Tag: Agric

  • Govt urged to invest in education, agric

    Govt urged to invest in education, agric

    THE government has been uged to invest in education and help graduates acquire practical skills.

    Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) members of the Federal Polytechnic, Oko chapter made this call at a conference

    The conference tagged Paradigms of Sustained Development in Africa: a multi-sect oral approach, was attended by the Rector of Kaduna Polytechnic, Dr Mohammed Bello Ibrahim and academics across the country.

    In his paper titled: Sustainable  development in Africa: The need for paradigm shift, Dr Ibrahim said sustainable development in Africa cannot be addressed without addressing population dynamics , poverty alleviation, technology transfer, science and education policy and practice of sustainable development.

    He urged African leaders to invest in education, observing that it would enable youths to acquire practical knowledge like motor repairs, building and construction, carpentry, plumbing and craft.

    The National President of the union, Mr Chibuzor Asomugha, described the event as timely, adding that it was an opportunity for the academics to network and discuss problems on sustainable development.

    Mr Asomugha said that Nigeria needs a paradigm shift that will seek a new direction in terms of policy, training and education.

    “I think it is timely and it will be meaningful to Nigeria’s transformation agenda at this time. I thank members of this chapter for their efforts so far.’’

    In a paper titled: Beyond theories, workshop, seminars   and conference: a call to practical action”, the Rector of Federal Polytechnic, Oko, who was represented by the Chief Librarian, Mr F. O. Obodoeze , said social justice and equality of opportunity for all citizens was a prerequisite for development in the country.

    He called for a paradigm shift among academics in Africa, saying it would lead to sustainable development in Africa.

    He noted that good people and vast lands are not the drivers of development, adding that good leadership, focus and ability to take difficult risks were necessary to achieve growth.

    A Lecturer in the Department of Statistics, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Dr G.A Osuji, spoke on Africa and sustainable development in the 21st century. He identified poverty, corruption, environmental degradation, lack of sustainable human development, lack of real democracy and inadequate planning as major factors militating against sustainable development in the continent.

    He called on the government to invest in agriculture, saying it would help in solving extreme poverty in Africa.

    The Chairman, Dr Onyeka Uwakwe, thanked participants for a successful convention, adding that it was organised to bring scholars together to discuss issues in Nigeria and Africa.

     

  • Agric products, others top half year containerised export

    Agricultural produce,such as cocoa, sesame, cashew nuts, cotton and charcoal took a chunk of containerised commodities exported from Nigeria in the first half of this year.

    According to a trade report by Maersk Nigeria Limited, the volume of charcoal export rose by 76 per cent as of May, this year compared to the same period last year because of the longer winter in Europe.

    The report said finished produce export in May recorded 39 per cent year-on-year growth because of the streamlining of production activities by major manufacturing firms that made Nigeria their main production hub for the region.

    However, the finished produce export share still remains low from Nigeria, said the Managing Director of Maersk Nigeria Limited and Head, Central West Africa Cluster, Mr. Jan Thorhauge.

    He said as of May, this year, the containerised import market to Nigeria was estimated to have ended 159,000 FFE (40-foot equivalent units) compared with the same period last year, which produced an estimated volume of 155,000 FFE representing a relatively marginal year on year growth of about two percent.

    Thorhauge noted that the East Nigerian market maintained its superior performance over the West in terms of growth in volume ratio with a yearly growth ratio of 10 per cent on import and one percent on export.

    He said: “Not much has changed as the containerised market in Nigeria continues to be strongly dominated by imports, and for the last six years, the import/export ratio has remained at around 92 per cent import as against eight percent export.”

    Thorhauge said most of the country’s containerised cargoe came from the Far East, mostly China, while most of its export commodities went to Europe.

    He said: “The sourcing patterns have not changed fundamentally in the last six years, though imports from Europe and Middle East have experienced significant increase in the last two years.

    “Major products coming from the Middle East are industrial raw materials, chemicals, electronics, iron and steel and tyres while from Europe, major products include industrial raw materials, frozen fish and cars.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The increased sourcing pattern can be attributed to better pricing from these regions, increase in the age limits of imported automobiles from five years to 10 years, increased construction as well as growing demands for finished products by the Nigerian populace, he said.

    He went on further to say that Nigeria’s export ratio can be improved upon if the government would be able to improve on infrastructure such as power supply, road network and rail services.

