Business
PH Residents Cry Out Over High Rents
Residents of Port
Harcourt City and its environs have appealed to the Rivers State House of Assembly to initiate laws that can protect tenants in the city from arbitrary hike in rents.
Some of the residents who spoke to The Tide yesterday said the cost of rents was becoming too high for the tenants to bear in the light of the present economic reality in the country.
Mr. Nwegbom Johnson said, “by the time one pays house rent, school fees, feeds the family and also shoulders some sundry responsibilities, one is left with nothing to save at the end of the month”.
Johnson regretted that he has been living in Port Harcourt for the past seven years without any reasonable savings as a man living and working in a city.
Chief Jona Clifford, another respondent attributed the high rent charge to the impression that Port Harcourt is an oil-city.
“But not everybody works in an oil company. Most people live from hand to mouth”, he said and appealed to the Rivers State Government to take steps in helping to protect residents from Shylock landlords.
But Mrs Mercy Eke, a civil servant wants the law to set a standard on the number of years a new tenant is supposed to pay for accommodation.
One room in most parts of the city now costs an average of N5,000 per month and one is expected to pay for two years”.
She called for legislation that could peg the rent of a room per month at three thousand Naira and advance payment for one year to enable people survive.
“I don’t know if it is because, the government charges the landlords high taxes which is responsible for the high rent”, asked Christopher Anadi, a petty trader.
Anadi wondered why the rent on a, house built for over 30 years could still be as high as N5,000 per month for a room.
He condemned the unsatisfactory stand of the government on high rentage, describing Port Harcourt as one of the cities where the cost of rent is highest in Nigeria.
Chris Oluoh
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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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