Tag: economic

  • How to attain sustainable economic growth, by experts

    How to attain sustainable economic growth, by experts

    Finance and economic experts have outlined a combination of fiscal and monetary strategies to drive Nigeria’s economic growth.

    President, Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS), Mr Oluwole Adeosun and other eminent professionals in the public and private sector, identified deployment of the Public Private Partnership (PPP) model and provision of liquidity under ease of doing business among other strategies to enhance accelerated growth and development of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

     Addressing participants at the 2023 Annual National Workshop of CIS in Abuja, Adeosun lamented that the last record of Nigerian double-digit GDP growth was in 2002 when the indicator grew by 15.33 per cent.

     According to him, much of the fundamentals of the country’s economy were built in the 1970s and 1980’s. 

    Adeosun explained that adoption of public private partnership (PPP)  model would boost economic growth and development and lift millions of Nigerians out of poverty .

    Read Also: Nigeria gets higher ICAO audit’s rating

     ”It has been established globally that one of the most effective routes towards achieving fast-paced economic growth, is the adoption of Public Private Partnership (PPP). While we accept that this has been tried in Nigeria to some extent, emphasis has not been as it should be. It is our conviction at the Institute that utilizing the capital market optimally will significantly enhance the effectiveness of Public Private Partnership in accelerating the GDP growth in Nigeria.

     ”Our present infrastructure deficit is estimated at US 3 Trillion Dollars over the next 30 years, constituting 30 per cent of the GDP as against 70 per cent by other middle -income nations. This constitutes a setback which needs to be corrected. At CIS, we believe that with genuine concern, altruism, innovative ideas, patriotic zeal and political will on the part of the government, our economy will be set on the right footing,” Adeosun said.

    Plateau State Governor, Mr Caleb Muftwang, who commended the institute for the various professional suggestions to grow the Nigerian economy, reiterated his administration’s determination to utilize the capital market to develop infrastructure in the state, saying no nation can develop without a viable capital market

    Chief Executive Officer, Economic Associates, Dr Ayo Teriba, who spoke on “Macro-Economic Policy Framework for Nigeria”,  explained that government should address the issue of liquidity to tackle insecurity, rising inflation and other macro-economic vagaries affecting Nigeria.

     ”The basic economic problem in Nigeria is illiquidity. This is in form of fiscal illiquidity, forex illiquidity or systemic illiquidity. The dominant source of illiquidity are the challenges associated with exports and inability of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to thrive due to lack of enabling business environment. Growth is a consequence of liquidity. Countries must get liquidity right. Nigeria is rich in assets and should take advantage of assets to grow the economy rather than rely solely on revenue from taxation,” Teriba said.

    Speaking on “ Managing Nigeria’s Sovereign Debt for Economic Stability”, Director General , Debt Management Office (DMO) , Ms Patience Oniha, argued that tax revenue drive should remain one of the major sources of government revenue without prejudice  to other avenues such as exports and FDI.

    President, Association of Capital Market Academics of Nigeria, Professor Uche Uwaleke, noted that effective implementation of the eight-point agenda of the current administration would create ease of doing business in Nigeria and drive investment.

  • 100 days: Expert lauds Tinubu’s strides, predicts steady economic growth

    100 days: Expert lauds Tinubu’s strides, predicts steady economic growth

    A general assessment of President Bola Tinubu’s first 100 days in office shows that things are gradually looking up for the economy, Dr. Oluwatobi Oyefeso, a UK-trained financial economist, has said.

    Speaking in an interview with our correspondent, Oyefeso, the pioneer Managing Director at the Nigerian Capital Market Institute, a subsidiary of the Securities & Exchange Commission, said a lot has been achieved within the first 100 days of Tinubu presidency.

    “Within hundred days in office, Tinubu’s presidency has initiated a number of policy decisions such as the removal of petroleum subsidy, tax reforms, exchange rate unification, etcetera. In my own assessment I think he has not done badly,” he said.

    The Ishara Remo-born technocrat who had short stints as senior lecturer at the University of Aberdeen, University of the West of England Business School, Bristol, University of West London and Northampton University, UK and University of Oman, Middle East, said, “First, the Nigerian economy was overdue for closing the ‘treasury leakages’ in the fiscal segment of our economy.  As such, the government’s removal of the petroleum subsidy, the inauguration of tax reforms and the abrogation of the dual exchange rates were essential macroeconomic decisions necessary for the long-term growth and development of our economy.”