    The dominant items imported into the country, according to the report, have remained the same over the past six years and are made up of traditional commodities including cars, electronics, construction materials, food items, chemicals, electrical fittings, machinery and paper, among other goods covering industrial as well as private needs.

    He said: “We are quite optimistic that the import market in Nigeria will grow by about 6-8 percent for the second half of 2013. The export market is subject to harvest conditions and global market prices, but we foresee an increase of about eight percent for the rest of the year.

    “Forecasting in general in Nigeria remains a challenge and 2013 is no different. The market development will as always depend heavily on unpredictable macro-economic factors as well as stable oil prices and oil production, security issues in Northern Nigeria, relative peace in Eastern Nigeria, government policies, exchange rate fluctuations for the naira, among others.

    He said that most of the terminals in Nigeria have made major investments in the early parts of the year 2013 in terms of infrastructure, container handling equipment and terminal management software stating that these investments, along with the dampened market, have resulted in reduction in Port congestion.

    “APMT Apapa has in early 2013 initiated the final phase of their expansion plans, and both TICT and Ports and Cargo Handling Services are today operating almost entirely with RTG’s (rubber tired gantry cranes) which has dramatically increased the yard capacity. The average dwell time days (the time spent between a container being discharged and leaving the terminal) has also gone down by around 40 per cent.

    “Irrespective of these improvements, it is expected that the terminal capacity in Lagos ports will be fully utilized within the next 4-5 years, and it is essential that steps are taken to find new terminal capacity in order to keep up with Nigeria’s economic growth. Poor road infrastructure outside the terminals and lacking rail services also remain a concern,” he added.

     

  • AfDB donates N465m agric input to flood victims

    AfDB donates N465m agric input to flood victims

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) under International Food and Agricultural Development (IFAD) project has disbursed agricultural input worth N465 million to flood victims in the six states devastated by flood.

    National Project Coordinator Fadama III, Mr Tayo Adewumi, disclosed this yesterday while distributing AfDB flood intervention input to victims in Jigawa State.

    He said aside Jigawa, other states affected are Borno, Plateau, Katsina, Kwara and Kogi, adding that the gesture was aimed at cushioning the hardship of the communities.

    He disclosed that victims in Jigawa State will get N65.2 million input.

    Represented by the Senior Monitoring and Evaluation Specialists, Mr Peter Ajibuiye, he said the materials were judiciously delivered to the affected victims. He said the distribution has been conducted in public to underscore the transparency of the exercies.

    He thanked the AfDB and the Federal Government for their collaboration with the state government to provide succour to the victims.

    He sympathised with others who were affected by the disaster.

    State Commissioner of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Alhaji Rabiu Isah Taura, said 50 Fadama Community Associations consisting of 578 Fadama Resources User groups in the 10 Fadama II participating local government areas are to benefit from the agricultural input and equipment.

    He commended the bank and Fadama II for providing the materials to the victims.

     

    The Commissioner also appreciated in particular the government’s support to Jigawa government Fadama coordinating office which no doubt made it possible for the project to record meaningful achievements.

     

  • NGO honours Agric College

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Centre for Ethics and Self Value Orientation (CESVO), has honoured the Federal College of Agriculture, Akure, Ondo State, with the “Most ethically responsible college of agriculture in Nigeria” award.

    The group, hinged the award on various measures put in place by its management particulary on academic and physical developments. Its Provost, Dr Mary Ogunkoya was also honoured with the ‘National ethical ambassador of Nigeria.

    Speaking at the event, CESVO Executive Director, Musa Yakubu said the Provost had shown transparency with the way she used the resources released to the institution by the Federal Government for the development of the college.

    Yakubu noted that CESVO carried out its assessment programme through questionnaires, stressing that the host community of the college was not left behind in assessing the performance of the Provost and the college.

    Yakubu said: “We have visited 21 states, and our aim is to expose corruption and maladministration in public institutions.

    “Though, some institutions have won our award. Before this college was tipped for this award, we have been monitoring its activities for the past 13 months.

    “The Provost has never met anyone among us and we have never seen her face-to-face. We carried out our assessment through questionnaires. We also introduced a well integrated research method in the course of this assessment.

    “We discovered that there is high level of transformation, and transparency in this college.

    “Nigerians should be rest assured we will never give our awards to corrupt people. On her part, the Provost has displayed to us that she deserved the award through her outstanding performances.

