A whopping 97 per cent of Nigerian businesses recorded losses during the lockdown over Covid-19 while 87 per cent said they have been negatively affected overall by by the pandemic, a nationwide survey has shown.
Titled the “National
survey report on the impact of COVID-19 on Nigerian private sector,” the survey
assessed the impact of the pandemic on medium and small scale businesses in
Nigeria. It was conducted between March 9 and April 10 through e-questionnaire
and telephone.
Most of the 13 per
cent who said they have been “positively impacted” by the global health crisis
operate in the health sector.
“Most of the
benefiting businesses are in the healthcare, pharmaceutical sector offering
essential services,” the report said, “or are currently exploring new
opportunities despite the threat of the pandemic.”
For the 87 per cent
who saw red, the report said this is because “majority of the countries they
source their products from were on lockdown and many more have ceased
operations.”
For Sanni Hassan,
the CEO of D’Genius Exquisite Fashion House, the COVID-19 lockdown period gave
his brand the opportunity to restrategise its service delivery and to reach
“more online potential customers who have pledged patronage after the
lockdown.”
In terms of their
balance sheets, 97 per cent of the businesses surveyed said they recorded
losses. The remaining three per cent managed to break even, the survey
suggested.
Three-quarters of
those who made losses said they lost $1 million or lower due to the lockdown
and travel ban.
A quarter of the
businesses that recorded losses (25 per cent) said they incurred more than $2
million in revenue loss. This includes 20 per cent who said they recorded
losses from $2 to $3 million and five per cent who lost $3 million and above.
“We suffered some
revenue losses with respect to campaigns we had earlier planned before the
pandemic and our various scheduled classes,” Ibrahim Oredola, team lead at
SkillNG, a startup training youth in digital and employment readiness skills,
told PREMIUM TIMES.
Revenue loss has in
turn forced some businesses to lay-off workers to cut expenditure on overheads.
Mr Hassan said
although he incurred “no loss,” his profit margin fell due to the fall in
consumers’ spending capacity.
“Before, for
instance, when we reach out to 100 people, we can get like 20 clients, but now
we need to reach 200 or more to get that number of clients,” he said.
More so, the report
found that 72 per cent of the businesses surveyed experienced a contraction in
job creation due to the pandemic, which has in turn resulted in them reducing
staff strength.
Nigeria’s statistics
bureau had said not less than four in every ten Nigerians (42 per cent) who
were working before the outbreak of coronavirus in the country lost their jobs
due to the impact of COVID-19, in April.
Mr Ibrahim said his
company had to explore full online learning experience as opposed to its
blended former offline learning approach to maintain its staff list.
Focusing more on
establishing a stronger emotional connection with their users “than just trying
to sell products to them” is the way Ojuolape Toheeb, CEO of Tell!, an online
African startup headquartered in Nigeria, said his brand is keeping afloat.
Yet, the report said
the inability of businesses to maintain their payroll has been further compounded
because 60 per cent of the country’s private companies said they do not have
any insurance policy or risk management system on their radar.
“The absence of a
risk management system is perceived to be among the strongest reasons for the
sudden flop of many of the private sector businesses,” the report said.
It said about 89 per
cent of the businesses expressed “interest to have insurance policy in place in
order to shield them from subsequent or future global crises.”
Also, more than
two-thirds of the respondents said their pre-COVID-19 business travel plan to
source for products and raw materials was truncated by the lockdown.
The effect of this
is far-reaching because 43 per cent of the businesses said they source their
products and raw materials from China, with only 19 per cent doing so within
Africa.
“This explains the
dominant position of China in the country’s supply chain and it partly reveals
the low level of trade between Nigeria and other African countries,” the report
read.
“This strong external
dependence of the economy on foreign nations especially outside Africa can be
attributed to the severity COVID-19 will have on the economy.”
The research
The research was
conducted by Africa International Trade and Commerce Research, the Nigerian
Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA),
O-analytics Research and Development Initiative (ORADI) and International Trade
and Research Centre (ITRC). The researchers captured data from 100 businesses.
The Key Informant Interview (KII) used telephone techniques.
The businesses, the
report said, comprised over 66 per cent micro and small businesses managed by
Nigerians with less than 10 staff and large enterprises that are into
international trade.
Eighty-eight per
cent of the businesses surveyed are Nigerian owned, eight per cent have
Nigerian and foreign ownership structure, while four per cent are owned by
foreigners.
To absorb the shock
caused by the pandemic, the report suggested expanding the N3.5 trillion
stimulus package rolled out by the CBN for households and businesses.
“Beyond this, the
government should develop a system of transparency and accountability in a way
and manner this fund is spent,” the report said. “A control system should be
set up to enhance close monitoring, measurement and evaluation of public
spending.”
Also, there is a
need to ratify the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCTA) as the
survey found that only 19 per cent of Nigerian businesses source their products
and raw material from African countries. Meanwhile, 79 per cent said they have
interest in sourcing their products from the continent if trade across African
borders is eased.
The private sector
was also urged to “secure corporate insurance policy and put a risk management
system in place,” a window for the insurance industry to thrive, as most of the
affected Nigerian businesses have no risk management system in place but are
now willing to have one.
“The private sector
should establish an insurance policy that mitigates against corporate internal
or external uncertainty. Nigeria private sector business should also leverage
on the current situation to diversify their business.
“Micro, small and
medium enterprises should be flexible to explore deliverables in sectors made
active by the pandemic. Some sectors whose products and services will be in
active demand throughout the period of the pandemic are healthcare, e-commerce
businesses, agriculture, telecommunication amongst others.”
More than before,
businesses need to increase the use of technology and e-marketplace platforms,
be it for meetings, customer services, promotion and marketing, procurement to
reduce cost and increase in efficiency, during this COVID-19 and post COVID-19
pandemic, Mr Ibrahim said.
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