    Pressed further, he said, “Without doubt, the current government has exhibited unequivocal strong political will and readiness to boost our economy and the wellbeing of the Nigerian citizenry.”

    While commenting on President Tinubu’s recent direction to curtail the number of the federal government’s officials travelling overseas on the government’s expenses, Oyefeso, who was a member of the Vision 2020 Committee argued that, “The decision was immensely commendable.  Indeed, it depicted a bold political mind of the government of President Bola Tinubu. Our economy is in dire need of a persistent fiscal discipline in all the three tiers of the government and all public institutions.  It is illogical to continue to experience treasury leakages and expect the government to fulfil all its civic responsibilities to its citizenry.

    Read Also: Tinubu, Biden, G20 leaders condemn terrorism, money laundering

    “All treasury leakages in our economic system should be sealed. Similarly, stopping other leakages would entail pragmatic budget reforms that have the appropriate monitoring and assessment framework, thereby instilling the necessary fiscal discipline, curbing budget cushioning and duplication of the budgeted projects.”

    On what should be the macroeconomic policy of President Tinubu, he said, “The government should unrepentantly focus on reversing the inflationary upward trend to a level conducive to macroeconomic stability. Likewise, the exchange rate should be tackled head-on and stabilised appropriately. Indeed, the government’s macroeconomic policy thrust should focus on economic growth. Further, the centrepiece of the government’s macroeconomic policy should be a total reformation of our taxation system for transparency, fairness and efficiency; in the same manner that the policy should seal all holes of tax evasion and tax avoidance, which are both major sources of ‘tax revenue leakages.’

    “Indeed, the government’s policy should have a more effective monitoring and evaluation framework on the government institutions that are revenue-generating in operations to spur the government’s revenue generation. Effectively driving the above policy vehicle should strengthen all the sub-sectors of our economy and, indeed, stabilise our financial markets.”

  • Lekki Free zone and Lagos’ economic potential

    SIR: Lagos remains the economic and commercial hub of Nigeria and, indeed, the entire West-African sub-region. It generates 26.7% significant portion of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product, besides over 50% of non-oil sector to her credit. Most of these come from taxes, levies, dues and rates paid on commercial transactions that daily take place in the Central Business District of Lagos Island. More importantly, most of the country’s corporate business headquarters, multinational companies and investment organizations are located in Lagos.

    The demands of the increasing population that migrate from other parts of the country have a compelling influence on the development of infrastructures and social amenities in the area of housing, hospitality, transportation. All these are investment opportunities which have expanded the scope entrepreneurship in the commercial nerve centre, called Lagos.

    Over the years, Lagos state has been blessed with visionary leaders who have committed themselves to exploring to the maximum the economic and commercial potentials of the state. On a daily basis diverse people from different parts of the world come into Lagos to explore her numerous economic and commercial potentials. This has paved way for progressive increase in the Internally Generated Revenue, IGR, of the state as well as in her ability to meet critical financial obligations. Today, Lagos targets to hit N50billion as IGR by the end of the current year.

    In a bid to further enhance the economic fortunes of the state and expand the frontiers of the ever growing mega city, Lekki Free Trade Zone, LFTZ, was conceived in partnership with China-Africa Lekki Investment Company.  An initiative of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, former governor of Lagos State, the Zone sits on over 3000 hectares of land along the coastal corridor. The blueprint, over the years, has manifested into physical infrastructural development along the Lekki corridor.

    Towards the full realization of the Lekki Free Trade Zone initiative, the Ambode administration has committed over N2billion in partnership with the Dangote group as a major stakeholder in the construction of a deep sea port that is valued at about N4billion in the zone. The idea is to turn the Lekki corridor into a thriving industrial, commercial and economic hub. As a one stop business community with its full complements, the zone is being equipped with capacity to generate its own electricity. The construction of over 36 kilometres inner roads have been completed for the benefits of subscribers. Meanwhile, proper security arrangement has been put in place to ensure that lives and properties are well secured in the zone. A police station has been completed in this regards.

    Presently, over116 investors have registered with Lekki free Trade Zone, out of which 16 have commenced full operations while another 100 have signified their intention to register and situate their business within the zone. Against bureaucratic delay of involved in clearing goods/raw materials, with its attendant cost implications at the nation’s ports of entry, investors who operate at the zone are exempted from paying import duties on raw materials imported for production/ excise duties for final products if not sold to local market. As part of method of operation, duties will only be paid only on products that are sold into local market.

