Imagine if, as Aliko Dangote was evolving from a mere trader to a Chairman of an industrialized conglomerate, that nine other people joined him. He picked cement; we still have electricity opportunities available. He picked sugar, we still have clean water yet to be fixed. In the Igbo nation, it takes the killing of one tiger to be called the killer of tigers! Look at the chart below, Nigerians should appreciate what it means to have big companies. We need to grow many Dangotes in other sectors.
And most importantly, if you look at what I am seeing there, excluding Dangote companies, MTN, and Nestle, and perhaps IB, all the companies there came out of the first cambrian moment of Nigerian entrepreneurial boost of the early 1990s.
You can understand why Nigeria should be worried that most of our leading tech companies including fintechs are incorporated in America. Had GTBank*, Access, modern UBA, etc followed that trajectory, this chart would not be possible. Someone needs to lead to secure Nigeria’s future.
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I picked this from Nairametrics where it is possibly promoted by Dangote Cement. I am reposting it here as it is newsworthy. No one paid Tekedia anything please.
The press release
Dangote Cement Plc has emerged as the highest corporate income taxpayer and biggest employer of labour in the country for the year 2020.
The foremost indigenous cement manufacturer came first among top 100 elite companies listed on the Nigeria Exchange (NGX) posting into the coffer of the federal government a princely sum of N97.24billion in the year, while MTN Communication Nigeria Plc paid N93.6billion and Guaranty Trust Bank came third with an income tax of N36.66billion.
In the performance analyses of 100 top elite corporate bodies on the Nigeria Exchange carried out by the reputable business magazine, “Next Money”, Dangote Cement was ranked as the most capitalized company in the country with N4,173.22billion.
Speaking on the analysis, publisher of Next Money, Mr. Ray Echebiri said the performance index analysis of companies listed on the Exchange was carried out with a view to establishing the best-performing ones among the over 150 of them.
Echebiri, a renowned financial analyst, explained that the exercise is to provide existing and potential investors with information that they can rely on when they are taking investment decisions. “The first step we take in the analyses is to extract the Total Assets of each of the listed companies from their audited accounts.”
He said: “We sorted the total assets of the companies from the largest to the smallest and cut off at the 100th. We tagged the hundred companies that emerged from this exercise “Nigeria’s Top 100 Companies”. Any company that makes it to the corporate elite club of Nigeria’s Top 100 Companies is automatically a candidate for further ranking by Revenues, Profits, Market Capitalization, Number of Employees and Tax Payment.”
According to him, the rankings show how the listed companies stand on the corporate ladder with regard to the various performance indices. This edition of Nigeria’s Top 100 Companies covers the 2020 accounting year. It is therefore, a performance analyses of companies listed on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) based on their audited accounts for the 2020 reporting year.”
“In other words, the information used in the analyses are extracted from the annual reports and accounts of the various companies published in 2020 irrespective of whether a company’s year-end is March, June, September, December, or any other month in 2020.”
Echebiri further pointed out that the analyses were restricted to publicly-held companies in the country and the reason being that the accounts of listed companies are easier to access than those of private companies. “Moreover, accounts of publicly-held companies are more believable because they are usually subjected to regulatory scrutiny and approval.”
He explained that his group had no doubt that there are many private companies that would easily count among the top 100 companies in the country given their huge balance sheet size, the sizeable revenue they post yearly and the mouth-watering profits they declare. However, he added that they were not a part of the performance review and analyses because their audited accounts do not go through the kind of regulatory examination and approval that the listed companies face and, are, therefore not as believable as those of the publicly-held companies.
The construction giant, Julius Berger trailed Dangote Cement as the highest employer of labour, albeit far behind, with staff strength of 12,217 and the United Bank for Africa Plc which had a total of 10,824 people on its payroll.
The analysis indicated that while Dangote cement with a market capitalization of N4,173.22 billion beat the rest of the companies listed on the NGX to emerge as the company with the largest capitalization, MTN Communications Nigeria Plc and Bua Cement Plc. as at December 31, 2020, followed as the second and third respectively with market capitalization of N3,458.23 billion and N2,619.41.
Dangote Cement paid the highest corporate income tax during the year under and was followed closely by MTN Communications Nigeria Plc which paid corporate income tax of N93.66 billion and Guaranty Trust Bank placed third with corporate income tax payment of N36.66 billion.
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Those who are incapable of lifting a stone will tell you how the government has been favouring Dangote, as if giving tons of money to a fool will make him wise…
It takes one who believes in his country to build there, rather than looking for excuses at every turn, a regime comes and goes, but Dangote remains. So, if it’s all about government favoritism, why is every regime favouring the same person? It means that he’s doing something very important and strategic.
One of the unwritten positive arguments of having big corporations is that they also make small businesses better, because the latter have the former as customers too, with purchasing power way above what thousands of disparate smaller consumers can muster; this also means that you need the corporations to sustain small businesses.
Dangote delivered on cement, doing something significant on sugar, working hard to deliver on refinery, you now wonder if he’s the only one here. The railway the government has been borrowing left, right and centre could have made for great business for private investors, but people will tell you how risky it is, until someone does it. The electricity challenge is still there, maybe the Dangote will fix it…
Others should start doing!