By Sunny Anderson Osiebe..
For Nigeria to end its economic recession, the government must urgently
create an enabling environment for the private sector to thrive and
drive the economic recovery efforts, Senate President, Dr. Abubakar
Bukola Saraki has said.
Saraki, according to a statement by his Special Assistant on Public
Affairs, Mohammed Isa, made this known on Thursday while receiving
members of the Association of Telecommunication Companies of Nigeria
(ATCON), who paid him a courtesy visit in Abuja.
He said, "we must move away from our thinking of the past that it is
only government that can make our economy to recover and grow. Even if
the government spends all her monies without the efforts of the private
sector, the situation would continue to be the same. It is only the
private sector, if strengthened and encouraged, that can take us out of
this recession.
"Our only responsibility as a government is to create enabling
environment for the private sector to thrive and drive the economic
recovery efforts, and that has been our focus in the National Assembly",
he said.
While assuring ATCON of the support of the legislature to enable the
telecommunication sector grow beyond its current level, Saraki also
charged the operators to ensure that Nigerians get value for their
money, adding that, the telecommunication companies could also improve
lives through performance of corporate social responsibilities and
reinvesting into the sector.
Saraki, who promised to look into the issues raised by the delegation
relating to the Communication Service Tax (CST) Bill, assured that "we
in the Senate will not do anything that will stunt the growth of the
sector".
The President of ATCON, Engr. Olusola Teniola, said the visit was to
plead with the leadership of the Senate to reconsider the Communication
Service Tax (CST) Bill before it. The proposed Bill among other things,
recommended nine per cent tax for telecommunication companies.
In the alternative, the ATCON recommended “a tax reform that increases
the current VAT by a new one per cent added for the purpose of
development of communications”.
Teniola, who expressed concern over the high rate of subscription fees
by Internet users in Nigeria, noted that, “the reality of Internet
access in Nigeria is that it’s all about mobile. Only about 13 per cent
of Nigerians get broadband access via mobile, while less than one per
cent is on fixed services."
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