overlap in legal instruments setting up the MDAs as well as overzealous­ness on the part of officials of reg­ulatory institutions in carrying out their respective mandates.

    Given the speed at which geo­graphical jurisdictions are contin­uously getting intertwined due to globalization, it goes without saying that regulatory functions especially in developing economies like Nigeria need to the harmonized and ratio­nalized for more efficient output to support the growth of industries in order to promote increased capacity utilization, quality and competitive products and services, thus provid­ing the much talked about employ­ment opportunities for the teeming youths. This no doubt will stem the tide of restiveness, the possibilities of being recruited into negative en­deavors and the brain drain (Japa) syndrome.

    Recent occurrences in some sec­tors of the economy suggest that not much has changed in wide gaps be­tween policies objectives and imple­mentation by regulatory authorities. Take the issue of pre-paid meters in the electricity sector as an example, differing tunes are being sung by the different DISCOs in Nigeria while the regulatory authorities seemed unable to stand their ground in en­suring that consumers get the best services possible. Efficient and effec­tive metering should be a sine qua non, following the privatization of the sector, if the players are to prop­erly account for services rendered against charges applied to the con­sumers.

    Another critical area to look at is the regulation of quality of goods where the leading agencies, like Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Con­trol (NAFDAC), the Nigeria Customs Service and lately the Federal Com­petition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), among oth­ers, hold sway.

    In spite of the continuous calls by organized private sector groups like the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), the National Asso­ciation of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), amongst many others, for harmo­nization of regulatory functions to reduce the burden on industry and subsequently consumers, not much seemed to have changed. These regu­lators are from the federal, state and even local government authorities.

    Regulatory requirements de­manded of industry by each of these agencies need to be harmonized in­cluding non-duplication of such es­sential activities like laboratory tests and analysis. The cumulative costs incurred by manufacturers in trying to meet the regulatory requirements set out by each of the agencies are enormous and need to be reviewed in the overall interest of the consumer and the nation’s economy.

    I read the other day about a reg­ulatory agency’s fact finding visits to steel manufacturing plants across the nation to investigate perceived in­fractions relating to poor quality and anti-competitive behaviour following intelligence and surveillance reports. This writer learnt that not only sam­ples of the products in question were taken but computers and even tele­phone handsets of operatives of the steel companies, not without obtain­ing a court order though.

    What the regulator has done in this instance can be referred to as tactically shutting down the steel companies’ production processes which presumes guilt rather than innocence until proven otherwise as provided in Nigerian legal juris­prudence.

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    Regulatory activities should bal­ance meeting standards, quality, safety, regulatory, environmental and socio-economic requirements with the provision of job opportunities and the attendant impacts down the social ladder.

    The investigation being carried out on the steel companies in this writer’s opinion, should be done in close collaboration with SON, espe­cially issues relating to verifying the quality of the product samples taken in order to save scarce government resources.

    Regulation of anti-competitive be­haviour by industry should be done with care and diligence so as not to get drawn into dirty fights among in­dustry players in trying to outplay and outwit each other.

    The Federal Government over the decades is said to have invested billions of Naira in building labora­tory competencies in such agencies as SON, NAFDAC, FIIRO, NAQS, etc, with some of them already attaining ISO/IEC 17025 (Standard for Testing and Calibration Laboratories) ac­creditation and international recog­nition status.

    Thus, any of the MDAs requiring laboratory tests and analysis in the course of carrying out its mandate should essentially patronize exist­ing infrastructures with requisite competence as a matter of first choice, except in cases where the competency for testing a particular product is non-existent locally. This will not only save scarce resources but ensure that these existing infra­structures are put to maximum use in the nation’s interest.

    Of the seven (7) NAFDAC labora­tories spread across the country, five, I learnt, have accreditation to ISO/ IEC 17025 Standard for Testing and Calibration Laboratories. These lab­oratories include Food and Drug test­ing in Kaduna and Agulu, Anambra State; for Food testing in Osodi, La­gos; for Drug, Vaccines and Medical Devices at Yaba, also in Lagos which also have WHO pre-qualification.

    Conversely, the Standards Organi­sation of Nigeria Food, Microbiology, Electrical and Chemical Technology Laboratories are said to be accred­ited to ISO/IEC 17025 Standard for Testing and Calibration Laborato­ries.

    Also, the Nigerian National Ac­creditation System (NiNAS), I under­stand, is building necessary capaci­ties for accreditation of laboratories with the required global recognition that goes with it. The nation and es­pecially government institutions and MDAs should therefore patronize such services going forward rather than spend our scarce resources on similar but not necessarily superior services from outside the country.

    Another issue in focus is the avoidable amount of government resources being expended on pro­curing management systems train­ing and certification services from abroad that are readily available in Nigeria both in content and global ac­creditation and acceptance. One good example is the SON accredited man­agement systems training and cer­tification services in the renowned ISO Quality (QMS), Environmental (EMS), Food Safety (FSSM) and Oc­cupational Health and Safety (OHC Standards), amongst others.

    The SON, I understand, has for decades developed competencies including obtaining and maintain­ing international accreditation and recognition for training and certi­fication to these global standards and even helped to set up Standards Institutions encompassing training and certification structures in three (3) sister African countries, namely Gambia, Sierra Leone and Liberia.

    Given the above, no agency of the Federal Government should expend resources in patronizing any, other than these accredited competencies nor even attempt to duplicate capac­ity in any of the existing competen­cies, thus expending scarce foreign exchange for such services that SON, NAFDAC, FIIRO and other agencies with similar competencies can cred­itably render.

    One of the challenges the current administration of President Bola Tinubu must confront head-on is in harmonizing and rationalizing gov­ernment regulatory structures to achieve greater efficiency and effec­tiveness to provide the much needed enabling environment for the private sector to thrive, in furtherance of the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    * Rilwan Fash writes from Lagos

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