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Forex crisis overshadows Tinubu’s policies in Nigerian tech industry – Stakeholders

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

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Stakeholders in the Nigerian tech space have said that the issue of forex overshadowed the various tech policies introduced by Bola Tinubu’s administration in the last one year as they struggled to meet forex obligations.

The stakeholders in their review of the administration’s one year said that though some critical policies were introduced in the period, the forex crisis took the shine for tech business, like other businesses in the economy.

This is against the backdrop of the Central Bank of Nigeria’s floating of the exchange rate, which saw the Naira value plummet to almost N2,000 in February this year before picking up again after the apex bank’s direct intervention in the forex market.

Specifically, the founder of Sycamore, a fintech startup, Mr. Babatunde Akin-Moses also noted that CBN’s forex policy had adversely affected fintechs in the last 12 months.

He noted that this led to a significant increase in forex costs for fintechs which have had to cut their forex exposures to stay afloat.

The Chief Commercial Officer of MTN Nigeria, Mr. Modupe Kadri, also told Nairametrics that the forex issue has eroded the value of its capital spending which is fixed in Naira.

A tough year for Nigerian tech industry

Meanwhile, Nigerian startups saw a slowdown in funding in one year of Tinubu’s administration. Although there was a general slowdown in funding for African startups in 2023, Nigeria’s slide from the position to 4th in Africa in terms of funding raised concerns over the country’s economic status.

On a not-too-palatable development for the Nigerian tech industry, Microsoft shut down its Africa Development Centre in Nigeria earlier this month, which led to the loss of jobs for more than 200 Nigerian Engineers working in the facility.

Although reports suggest that the shutdown was due to the tough conditions in the operating environment, Microsoft said it was part of its “organizational and workforce adjustments.”

The center based in Lagos was opened in 2022 as part of Microsoft’s push to deliver high-end engineering and innovation solutions for the company.

In what could be the silver lining for the tech economy in the first year of the administration, ICT has maintained steady growth in contribution to the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) over the last two quarters.

Tech policies at a glance

A look at the activities of the Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, which supervises the tech industry, shows that the industry Ministry has introduced a number of policies in the last 12 months to drive tech growth. These include:

No impact yet

However, analyzing the tech policies of the administration and its impacts on the tech industry, the founder of Sycamore, a fintech startup, Mr. Babatunde Akin-Moses, said everything that has been done was laying the groundwork for the future and has not had an immediate effect yet.

“We have seen initiatives such as the 3MTT; the project 774, which plans to connect all Nigerian Local Governments to fast internet services, and the AI positioning of Nigeria in the global scape, from the Office of the Minister of Communication, Innovation and Digital Economy.

“The three initiatives are great and foundational improvements that need to happen.  The thing is, investment in human capital and backbone infrastructure will take a while to implement and manifest outwardly,” he said.

A Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI) Policy Advisor and Founder of Jidaw System, Mr. Jide Awe, believes the 3MTT has been the most visible tech policy of the Bola Tinubu administration so far. He, however, also pointed out that the impacts of the policy will take time to manifest.

“The 3MTT initiative is certainly the most visible program or policy of this administration so far. This is because training Nigerian youths in important tech skills relevant to the digital economy, locally and globally, will harness Nigeria’s massive youth potential.

 “However, we can only evaluate the program based on its actual long-term impact on job creation, economic diversification, and entrepreneurship and innovation in Nigeria. It takes time for tech policies of this nature to show significant impact. We should, in the next few years, look at jobs created, businesses created, new products and services developed, the impact on the startup ecosystem, skills gap reduction and global competitiveness,” he said.

Unaddressed challenges

The Jidaw founder observed that despite the promises by the administration to address critical challenges facing the tech industry, they have not done anything in that regard in one year.

According to him, the high cost of Right of Way is still a major obstacle to telecom infrastructure deployment in the country and the government has not done anything to address it.

“Extortionist Right of Way charges, multiple taxation, insecurity of telecom infrastructure, the indiscriminate shutting down of telecommunication sites, and bureaucratic bottlenecks continue to hinder business development for telecom companies. This, in turn, slows down infrastructure development and technological adoption. Making telecoms a critical national infrastructure is long overdue to protect infrastructure investments,” he said.

The President of the National Association of Telecoms Subscribers (NATCOMS), Mr Deolu Ogunbanjo, shared a similar sentiment, noting that while the government has come up with new initiatives to drive the growth of the ICT industry, many of the challenges such as multiple taxation, high cost of Right of Way charges are yet to be addressed.

He, however, noted that the administration did well by appointing someone with Knowledge of the tech industry in the person of Dr. Bosun Tijani as the Minister of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy.

 

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