Lagos State has emerged as the 20th on Nigeria’s subnational ease of doing business survey.
The survey conducted by the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council chaired by Vice President, Prof- Yemi Osinbajo, saw Gombe, Sokoto and Jigawa as the top three states in this ranking.
The lowest on the ranking were Zamfara, Taraba and Delta emerging tops from behind.
According to the report, the subnational survey methodology framework was developed by the PEBEC-NEC (National Economic Council) Technical Working Group.
The group comprised representation from the nation’s six geopolitical zones as well as the NEC secretariat, the Nigeria’s Governor’s Forum, the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics, the Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission, the Nigeria Export Promotion Council, the Nigerian Economic Summit Group and other private sector representatives.
The homegrown indicators on which the states were measured were in four thematic areas – Infrastructure and Security, Transparency and Access to Information, Regulatory Environment and Skills Workforce Readiness.
Each state was rated on a 10-point scale across indicators, which provided the basis for calculating the overall performance of the state, the group explained.
It added that the empirical field survey was constructed by KPMG Professional Services between November 2020 and January 2021.
Lagos scored an overall average of 5.28. In infrastructure and security, the nation’s commercial nerve centre scored 3.71; in transparency and accessibility to information, it scored 6.49; in regulatory environment, it scored 3.62 while in skills and labour, it scored 3.62.
According to the report, Gombe came tops with a score of 7.69; Sokoto came second with a score of 6.88 while Jigawa came third with 6.79.
On the other hand, Zamfara occupied the 37th position with a score of 3.54; Taraba came 36th with a score of 3.91 while Delta occupied the 35th position with a score of 4.32.
Other high performers included Bauchi and Akwa Ibom which tied at the fourth position with a score of 6.54; Kebbi which came 6th with a score of 6.49 and Anambra, 7th, with a score of 6.35.
Other states close to the bottom of the list included Edo, 34th with a score of 4.38; Abia, 33rd with a score of 4.48 and Kano, 32nd with a score 4.51.
The Infrastructure and Security theme included four indices, namely, electricity, transportation, primary healthcare, and security.
Transparency and Accessibility to Information had two indices – investment promotion and state information structures.
The Regulatory Environment had four indices – paying taxes, starting a business, enforcing contracts and land, property, acquisition and development.
The Skills Workforce Readiness theme is standalone indicator that measured technical and professional skills of the states.
In electricity as an indicator, Akwa Ibom had the highest score of 7.85; Bauchi had 6.80; Kebbi had 7.02, Kano had 6.35 while Sokoto had 6.32.
In transportation, Akwa Ibom had 7.85; Bauchi had 6.80; Kebbi had 7.02; Kano had 6.35; and Sokoto had 6.32.
The summary section of the report said improving the business regulatory environment across Nigeria would be key for the country’s economic growth.
It added, “Nigeria’s heavy dependence on oil poses structural challenges that have made it difficult to achieve sustained growth, create jobs and reduce poverty.
“Over the past four years, the business regulatory reform agenda has taken on an inclusive approach with the involvement of the federal and state governments in the design and implementation of reform initiatives.”
Continued, it added, “Nigeria has moved up 39 places in the World Bank Doing Business rankings since 2016 and has improved 11 places in the World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness rankings within the same period. “In the World Bank Doing Business 2020 report, Nigeria moved up 15 places to 131st position and was named one of the top 10 most improved countries for the second time in three years.
“These improvements are indicative of the infrastructural, policy-based reforms and frameworks being implemented at the national level.
“This has also served as the basis for much deeper business reforms at the subnational level, with improvements recorded in 32 Nigerian states – led by Kaduna, Enugu, Abia, Lagos, and Anambra states.
“To advance the progress made to date, the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council commissioned a subnational Ease of Doing Business Baseline Survey to map business environment conditions across the 36 states of the Federation and the Federal Capital Territory to ascertain the impact of reforms on competitiveness and to develop an approach for regularly tracking challenges and improvements across the country.
“Four homegrown indicators were developed for this assessment namely: Infrastructure and Security, Transparency and Accessibility to Information, Regulatory Environment and Skills and Labour.”
Special Adviser to the President on Ease of Doing Business and Secretary, Enabling Business Environment Secretariat, Dr Jumoke Oduwole, said today, micro, small and medium sized enterprises (MSMEs) accounted for 47.8 per cent of Nigeria’s GDP, despite binding constraints on productivity due to a challenging business environment.
Oduwole said, “The identification and implementation of various policies and operational levers to unlock SME competitiveness and growth have remained a central economic development theme led at the highest level of the Federal Government of Nigeria – primarily because of its ability to deliver transformative impact such as job creation, poverty reduction and gender inclusivity.
“Since the inauguration of the PEBEC in 2016 by President Muhammadu Buhari to remove critical bottlenecks and bureaucratic constraints to doing business in Nigeria, the business climate reform initiative has recorded tangible impact and measurable progress.
“Without a doubt, Nigeria’s subnational governments continue to play a critical role in business environment as state governments have exclusive responsibility for property registration, issuance of construction permits, areas where urgent reforms are required to fully unlock the Nigerian economy.”