Business
Institute Urges MDAs To Stop Building Houses
Sequel to Federal Government’s recent partnership with the organised private sector, the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS), has urged Ministries, Departments and Agencies to withdraw from building housing units.
The institute has noted that the budget for housing is better spent on augmenting the resources for mortgages for all classes of Nigerians.
Making it’s study on the 2012 budget known recently, the Think-Tank of the NIQS suggested ways by which the Federal Government, through its budget could utilise the construction sector, as a major contributor to the agenda of transformation in the country.
In the study release which was made available to The Tide, the NIQS posited that the overhaul of the total housing and ecology, particularly as it touches the role of the MDAs is long overdue.
The study posited “we hope that these reforms, to be encapsulated in a new National Housing policy will be completed by the second quarter of 2012.”
According to the committee which was directed by its president, Mr. Agele Alufohai – “Nigeria is estimated to have a deficit of more than 16 million housing units, the best way of resolving the country’s housing crisis and unleashing N60 trillion (the cost of constructing the required number of houses) to the industry is creating a system of long-term mortgage financing for millions of Nigerians.”
Such structural change, the body said, will affect the role fo ministries and agencies in the sector and hence the provision for them in the budget.
Corlins Walter
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Business
Sugar Tax ‘ll Threaten Manufacturing Sector, Says CPPE
In a statement, the Chief Executive Officer, CPPE, Muda Yusuf, said while public health concerns such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases deserve attention, imposing an additional sugar-specific tax was economically risky and poorly suited to Nigeria’s current realities of high inflation, weak consumer purchasing power and rising production costs.
According to him, manufacturers in the non-alcoholic beverage segment are already facing heavy fiscal and cost pressures.
“The proposition of a sugar-specific tax is misplaced, economically risky, and weakly supported by empirical evidence, especially when viewed against Nigeria’s prevailing structural and macroeconomic realities.
The CPPE boss noted that retail prices of many non-alcoholic beverages have risen by about 50 per cent over the past two years, even without the introduction of new taxes, further squeezing consumers.
Yusuf further expressed reservation on the effectiveness of sugar taxes in addressing the root causes of non-communicable diseases in Nigeria.
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