    As against the over dependence of many states in the country on federal allocation as major source of revenue, Lagos is practically extending her frontiers of wealth creation by providing basic infrastructures, capable of driving Lekki Free Trade Zone to generate further wealth for the state and, indeed, the country as a whole. Without a doubt, by the time current efforts of the state government and her partners to transform the Lekki Free Zone into a huge economically thriving focal point, the state and its residents would be the better for it.

     

    • Bolaji Odumade,

    Lagos State Ministry of Information & Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja.

  • Nigerians getting poorer despite recovery – IMF

    Nigerians getting poorer despite recovery – IMF

    Nigerians are getting poorer despite the ongoing economic recovery after the recession, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said.

    The Fund urged the government to urgently begin economic reforms to turn things around, according to the IMF Annual Article IV review of Nigeria quoted by Reuters.

    The Fund expects the government to “muddle through” in the medium term, and any progress could also be threatened if elections next year consume political energy and resources, the report said.

    The report said economic managers had continued to boast that they had set the economy back on track after emerging from recession in the second quarter of last year.

    It said critics insisted much of the recovery came from a return to oil dependence after a rise in global oil prices and a recovery in crude production, mainly as a result of the militants in the Niger Delta stopping attacks on oil facilities than of economic policy under President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

    The IMF said in the report that the outlook for growth had improved but remained challenging. “Comprehensive and coherent” economic policies “remain urgent and must not be delayed by approaching elections and recovering oil prices,” it said in its annual Article IV review of Nigeria’s economy.

    “Higher oil prices would support a recovery in 2018 but a ‘muddle-through’ outlook is projected for the medium term under current policies, with fiscal dominance and structural constraints leading to continuing falls in real GDP per capita,” the IMF said.

    In the report, IMF identified risks to growth, including additional delays to implementing policies and reforms ahead of 2019 elections, security tensions, and oil prices, a fall which could see capital flows reversed. “Further delays in policy action — including pre-election pressures — can only make the inevitable adjustment more difficult and costlier,” the report said.

    The lender repeated its call for Nigeria to simplify its “complex” foreign exchange system, a bugbear for the IMF for more than a year which has left large gaps between official rates and various windows that certain groups can use to get other rates.

    “Moving towards a unified exchange rate should be pursued as soon as possible,” the IMF said. “(IMF) staff does not support the exchange measures that have given rise to the exchange restrictions and multiple currency practices.”

    The Fund singled out the Central Bank, saying it should discontinue direct interventions in the economy. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) frequently injects hundreds of millions of dollars into the foreign exchange market to keep its own rates stable.

    Commercial banks struggling to remain solvent were also called out, but not identified by the IMF, including one that the lender said was already insolvent: “Some of these banks are kept afloat through continuous recourse to the CBN’s lending facilities.”

    The IMF said it does not comment on purported leaks. A spokeswoman for the Fund said a statement would be issued after the lender’s board meets to discuss its assessment on Friday. A Finance ministry spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a phone call and email requesting comment, Reuters said.

  • ECA to African countries:Exploit waters for economic growth 

    The Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) has called on African countries to harness the potentials in their body of waters for economic growth and prosperity.

    Dr. Vera Songwe, Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) made this call at the opening of the 12thRegional Nile Day Celebrations, held on the theme: ”The Nile: Shared River, Collective Action” in Addis Ababa Ethiopia  recently.

    According to her, ”Africa’s growth and continued prosperity depends on the proper management of our waters. The Nile does not only play a unique role in the cultural heritage of Africa but is also an important extension for achieving sustainable development and the realization of Agendas 2030 and 2063,” said Ms Songwe.

    She added that “the Nile is Africa’s strongest potential for transformational development and the most tangible metaphor for bringing together economic growth, environmental preservation and social inclusion,” she said.

    Songwe highlighted the economic and ecological importance of the Nile, in particular, and other major bodies of water in Africa in general as significantly impacting on human, socioeconomic and the wellbeing of African peoples.

    The Nike she said “gave birth to entire civilizations; and today feeds millions of people who continue to expect benefits from sustainable development and management of this shared crucial resource.”

    The Nile Basin covers ten counties with an area of about 3.1 million km2 and represents 10% of the African continent. Despite considerable variation in the distribution, the Basin receives annual average rainfall of about 650 mm.

  • Netherlands, Nigeria to deepen economic cooperation 

    The government of Netherlands will work with the Nigerian government to improve economic cooperation and investments in key sectors of the Nigerian economy.

    The Netherlands Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Robert Petri made this known yesterday on the floor of the  Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) in Lagos.