    “She epitomises sound leadership and that is why the college transformational agendas are at high speed.”

    In her response, Dr Ogunkoya said several organisations have approached the college for awards, demanding for money, stressing that, CESVO did not ask for a bribe despite the rigorous protocol it went through.”

    She said the awards would spur the institution’s machinery to work harder in order to enable the college attain a world class status.

     

  • Mainstreet Bank commits N10b to agric devt

    Mainstreet Bank Limited has invested over N10 billion into the Federal Government backed Growth Enhancement Scheme (GES) designed to provide affordable agricultural inputs like fertilizers and hybrid seeds to farmers. This will assist them to increase their yields per hectare and make it comparable to world standard.

    The Executive Director, Corporate and Investment Banking, Mainstreet Bank Limited, Mr Roger Woodbridge said the bank’s investment in the GES scheme has given it an opportunity to contribute towards the reduction of hunger amongst Nigerians. He said the lender offers a learning experience to other banks that are still skeptical about agricultural funding. He commended the Federal Government for coming up with the GES scheme.

    Speaking to newsmen after a stakeholders meeting held in Abuja recently, Mr Woodbridge acknowledged that the GES scheme has enabled the private sector to play an integral role in growing the nation’s food production. Citing Mainstreet’s experience in funding fertilizer distribution to agro-dealers and smallholder farmers, he stressed that the Public Private Partnership (PPP) provides effective framework for private sector engagement in overall agricultural development.

    ‘Nigerian banks must lend support to human centred development activities such as agriculture which has the ability to increase the production capacity of local farmers as well as aid to gainful employment for the youth population,” he said.

    Also commenting on the recent Millennium Development Goals (MDG) report, where The United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) honoured Nigeria and 37 other nations for reducing the number of people living in absolute hunger in their countries by half well ahead of the year 2015, he expressed excitement that concerted efforts in the implementation of the Federal Government’s agricultural transformation initiative would in the shortest possible time stimulate wealth creation along the agricultural value chain especially amongst the rural populace.

     

  • ‘We’ll make agric attractive to women’

    ‘We’ll make agric attractive to women’

    The Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory, Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide, has given a clear indication of the FCT administration’s desire to transform agriculture in the territory.

    She said the administration is not just concerned about producing more food, although that is a prime target, but that in doing so, it will make agriculture more lucrative, sustainable and attractive to women.

    She stated this in Abuja at the signing of a performance contract agreement by the Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development Secretariat (ARDS) in the FCT, Mrs. Bema Olvadi Madayi and Director of Administration & Finance (ARDS), Mr John Obiahu.

    The minister and the new Permanent Secretary, FCT, Mr. John Obinna Chukwu, an engineer, signed the agreement on behalf of the FCT Administration.

    Akinjide stated that the FCTA would ensure that agriculture was practiced as lucrative commercial enterprise that is not only sustainable but attractive to the women and youths.

    She explained that the performance contract agreement was one of the major achievements of the Administration to enable it deliver on its mandate to Nigerians.

    ”Nigerians expect government to be more proactive and effective in its actions by providing the enabling environment and the requisite concrete deliverables that will enable them function more effectively.

    “The Performance Contract Agreement is meant to gauge the performance of the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) of government in line with established Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). The MDAs are required to develop detailed documents to guide implementation of the KPIs,” she stated.

    The minister commended the secretary and her team for their sterling performance in the last 12 months and urged them to accomplish more in 2013.

    In her response after signing the agreement, Madayi assured that the Secretariat would will assiduously to ensure sustainable food security and poverty eradication in the FCT.

    ”We will work to transform the agriculture sector in the FCT into a vibrant sector. The Year 2013 will be a year of great transformation in the agriculture sector in FCT,” she added.

    The secretary applauded the FCT Minister of State for her support and encouragement towards ensuring that the Agriculture and Rural Development Secretariat realised its goals.

     

  • Agric scheme: Farmers’ registration in collation stage, says FG

    Registration of farmers for the 2013 edition of the Growth Enhancement Support (GES) scheme in the country has reached its collation stage, the Federal Government said.

    The Special Assistant to the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development (Media), Dr. Olukayode Oyeleye, disclosed this in a chat with The Nation yesterday in Abuja.

    He said the registration process for the year was more effective compared to the previous exercise due to the deployment of information technology equipments.

    Oyeleye said: “For 2013, farmer’s registration is being collated so it is too premature to give details without figures until everything has been collated.”

