Tinubu unveils new economic management structure
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has announced an overhaul of Nigeria's economic management structure intended to ease financial hardship and boost productivity in Nigeria. The new structure will also establish a framework to bolster coordination, planning and implementation.
Tinubu, who took office
last year, inherited an economy struggling with record debt, high unemployment,
low oil output, and power shortages that have crimped growth.
But reforms he has implemented since then, chiefly ending a costly petrol subsidy and twice devaluing the naira currency within a year, have spurred price pressures and sparked the worst cost-of-living crisis in decades in Africa's largest economy.
Central to the economic
management structure is the creation of the Presidential Economic Coordination
Council (PECC), chaired by Tinubu himself, his spokesperson Ajuri Ngelale said
in a statement.
The PECC brings together
12 cabinet ministers and the central bank governor, alongside top economist
Doyin Salami and prominent business leaders Aliko Dangote, Tony Elumelu and
Funke Okpeke.
For immediate economic
challenges, the president set up the Economic Management Team Emergency
Taskforce (EET) which is headed by Finance Minister Wale Edun.
The taskforce, which
unites cabinet ministers, the national security adviser, head of state oil firm
NNPC Ltd., state governors and leading economists Bismarck Rewane and Suleyman
Ndanusa, is mandated to develop and execute a six-month emergency economic plan
within two weeks, Ngelale said.
The existing Economic
Management Team (EMT) will be subsumed under the PECC and will primarily focus
on long-term economic strategies after the EET's six-month term ends.
"The formation of
these teams complements existing structures like the National Economic
Council," Ngelale said.

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