    Petri said Netherlands government recognised the importance of agriculture sector, saying that the sector is a priority in Nigeria with the huge opportunities therein.

    He added that this is why the netherlands government want to key and expand their investment in the country.

    “We are planning to intensify our collaboration in different field particularly in Agriculture. There are huge opportunities there. It is the priority of the Nigeria government and we have something to offer in the sector,” he said.

    While commending the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), Petri noted that the Netherlands government and Nigerian government should increase collaboration between the Exchanges in Nigeria and Amsterdam to further deepen its bilateral cooperation.

    “We have many things to do together. We are living in crucial times and the private sector lays a crucial role in promoting economic growth and furthering employment,” he said.

    The Ambassador noted that Nigerian was an extremely important country as its Exchange was one of the largest in Africa and best performing exchange, having listed two Dutch companies, Nigerian Breweries and Unilever, that were doing extremely on the market.

    “In Netherlands, we know how important Nigeria is. We are the third largest investor here and the fourth largest trading partner of Nigeria; we have important economic interest in this country,” he added.

    While the stockbrokers commended the Netherlands ambassador and convoy, urging them to deepen collaborations between the two countries.

  • Special Economic Zones coming

    Special Economic Zones coming

    The local textiles and garment industry will be revamped at the Special Economic Zones (SEZs) to be created, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has said.

    According to Osinbajo, the Federal Government and the private sector will collaborate in creating SEZs, starting first with the textile and garments industry, to spur the nation’s economic development.

    The Vice-President spoke during an interaction with selected investors in Davos during the World Economic Forum, according to a statement issued in Abuja by Mr Laolu Akande, his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity.

    Osinbajo said that “having the right mindset and understanding where we want to go” would affect the implementation, whilst ensuring things got done in the nation’s business environment.

    He said private sector-government collaboration had ensured consistency in the implementation of economic policies.

    The Vice President said he was optimistic about the forthcoming SEZ for garment manufacturing “because it is specific and is something we can measure very quickly’’.

    Osinbajo said that working with investors and allowing them to determine what should be achieved would enable the government to attain set objectives.

    He suggested having labs, where issues around effective implementation plans would be intensely discussed with expert participants drawn from the private sector and public sector.

    The Vice President said such mechanism would also help ensure the realisation of objectives as those labs would set up the implementation agenda and see it to the end.

    Speaking earlier, Sen. Udoma Udoma, the Minister of Budget and National Planning, stressed the advantages for Nigeria to create the SEZ for textile manufacturing.

    He cited the country’s lingua franca, political stability and the provision of an enabling environment for the private sector as advantage to investors.

    Udoma remarked that confidence was being restored in the heart of the people regarding economic policies.

    Mr Okey Enelamah, the Minister for Industry, Trade and Investment, described 2018 as a year of implementation.

    Enelamah stressed the need for a continuous active implementation of the ERGP hinged on investment, trade and industrialisation with enabling environment across the spheres.

    A former World Bank Chief Economist, Prof. Justin Lin, said that the garment and textile industry in Nigeria had huge potential.

    He said this was because Nigeria produced cotton, as well as the availability of good locations around the country, including the large domestic and global markets.

  • Ijaw leaders gather in Bayelsa, seek unity, economic integration

    Ijaw leaders gather in Bayelsa, seek unity, economic integration

    IJAW traditional rulers and leaders from the six states of Bayelsa, Edo, Delta, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Ondo on Friday converged on Yenagoa to seek unity and economic integration. The meeting which was declared open by Governor Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa State also harped on reconciliation, unity, peace, stability and economic progress of the Ijaw nation Dickson urged stakeholders to put aside their differences and forge a strong united front, which he said was the only way to make Ijaw nation relevant among other ethnic nationalities in the country.

    He said the time had come for the Ijaw traditional rulers, elders and leaders of the people to constitute a strong, credible, dependable and fearless leadership for the Ijaw National Congress (INC). A Government House Statement signed by Fidelis Soriwei, said Dickson spoke at the Conference of Ijaw Traditional Rulers and Elders in Yenagoa.

    The governor said it was time for certain key roles to be undertaken and spearheaded by a strong president of the INC and his executive committee in the interest of Ijaw nation. He said that the absence of a strong INC had created a vacuum which was inimical to the development of the Ijaw nation and the Niger Delta. He said: “On the need for Ijaw unity, everybody in the Ijaw nation, all our leaders are on the same page. And I am delighted that all of you who are the critical pillars of the Ijaw movement which is founded on our Ijaw traditional institutions are present here, that is why you have clan representation.

