Monday, October 10, 2016

World Bank To give Nigeria $1.3BN to start up Development Bank of Nigeria



Nigeria has reached an agreement with the World Bank Group and other development partners for the release of $1.3bn for the take-off of the Development Bank of Nigeria.



Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, the Minister of Finance, said this on Sunday in Washington DC, United States of America at the closing press conference marking the end of the World Bank/International Monetary Fund’s annual meetings.

Adeosun, who spoke alongside the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, explained that the DBN would serve as a means of intervention for the Small and Medium-sized Enterprises in the country to get funds to run their operations and expand in order to achieve inclusive growth for the country.
 “An agreement was reached on the final steps for the take-off of the Development Bank of Nigeria, which had been stopped due to some issues; we have resolved all those issues, the recruitment process has now been finalised, with management team put in place; and this will release $1.3bn, which is aimed at supporting our SMEs and the SMEs are part of the engine that will spur the growth of our economy” she said.

The minister also said that the Nigerian delegation to the meetings had high-level discussions with the multilateral agencies on the challenges in the power sector, especially the financial issues, and that an agreement was reached for a workshop to hold in Abuja in November to be attended by the World Bank Group, International Finance Corporation and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, which provided partial risk guarantees.


Adeosun added that the World Bank would be bringing its specialist power finance team to see how they could proffer financial solutions to the challenges of the power sector in Nigeria.

The minister said, “We also met with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), and we secured their commitment to facilitate trade and investment in Nigeria; specifically, they have agreed to make investments in agriculture, especially in the fisheries sector, and we have made progress on the Jebba hydro project, which is also a power project.

“Our constituency, which represents South Africa, Nigeria and Angola, had a meeting and we reviewed the fact that the allocations to our constituency are among the poorest, particularly from the IFC, which are unacceptably low. What we have agreed to do is that we will be hosting a meeting in Abuja in March for the three finance ministers and the idea is that we will benchmark and scale up our technical capacity to ensure that we are able to get more of what is available for the three countries.

“We also secured commitments from the Canadian ministry of finance to support us in the PPP platform for roads; they have successfully developed a PPP platform for road investment and they have offered to support us on the technical front in that regard.”

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