    He expressed hope that the data for this year edition will be more specific and reliable.

    The scheme is a FG initiative under the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) designed to support farmers with farm inputs such as fertiliser, improved seeds and tractor services.

    Under the initiative, farmers will access inputs through an electronic distribution channel known as the e-wallet.

    Registered farmers are expected to pays 50 percent of the cost of farm inputs while the FG and states jointly pay the balance.

    Oyeleye admitted the possibility of extending the registration if the Federal Government considers it necessary.

  • ‘We will make Kwara Nigeria’s agric hub’

    ‘We will make Kwara Nigeria’s agric hub’

    When Zimbabwean farmers started commercial agriculture in Shonga, Kwara State, not many believed in the project’s viability. Today, it has become a success.The state has bigger dreams for the project. Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed is seeking the Federal Government’s support for the scheme through irrigation, which he says is capital intensive. He also spoke on his administration’s efforts to create employment and revive moribund state-run businesses, among others, with reporters, Group Business Editor, AYODELE AMINU was there.

     

    The Commercial Agricultural Scheme in Shonga was launched with fanfare, are the products in the market?

    Shonga Farm is one of the best things that have ever happened to Kwara State and, indeed, Nigeria and I wish that the transformation agenda we’ve been talking about in the country borrows from what we have done in Shonga as a platform for driving commercial farming in Nigeria. We started with 13 farmers who moved from Zimbabwe and settled in Shonga. We have them compartmentalised into three sectors – Poultry, Mixed Cropping and Dairy. These farmers came in to be commercial farmers. For commercial farming, we are talking about what we call value chain. In other words, they will form largely what we call feed stock for processing. That is what we mean by commercial farming. You will not see their products on the shelves like you expected to see. Their products are there in the market which you use, probably daily but you will not know because it is a value-chain concept. For instance, the dairy plants soya and maize to prepare feed. This feed is fed to cattle. The cattle produce milk. Milk is now sold to WAMCO. WAMCO produces Peak Milk, which you use. You now understand the value chain. That is why if you expect to see fresh milk in the market you will not see it. They are largely designed to be feed stock and the same thing happens to the poultry. They plant maize and soya. They have a 50-tonner feed mill there where they generate feed. They buy day-old chicks from Olofa’s Farms, which is another feed stock farm and in six weeks they grow to table size.

    They have an abattoir that has the capacity to slaughter 10,000 chickens every day, but currently they are doing about 5,000. Once they slaughter the chicken, they are packaged and sent to eateries. At major eateries, it is their chicken you will eat. So, people who expect to see Shonga Chicken in the market will not see it that way. The cassava that is grown there has the highest yield in the country. The national average for cassava is about 15,000 tonnes per hectare; in Shonga we do 40,000 per hectare. This cassava is being exported to China as chips. The kind of transformation agenda we are talking about in the country is what is already happening there. Our own effort in the state is to see how our local farmers would begin to be incorporated into this transformation agenda beyond just subsistence farming. They begin to see themselves as clusters around these commercial farmers and it is that model which we are trying to translate to the state wide farming concept. So, if you hear us talking about agricultural transformation in Kwara, what we are talking about is replicating what we are already carrying out in Shonga to make it a state-wide farming concept.

    Unfortunately, the biggest challenge we are faced with is the issue of irrigation, which is capital intensive. That is what the Federal Ministry of Water Resources should be doing by supporting us with irrigation so that we as a state continue to give necessary inputs to drive our farmers from subsistence level to commercial level under a clearly spelt out value chain concept. This will help our farmers to truly see agribusiness as a means of economic empowerment. For us in Kwara State, we have gone further by not only enumerating our farmers, but clustering them according to cooperatives and compartmentalised them into crops; that is, rice, maize, soya and cassava. These are the four crops we are taking to commercial level. These four crops will form feed stocks to a value chain development programme. So, that is what commercial farming should be seen. Hence, when you are trying to drive a transformation agenda, it is the whole chain that requires to be renewed. All we need to do is to use our local farmers to copy what the Zimbabwean farmers are doing successfully. Hopefully, Kwara State will become the true hub of agricultural transformation and agricultural value-chain development in Nigeria.

    What is the government doing about job creation in the state?