    “Let me draw your attention to the need for the Ijaw nation at this point in time more than any other time to be united as quickly as possible to put processes in place that will lead to the emergence of a credible, solid, dependable, knowledgeable and fearless leadership for our people because there are certain things only the INC can do. ‘There are certain things only the the INC president and his team can say, all of us will give support. Right now there is a vacancy, a vacuum and that is not good at all for us, for the Niger Delta because our people, the Ijaw people have a duty to galvanise this region and close leakages that can lead to more stable and prosperous Niger Delta, and Nigeria.”

  • Recession, our well-being and economic experts

    Since the publication of the 2017 second quarter Gross Domestic Product (GDP) report by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), which indicated that Nigeria has inched out of recession, commentators who apparently do not agree with that position have struggled to link their perception to the state of well-being of majority of Nigerians. To them, since there is still an outcry of hardship in the land, then the country’s economy is still neck deep in recession.

    They maintain that the recession regime is still on, in spite of the marginal 0.55% positive growth gained after five consecutive quarters of negative outing. However, put simply, a recession results when there is two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth in a national economy. Exiting recession therefore is when a succeeding quarter growth level turns positive.

    For a layman, linking exiting recession and escaping hardship might be excusable since it is largely an expectation; but it hardly would be for those who claim to be economic experts. A number of those who have so classified themselves have in their analysis in the past three months exposed their limited relationship with macroeconomic dynamics; even as some of them have jumped into the popular side of the public gallery while still waving the banner of economic expertise.

    Initially the bashing was assumed as a euphoria thing characteristic of the politically partisan Nigerian landscape which sometimes throws sanity to the winds. It was thought ordinarily that it would wane with the frenzy that the report generated in some quarters; but it has not. Some economic “experts” and newspaper columnists still use the erroneous perception to garnish reports aimed at dismissing government’s economic policy initiatives; especially pronouncements that seem to indicate that some progress is being made with gains on the economic landscape. This indeed is unbecoming and requires some intervention otherwise it would linger and eventually become accepted as true.

    One does not need to be an expert in economics to know that there is a difference between exit from recession and full economic recovery, even if they are some cross-cutting variables. Simple economics can attest to this! A recession occurs when there are two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth in an economy; therefore exiting a recession is simply when the quarterly growth turns positive. Even though an exit from recession is a necessary and important precursor for economic recovery, exit from recession does not necessary amount to full economic recovery. There is no real harm talking about it in that light within a context, but using it generally and trying to dress it in an intellectual garb to push a set position would amount to either basic ignorance or intellectual dishonesty.

    For those who are well versed in economics as opposed to those playing politics with it, when an economy slides into a recession, the first step towards recovery is to arrest the slump and prevent the economy from sliding further. It is when this is successfully done that building towards economic recovery begins. Simply put, without an exit from recession there can be no recovery. What the second quarter report simply indicated was that the slump has stopped and recovery has begun. It did not say that the economy has fully recovered and everyone would suddenly quit poverty and exit hardship.

    It is worrisome that some persons who otherwise should know and who should be helping with strategic initiatives and projecting positive values to help drive the economy for the benefit of all have allowed other considerations to becloud their patriotic and professional perspectives. Everybody need not agree on a particular situation or issue, but mischief or half-truths can hardly be helpful in addressing it. Nigeria is particularly unlucky to have some “experts” who are more knowledgeable in propaganda and mercantilism than in the fields they claim to profess.

    At the drop of a hat, more than 100 “experts” could write and discuss on a particular development with largely varying perspectives and positions; often without verifiable indicators, variables, parameters or fundamentals. The country has been invaded by a motley gang of experts who profess according to their respective feelings and expectations rather than the scholarship of their calling.

    Just as in the case of dismissing exit from recession on the basis of low level individual indispositions, some of these “experts” point to government’s poor revenue stream and resultant shortage of expendable money to justify their disagreement. In real economic terms, what would be the relationship between coming out of recession and the amount of money available to government for public sector spending? It would be necessary to explain that the Nigerian economy using GDP-by-output has 46 activities. Public administration is just one of the 46; and the “experts” in their analysis are often referring to just one of the activities. There are others which include:  agriculture that does not depend on whether government has money or not to grow; same with trade and even crude oil which does not come from wells only when government has money to spend. Financial services, arts, entertainment and recreation, telecommunications, among others, do not, in strict economic sense and in this context, depend on the amount of money available to government to spend.

