Title: Investing in Nigeria: World Bank Support
1- Investing in Nigeria World Bank Support
Steven Dimitriyev Senior Finance and Private
Sector Development Specialist Nigeria Country
Office Email SDimitriyev_at_worldbank.org
2World Bank Portfolio - Nigeria
- Largest Portfolio in Sub-Sahara Africa
- (2007) 23 IDA projects and 2 GEF projects with
about US2.6 billion in commitments about 12 of
the Africa Regions total commitments of about
US21.1 billion. - (2009) Portfolio over 30 projects, now up to 3.7
billion - (2010-2012) Additional 3.3 billion forthcoming
- Country Partnership Strategy (CPS I) focus on
basic social infrastructure and human
development, public sector reforms, enabling
environment for private sector development - CPS II Aligned to Governments Priorities -
Human development, governance and non-oil growth - Over 50 of CPS II Fund to Support Removing
Obstacles to Non-Oil Growth - Est. 1 billion in support to Power, Transport,
Agriculture sectors Est. 1.1 billion in
cross-cutting PSD support (economic stimulus
package, industrial clusters/value chains, PPP
framework and finance) - Accent on Subnational Economies
3Riskiness of World Bank Portfolio
Risks of investing in Nigeria mirror risks of
World Bank portfolio
4Why is Riskiness Improving?Nigeria is maturing,
consolidating, and taking lead
Challenges
Achievements
5Sectoral Distribution of World Bank Portfolio -
2007
- From 2009 on, this pie chart will show radical
shifts - Private Sector-led Infrastructure investment
programmes will lead
6Removing the obstacles to competitivenessongoing
agenda to improve business enabling environment
- Public Financial Management (i.e., tax planning,
tax collection and administration, revenue and
expenditure management, information systems,
asset management, debt management systems, etc.) - Infrastructure Regulatory Framework (i.e., tariff
setting, tariff collection, subsidies policies,
sector regulators, private sector role,
investment planning, etc.) - Corporate Governance (i.e., procurement process,
safeguards, monitoring and reporting systems,
audited financial statements, credit ratings,
etc.) - Financial Regulatory Framework (i.e., debt
regulation for sub-national borrowing -- fiscal
responsibility legislation, monitoring and
reporting to central government, capital market
regulation, bankruptcy and legal claims against
sub-national entities, etc.) - Capacity Building (i.e., training, staffing,
incentives, etc.) - Investment Incentives Regime (taxation policies,
profit repatriation, accounting allowances)
7Investment Climate Current Imperatives
- PSD REFORM SYNERGIES PACKET
- Strengthening of Bank regulation, Sub-national
credit market development, non-banking financial
sector - Simplification of Business Regulations to reduce
red tape and strengthen investor/creditor
position - Strengthening of National and Subnational PPP
capacity best practice transactions skills,
complete regulatory framework, and remaining
sectoral regulatory agenda - Selective investment projects, accompanied by
Risk Mitigation support for maximizing financial
leverage - IFC to diversify to Real Sector investments and
PPP
8Top performers on Doing Business (2008)
9Potential for improvement in ranking
Taiwan 50 Botswana 51 Italy 53
Nigeriana to 51
- After wider adoptation of already existing best
practices
Ethiopia 102 Bangladesh 107 Nepal 111
Nigeria - from 108
10Nigeria - low labor productivity and high unit
labor costs
11Share of firms reporting each constraint as
serious
12Impact of Constraints on Indirect Costs on Firms
Intl Comparison
of sales
13NEW Flagship Investment Promotion Programmes
(cross-cutting and sectoral)
- Benchmarking/diagnostics of all 36 state
economies (DOING BUSINESS and INVESTMENT CLIMATE
SURVEYS) - Implementing reforms in Lagos, Kano, Kaduna and
Cross River in tax administration, land
management, investor information other states
to follow in 2009-11
DFID GBP 6.5 million grant IFC 1.8 million grant
ICP (Subnational Investment Climate Programme)
- GEMS (Growth Employment and Markets in States)
- Scaling up of ICP in above states
- Investment in high-growth clusters/value chains
of - Construction, ICT, Meat Leather, Wholesale/
Retail markets, Entertaintment (Nollywood),
Offshoring (in above 4 states to be added)
IDA 180 million DFID GBP 70 million grant
14NEW Flagship Investment Promotion Programmes
(cross-cutting and sectoral)
IDA 300 million
PPP Infrastructure and Finance
100 million for Capacity Strengthening 200
million for Financing Liquidity fund, PRGs
IDA 500 million
POWER SECTOR Gas-powered IPP Gas supply PRG,
PPA
IDA 500 million
TRANSPORT and AGRIBUSINESS
Roads, Railways, Ports and Downstream Processing
15SUMMARY
- Investment regimes are improving across the
Subnational landscape - A stable, competent National institutional
framework is nearly complete - Tremendous needs (and opportunities) for private
investment - Tremendous profits being made, yet still
virtually untapped and growing potential - Now is the time to get in