The Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) has reiterated its commitment to optimise the Federal Government’s assets through private sector investment.

Director-General of BPE, Alex Okoh, said this at a media event in Abuja, News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

Okoh said there was a need for the Federal Government to rely less on borrowing and look to private sector investments to fund the nation’s fiscal plans.

He said the message of economic liberalisation was resonating more with the current administration.

Okoh said the environment and the reception of the ideology of privatisation were making more sense and

gaining more ground under the present administration than the previous ones.

The director-general said the present government was free market-oriented and private sector-oriented, thereby showing encouragement for the private sector to play a more dominant role in the economy.

He said this was against previously keeping everything within government, even when inefficiently managed.

“The president has been engaging the international investment community with the same message that Nigeria is open for business.

“The signal we are sending is that we have the opportunities for foreign direct investments to locate opportunities within the sector.

“For us, it is the way to go. We cannot borrow ourselves out of this problem because the more you borrow the deeper you dig the hole.

“Our position has always been that we need to optimise the assets the Federal Government has and to rely less on borrowing to fund our fiscal plan.

“That is the role we will continue to play and more aggressively in 2024.”

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Okoh said the size of Nigeria’s infrastructure stock to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was about 35 per cent, describing it as low for the size of the country/economy.

“Our position has always been that we need to optimise the assets the Federal Government has and to rely less on borrowing to fund our fiscal plan.

“That is the role we will continue to play and more aggressively in 2024.”

He further said the size of Nigeria’s infrastructure stock to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was about 35 per cent, describing it as low for the size of the country/economy.

He said other African countries considered to be ranked below Nigeria had a higher infrastructure stock to GDP compared to Nigeria.

The director-general said Ghana’s infrastructure stock to GDP was 45 per cent, while South Africa was about 70 per cent, and Egypt was close to 68 per cent.

“So imagine if we can raise the level of the infrastructure stock, we can imagine the multiplier effect and impact on Nigeria’s GDP.

“So we need to rethink how we want to grow this economy and create prosperity for the citizens.”

He called on the media to help in properly framing the narrative of economic liberalisation and opening the economy for private sector participation.

His words: “We are not just dashing assets that are considered national patrimony to people anyhow.

“We reason through each privatisation and strategy we are adopting before we go ahead to take those decisions. More goes into the assets optimisation mandate of the bureau.

“There is a lot of efficiency brought into the management of these assets as a result of privatisation, commercialisation and concessioning of those assets, rather than keeping them under the inefficient management of government.”

He added that the best business of the government was to provide an enabling environment for businesses to thrive under the drive of the private sector.