Privatization of Public Enterprises in Nigeria

Okpe Innocent Ikechukwu

Abstract


The term privatization is often loosely used to mean a number of related activities including any expansion of the scope of private sector activities in an economy and the adoption by the public sector of efficiency enhancing techniques commonly employed by the private sector. It involves the transfer of productive asset ownership and control from the public to the private sector. The transfer of assets can be total, partial or functionary, with the sale being implemented by methods such as private sales. Leasing arrangements, employee buy-outs and share issues. In Africa, many governments have embraced the idea of privatization, brought to the fore mainly as a part of the adjustment and stabilization programmes of the mid-eighties and the nineties. Privatization now frequently features in government policy statements and in conditionality from donors. The past decade has also seen the World Bank and other donors get increasingly involved in lending operators towards parastatal sector reforms that included privatization components.

African countries share a number of common features in relation to the drive towards privatization. For most of these countries, the first twenty (20) years of independence were characterized by rapid growth, driven by favourable terms of trade and high levels of public investments in infrastructure and services. The development of import substituting industries brought in the dramatic rise of parastatal corporations, which were also used as vehicles for increased local participation in the economies. Many governments moved to nationalize existing foreign interests in their counties and also to create new state enterprises to carry out the various production and trading functions. Parastatal corporations rapidly dominated the extractive industries, manufacturing and financial sectors of their economies, and acquired important economic and political status, becoming major sources of employment. The moderate growth experienced in the seventies (70’s), the early eighties (80’s) and associated inefficiencies made parastatal sector reform a major element in the reform efforts implemented by the countries.


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ISSN (Paper)2224-607X ISSN (Online)2225-0565

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