    On employment, I can tell you that it is the benefit of continuity. The real meaning of continuity is value for money in the real sense because what are we trying to continue? You want to continue something that has been started which is expected to drive itself to a level of fruition that you can get benefit. For us in Kwara, we started the issue of getting people out of the streets, getting them empowered. We went further the moment we came in 2011. We went into an enumeration programme to know how many people are unemployed. What is their category? What is their educational level? That helped us in generating the database which has helped us in creating a platform for giving those jobs. The first thing we did was that we gave 2,000 youth jobs under the Kwara Bridge Empowerment Scheme. We promised these 2,000 youths that within the next one or two years they would be properly engaged. That is, they would move from the bridge to proper engagement and so others will replace them on the bridge. I am happy to let you know that the 2,000 have been completely absorbed. In addition to that, additional 2,000 have been replacing those ones that moved from the bridge. It is a continuous programme.

    Also, we have just started an International Vocational Centre, which will be driven under a programme with City and Guilds (C&G) of London so that the people who graduate from there will be given C&G certificates. We chose C&G because we want to create people that would be employable outside Nigeria. We are looking beyond Nigeria. As soon as it starts with the first tranche of students in September, the centre will be the platform for training youths and reduce unemployment. We will also create a platform for supporting them. We have a debenture. We have set aside over N250 million, the first tranche of people who already had skills but gaps in funding have collected theirs. We have given some of them part of the N250 million under the cooperative scheme. So, those who undergo training will also have access to these funds. In other words, we are training people that will become employers and employees at the same time. So that is the kind of support we are giving to address the issue of youth unemployment in the State.

    You said you are interested in micro finance banks. The policy allows state governments to put aside a percentage of their money to help the micro finance banks. How much have you given to the micro finance banks and what is the agenda to develop the micro finance banks?

    What we have done here is that we look beyond just giving the one per cent. We were very conscious of the fact that the micro finance banks are expected to drive deposits to be able to bring about lendable funds within the micro finance industry. We are not waiting for that. We have set aside about N500 million as a debenture, which we are making available to prospective beneficiaries through the micro finance banks. So, the way the Federal Government has created a debenture under the support for agriculture and made this money available through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to commercial banks to beneficiaries, we have also set aside that kind of money. The micro finance banks that have demonstrated capacity to lend this money and collect back will continue to be our partners. As a matter of fact, we are still assessing the first tranche of their administration of those funds and the level of recovery will make us know what next.

    What are the things you have on ground that could attract Shoprite to Ilorin and others that are coming?

    The first attraction to any business is how enabling the environment is in terms of security. We have spent so much and we have put so much at stake in ensuring that we have a secured environment.

    Secondly, we’ve invested so much on our road network, which makes us accessible from the North, the South and the North-central. Most importantly, our people are very hospitable. You hardly see any issues that have to do with religious, social problems in the state. We have always tried to ensure that our environment is quite enabling. We also have the population. This tells you that the environment couldn’t be more enabling to support this kind of businesses. That is why we asked Shoprite to come here and they saw that the environment is quite good for them. Our weather is also quite supportive of driving businesses. These have been part of the ingredients that the government has always seen as part of its own contribution to creating an enabling environment. However, we are not stopping at that. We are bringing Spar to Kwara. We have had the same kind of arrangement we had with Shoprite with Spar. They will not only create a new Spar outlet here, they will also create a new Shopping Complex, which will be a very good platform for employment. Our major concern is getting our people employed and creating the enabling environment for our people to carry on their businesses. Shoprite alone has generated so much employment for our people. The turnover in one day is on the average of N6 million to N7 million. Nobody ever believed that Kwarans have this level of disposable income. This tells you that our people are hungry for this kind of businesses. Apart from the environment that would be created for employment, it will also create an environment where we can get value for money.

    Spar is one of the biggest outlets globally from Netherlands. We are lucky to partner with them to bring them here to set up something that will change the lives of people. We are focused because we are driven under policies that have been outlined, structured, methodically put in place to drive Kwara State to desired level. From day one when we were coming to this business, we already knew what we wanted to do for the next four years. We didn’t come to this business by accident. We knew exactly what we were coming to do. We knew how much resources are available and we knew how much these resources can do and we know that we are going to get there only through ingenuity, through partnerships with the private sector and that is what we are doing. We are not deterred.

    What is the idea behind Harmony Holdings Limited?

