Featured Finance

BPE raises panel to revive dying govt-owned companies

The Federal Government on Monday announced that it had inaugurated four technical working groups to review and implement a strategic roadmap for the resuscitation of ailing enterprises across the country.

It outlined the groups to include those to work in the automobile, housing (bricks and clay), mines and steel, as well as oil palm sectors.

Inaugurating the groups on behalf of the Federal Government in Abuja, the Director-General, Bureau of Public Enterprises, Alex Okoh, said the initiative was in consonance with the ease of doing business in Nigeria target and the Federal Government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan.

Okoh disclosed this in a statement issued in Abuja by the Head, Public Communications, BPE, Ibeh Chidi.

The BPE boss, who was represented by the bureau’s Director of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Ignatius Ayewoh, noted that the event was a culmination of the efforts by various stakeholders which started in 2018 to revive non-performing privatised enterprises across the country.

He said the BPE in discharging its supervisory duties on privatised enterprises through the instrumentality of result-based monitoring and evaluation, discovered that about 16 per cent of the privatised companies were non-performing.

Okoh said the result of the findings was submitted to the National Council on Privatisation in 2018 and to the Senate Committee on Privatisation in 2020, as this led to a  meeting of the relevant stakeholders in the ailing enterprises in July 2018.

He said the terms of reference for the working groups include to conduct diagnostic study on the enterprises in order to identify their current status (operational and financial positions) and conditions in terms of ownership, share structure and capacity utilisation.

He said the groups would “prepare a business plan that meets the current sectoral requirements, examine the challenges in the sectors, and develop a comprehensive five-year, (2023 – 2027), turnaround programme for each of the non-performing enterprises.”

Others include to “review and advise the Federal Government on the processes and implementation the turnaround programme and determine the potential and economic viability of the sectors, among others.”

Also speaking at the event, the Director, Post-Transaction Management, BPE, Toibudeen Oduniyi, urged members of the groups to contribute their expertise for the actualisation of the much-desired revitalisation of the non-performing enterprises for the economic growth of the country.

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