Showing posts with label rates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rates. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

Tariff Rates on imported vehicles & Tyres Set to rise by 60%.



The Federal Government has released the facts of new duties and levies payable on imported new and used vehicles as well as imported new tyres from next year, raising the tariff from 20 per cent to 70 per cent.
Dealers of imported vehicles estimated that the new rate would translate into an increase of 60 per cent on imported cars.
The Federal Executive Council had last month approved a new national automotive policy aimed at encouraging local production and assembling of new vehicles by having an imposition of a high import tariff on fully built vehicles. But the new rate was not given then.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

FG seeks $3.4bn foreign loan for power projects …says Nigerian banks charge high interest rates





The Federal Government is looking beyond Nigerian banks to raise $3.4bn needed to fund power projects in the country because of high interest rates being charged on loans by local banks.
The Chairman, Presidential Task Force on Power, Mr. Beks Dagogo-Jack, said Nigerian banks had not done enough in terms of understanding how the ongoing reforms in the power sector worked.
He spoke with journalists on the sidelines of the Presidential Power Reform Transaction signing ceremony in Abuja on Monday.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Nigeria, Angola, Gabon to enjoy robust growth -IMF



Sub-Saharan Africa is poised to enjoy the type of high growth rates not seen outside Asia in the next few years, the International Monetary Fund said Monday, as the region’s unbridled economic rise continues.

The IMF predicted the region’s economy would grow at 5.0 per cent in 2012 and 5.7 per cent in 2013, a little slower than expected this year, but faster than expected next year, Agence France Presse reports.

“Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to continue growing strongly in the near term,” the Fund said in its regular economic outlook.

Ghana and the Ivory Coast are expected to top the region’s growth this year, with growth of over eight per cent.

Oil producers Nigeria, Angola and Gabon will also see strong growth.

The outlook for the rest of the region is also rosy, raising hopes that Africa may be on the verge of experiencing the type of growth that has transformed Latin America and South East Asia in recent decades.

“Economic activity in sub-Saharan Africa has expanded by more than five percent in each of the past three years — continuing a decade-long run of strong performance that was only briefly interrupted by the global downturn in 2009,” the IMF said.

But there were a flew blots on an otherwise positive landscape.

Africa’s leading economy South Africa is likely to experience weak growth of around 2.6 percent this year, thanks in part to spillovers from Europe’s debt crisis.

The IMF predicted South Africa’s economy would grow 3.0 percent next year.

The IMF also warned that African nations must use the prolonged boom to help create a nest-egg for any trouble ahead.

And Sub-Saharan Africa still has a long way to reach its potential. Today it accounts for just 2.5 percent of world GDP — or 1.3 percent excluding South Africa and Nigeria.

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Source : punchng[dot]com

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