    Before now, the state had interest in some businesses – transport, insurance, properties, hotel business and so many things. These things were just run on their own. Sometimes the state has shares in some businesses; for example, Kwara Furniture. But to what extent have all these businesses translated into increase in revenue for the state government? We have found out that they have not contributed anything, largely because they have been running on their own and we began to see that whatever they are right now, they have assets with latent potential to grow to desirable levels where they can contribute revenue to support economic growth in the state. It is against this background that we said all these things should be put under an umbrella, which we called Harmony Holdings with a very strong management that will see each of these businesses as S.B.U. – Strategic Business Units – that would be given specific targets in terms of growth and development and most importantly, in terms of expectations in revenue to advance the much required revenue for the state.

    Some of the businesses are even moribund, but we are reviving all of them so the potential are huge. I will give you an example, Kwara Transport, used to run commuter buses from one town to the other. We said no, this cannot go on like this. If you want to be in the business of transportation, what are the best practices? Who are those that know how to do it and are doing it well? Bring their models to see how it is working. That is what we have done. Today we have a structured management.We have a programme that allows individuals to bring in their buses. In short, we have been able to get to efficiency level from where we will grow organically and ultimately inorganically. This will begin to see us getting to the desirable level of revenue. There are so many options where we can go. There are courier services. There is haulage business. There are ferry services. These are all inorganic ways of growing. We can increase the fleet. Look at more routes, do a feasibility of which routes give us best benefit for our value for money. That is organic growth and that will see us getting to desirable level. Our major concern is value for money.

     What is the economic importance of the Aviation College?

    For keen observers and those who want to truly see themselves growing among comity of nations, they must begin to learn how to do a clear analysis of opportunities. One big opportunity that exists in the aviation industry is the fact that there is dire need of pilots globally. Check any international airline, they will tell you. Training pilots requires that you understand the dynamics of the business. The last administration realised that this gap could be filled to serve two purposes. Firstly, it will serve as a hub for aviation. It will support what we have on ground. Don’t forget that we have a cargo terminal. We already have the Air Force hangar here and, of course, an International Airport. Secondly, we want to bring Kwara State to be on the map of the world because when you have an International Aviation College it goes beyond servicing the immediate community. Apart from Zaria and South Africa, I don’t know where else pilots are trained in Africa. Obviously, by the time this school gets to its full potential, everybody in Africa who intends to train as a pilot will know the existence of an Aviation College in Ilorin. For now, we are training pilots but there are other services. There is engineering training. There are other services that are going to go into it. This would become itself a hub for driving aviation business.

    Indirectly, there are people who will support those who are going to work there. So, for us, it is a major hub to create the kind of economic environment that will not only put us on the map of the world but also we begin to see Kwara as a place that is attractive for prospective businesses. In Kwara, we are looking beyond just tapping on low-hanging fruits.We are looking at the process where in 15 to 30 years, the state will be one of the most developed.

    So, beyond just doing the normal infrastructure – roads, water, hospitals, schools –what are the long term benefits that we can bring to our people that on its own can regenerate support scheme for growing the economy of the state. This is part of the reasons we have set up an International Aviation College and, luckily, under the new EXIM loan that the Federal Government has signed with the Chinese and India governments and others across the world, International Aviation College will be benefiting from the loan. It will be able to acquire at least 10 new aircraft under a 25 year loan agreement with a 10 year moratorium. It couldn’t be better than that. The school will acquire the aircraft, develop economy of scale, train students, earn money and pay back the loan on their own. The 10-year- facility means that the college’s cash flow will not be under pressure. It is when you borrow money and you have to pay within a very short time that you have pressure on your cash flow. The loan was so attractive that we couldn’t resist it and it is one of the best things that ever happened to us. That will enable the school to get to the much desired full scale aviation college that we have always prayed for and will allow them to attain economy of scale where they can earn a lot of money to service the school and pay back. For now, the school is fully owned by the state but don’t forget that the state government is not in the business of running aviation. So, ultimately, we will sell off 70 per cent of that business to those who know how to do it and then the school will run on its own internationally.

     

  • Ex-Deputy Governor urges govt to create jobs through agric

    A  former Lagos State Deputy Governor, Mr Abiodun Ogunleye, has advised the Federal Government to promote agriculture, through better funding, to tackle unemployment in the country.

    Ogunleye gave the advice in Ikorodu in Lagos, at the fourth edition of the free computer training organised for youths in the area by a state lawmaker, Mr Sanai Agunbiade.

    He said agriculture could be the largest employer of labour in the country, adding that the neglect of the sector by successive governments had contributed to the economic woes experienced in the country.

    “’When a country that has large scale arable land cannot feed itself, it is a big shame and calls for urgent attention,’’ he said.

    The former deputy governor in the Tinubu administration, said agriculture would have to take the “centre stage’’ to eventually eradicate poverty in Nigeria.

    He commended the lawmaker for the yearly event, which, according to him, was to empower youths in Ikorodu and its environs.

    Earlier, Agunbiade (ACN-Ikorodu I), said that Information Technology is dominating the world, adding that the training will afford the beneficiaries the opportunity to earn a living.

    Mr Taiwo Hassan, one of the beneficiaries, praised the lawmakers for giving youths in the area the opportunity to acquire skill in computer appreciation.

  • Agric holds the ace in job creation

    Agric holds the ace in job creation

    Often times, government reels out statistics of steady economic growth. The growth index, say economists, is occasioned by rising oil prices and quantity of oil sold. An analyst, Comrade Chika Onuegbu, described such growth as “jobless, non-inclusive growth.” He enumerates how to create jobs through the agricultural sector and keep Nigerians in gainful employment, reports DUPE OLAOYE-OSINKOLU.

    Unemployment rate in Nigeria is burgeoning and at the moment stands at well over 30 per cent of the nation’s workforce. When segregated, the figures become more alarming, especially those for the youth which stand at about 70 per cent in the urban areas and 60 per cent in the rural areas. These numbers are increasing by the day and nothing seems to be in the offing in the nearest future to get anything done to reverse the trend. The consequences of this, both to the economy, polity and Nigeria as a whole are dire and demands immediate response both for now and the future.”

    This is the thrust of a paper by an analyst, Comrade Chika Onuegbu, at a gathering in Lagos. The paper, which centred on employment generation, addressed the issue of solution to unemployment, saying, agriculture remains the way out. He noted: “The easy money from petroleum led to the abandonment of agriculture, changes in the fiscal federalism and the pursuit of ‘easy life’ by the government and people of Nigeria.”

    Onuegbu in the paper entitled: Agriculture and unemployment in our country: The way forward, said despite Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth rate since 2000, “our rate of unemployment is one of the highest in sub-Saharan Africa” . He also said agriculture can bail the youth out of unemployment.

    The drift of young men and women from the rural areas to the cities in search of jobs, he said, can be addressed through agriculture.

    He said agriculture can create new workplaces as it engages a large percentage of the population directly in its processes, such as land cultivation for crops, both in small and large holdings, poultry, piggery and dairy farms for milk production.

    The larger these workplaces are, the more the number of people employed in them, he said.

    Onuegbu said agriculture has not been the basic driver of job creation because of distorted national policies as agricultural development dwindled, unemployment worsened, showing a strong correlation between them, he argued.

    The agriculture sector, Onuegbu said, can redress the dislocation caused by the emergence of oil, adding: “In Nigeria, agriculture accounted for a larger percentage (about 70 per cent) of the number of people in employment, but with the emergence of oil, which distorted the economic allocative processes, more people left the land for white collar jobs.

    With this, agricultural production suffered and Nigeria gradually became a food importer, which finally, led with the passage of time, to her becoming dependent on the rest of the globe for food imports. As agriculture suffered, and as the population increased, as the skill demand level for other jobs increased over time and as lifestyle changed, more and more people found themselves increasingly in the unemployment queue. These sets of people, as a result of certain factors, were unable to go back to agriculture and this worsened the unemployment situation.

    “Agriculture can, therefore, generate increasing workplaces in its various stages and processes, from the preparation of the land, the planting of the crops, tending and caring, harvesting and storage and processing into various end or semi-end products. The same can be done with the other segments of the agricultural sector.

    “The agricultural value-chain is long and can be stretched to accommodate more and more workers seeking jobs. The more new farms come on stream, the more new hands are needed for their operations,” adding that agriculture creates new bases for jump-starting manufacturing activities.

    “Manufacturing activities depend very much on the raw materials provided by the agricultural sector. It provides the bases for individuals to become manufacturers. The technology involved in some of the early stages of the value chain in agriculture is often simple and is easily assessable to the interested entrepreneurs.

    “This, therefore, generates a basis for jump starting manufacturing which has the capacity of generating workplaces, thus increasing employment.”

    Onuegbu said when manufacturing activities rise in any economy, new workplaces are created. Agriculture being an enabler of small scale manufacturing, not only employs the entrepreneurs involved in it, it also allows them to become creators of jobs thus increasing employment.

    Agriculture, he said, generates absorptive capacities for new entrants into the job market. “New entrants into the job market, especially fresh graduates from both tertiary institutions and secondary schools at present do not command high level of skills needed in the highly technologically driven Industrial processes and most of the demands of the service sectors, such as the financial institutions, telecoms, etc. This allows for the existence of the syndrome of “unemployable Nigerian graduates,” meaning that even where there are vacancies, you may not readily find Nigerians to fill such vacancies.

    “However, the agricultural sector, because of the low skill demand in the lower end of the business, provides a readily available platform for the absorption of these low skilled new entrants into the labour market, either as entrepreneurs or as employees. With a vibrant agricultural sector therefore, it becomes easier for fresh graduates to participate productively in the nation’s economic processes.

    “Another plus that can be derived from agriculture is its being a source of seed money, or capital for investment in other businesses,” Onuegbu said.

    He said every economy needs investible capital to start new businesses. The agriculture sector, if properly directed, serves as a ready source of seed money for aspiring entrepreneurs to invest in other areas of the economy. The capital needed to start a small- scale holding farm is often not above the means of the average family and when the right crops are planted and income generated at the harvest season, a reinvestment of a proportion of this over some few years would serve as capital to go into other businesses that demand greater start-up capital.

    The availability of start-up capital creates jobs both for the business owner, eventual direct employees and others that may be engaged indirectly because of the spin-offs generated by the business thus established. This will impact positively on unemployment.

    Agriculture also creates horizontal and vertical multipliers. Agriculture, he said, is a primary industry, adding that many industries depend on it for their operations. If agriculture gets a boost, other sectors, both the ones that depend on it for raw materials and the ones it depends on for supplies are reinvigorated.

    “If we use fisheries, for example, which most of us here can identify with, or cassava cultivation, which is also prevalent here, the business chain that will be created out of these alone can turn this whole environment into an industrial/commercial hub. Starch can be made from cassava, which will attract both other food and pharmaceutical industries, flour for bread and other confectioneries, animal feeds by extension a vibrant poultry sector, the associated businesses to service and enable the sector will all come in with the attendant boom in the real estate sector. Just stretch your imagination and see what can happen to employment generation if we can carefully and consciously regenerate agriculture.

    “Having examined some of the roles the sector could play in reducing the present scourge of unemployment, it is imperative that we look at some of the factors that have impeded the growth of agriculture in Nigeria and, especially in our community, so that the roadmap forward can easily be discernible.”

    Onuegbu also spoke about impediments to agricultural development. To boost agriculture investment, he advocated subsidising major input to make the sector both locally and internationally competitive.

    “When a farmer knows that the price at which he will sell his products are already guaranteed even before planting, this reduces exposure to various associated risks and encourages him to expand his output. It allows him to calculate his probable returns with certainty and makes the financial sector to invest in agriculture.

    “Subsidy on power and oil may also serve as a boost to agricultural production. These include but not limited to: Agricultural loans to improve access to funds, provision of incentives – via pricing, subsidy etc, creating greater interface between government agencies, scientific findings and farmers.

    “There is an urgent need for a deliberate policy of creating funding pools for the development of agriculture. The Central Bank of Nigeria at present through the banks have set aside this pool of resources for investment in agriculture, but the problem is that these funds are not accessible to, especially, small- scale holders. The collaterals are very tough, the thresholds very high that the small scale are easily excluded for participation.

    “A system of rebates and tax holidays should be devised to encourage banks to lend to small scale holdings and the government should be able to guarantee some of these loans so that the issue of stringent security requirements would be mitigated making funds readily available for agriculture.

    “I know many young entrepreneurs, who have ideas of what they want to do in agriculture, but are hindered by funds. If funding is made more accessible, their creative energies will be unleashed on the agriculture sector. However, these young men remain frustrated and may, unfortunately, go to their graves without showcasing their ideas. Without funding, ideas will remain in our heads and atrophy.”

    He suggested conscious and deliberate efforts on the part of policy makers to make investment in the agriculture sector more attractive to old and budding entrepreneurs. He also sought duty waivers or reduction on imported equipment and other input for direct use in agricultural projects, tax holidays for organisations involved in agriculture, and price guarantees for certain products of agriculture.