    Apparently because of the mindset of some of these “experts”, they lose sight of the fact that the report was a GDP report on the whole economy, formal and informal, and not a public sector performance report. Government is just one part of the whole economy which the report referred to. By expenditure approach, GDP is household consumption plus government consumption plus government investment plus private sector investment plus net exports. Capital is just one of five parts and the smallest part of the above equation, so it cannot be used to determine recession or otherwise.

    There is no doubt or hiding the fact that the Nigerian economy is still in the woods; but unnecessary bashings from arm-chair economic experts who stand facts on the head is not going to help the situation get better. Instead, it will create more confusion and panic in the system which can never be in the interest of anyone, including the acclaimed experts themselves. A simple content analysis of the proposals and postulations of a number of these experts would produce nothing but a cacophony of sounds with very little or no beneficially related substance, because everyone is seeing things from individual perspectives and assuming that such personal positions are the very remedy to the situation at hand.

     

    • Ikot, a commentator on national issues, resides in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State.
  • Making agriculture mainstay of economic growth

    Making agriculture mainstay of economic growth

    Agriculture was the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy before the discovery of crude oil. From 1960 to 1969, the sector accounted for an average of 57 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and generated 64.5 per cent of export earnings. To sustain contributions of the agricultural sector to the GDP, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) amended the Commercial Agriculture Credit Scheme (CACS) and encouraged more commercial banks to lend to farmers at a single digit interest rate but insisted that no loan under the scheme should exceed N2 billion, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    Agriculture was the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy before the discovery of crude oil. From 1960 to 1969, the sector accounted for an average of 57 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and generated 64.5 per cent of export earnings.

    From 1970 to late 2000s, the sector’s contribution to the GDP and export earnings steadily declined because Nigeria’s focus shifted to petroleum exploration. Over the past five years, the sector has contributed an average of 23.5 per cent to GDP and generated 5.1 per cent of export earnings.

    The recent fall in crude oil prices has triggered conversations around the role of agriculture in economic diversification. The agricultural sector requires massive investments to increase production and to create value addition across the most-profitable segments of the value chain.

    Despite the challenges faced in the sector, there has been improved lending to the agriculture.  For instance, before now, no lender would give depositors’ funds to a farmer. Such loans would be considered lost from the date of approval. But today, the lenders have begun to scramble for agric businesses, having seen the potential, and knowing how much a well-priced loan can add to their profitability, many lenders are keying into the agriculture financing scheme.

    To make this happen, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has amended the Commercial Agriculture Credit Scheme (CACS) following which it pegged maximum loan intake for any project under the scheme at N2 billion.

    It equally pegged the maximum interest rate to the borrower under the scheme at nine per cent, inclusive of all charges.

    The apex bank also approved the participation of deposit money banks in the scheme, with the participating banks required to sponsor projects from any of the target areas in the guidelines, and bear all the credit risk of the loans they will be granting.

    The CACS is being financed from the proceeds of the N200 billion, three-year  bond raised  by  the  Debt  Management  Office  (DMO).  The fund will be  made  available  to  participating  bank(s), to  finance  commercial agricultural enterprises.

    “The single obligor for any project from a participating bank under the Scheme shall be N2 billion while for state governments shall be N1 billion. However, for special schemes and programmes for agricultural development, state governments may be granted concessionary approval for more than N1 billion,” said the CBN.

    The scheme is also expected to help  fast-track  development  of  the  agricultural  sector  of  through the credit  facilities; enhance  national  food  security  by  increasing  food supply  and effecting  lower  agricultural  produce  and  product  prices,  thereby promoting low food inflation.

    The  CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele said agric financing is the way forward for the economy. He explained that part  of  its  developmental  role, the CBN has in collaboration with the Federal Government of Nigeria, represented by the Federal    Ministry    of    Agriculture    and    Rural    Development    (FMARD) established  the  Commercial  Agriculture  Credit  Scheme for  promoting commercial agricultural enterprises in  Nigeria, which is a sub–component of    the    Federal    Government    of    Nigeria    Commercial    Agriculture Development  Programme  (CADP).

    The fund, he added, will complement  other special initiatives of the CBN in providing concessionary funding for agriculture such as the Agricultural Credit Guarantee Scheme (ACGS)   which   is   mostly   for   small   scale   farmers,   Interest   Draw-back scheme,    Agricultural    Credit    Support    Scheme    and    other    similar developmental initiatives.

    Emefiele said there was no need to allocate scarce forex to rice importers when vast amounts of paddy rice of comparable quality produced by poor hardworking local farmers across the rice belts of Nigeria are wasted, and farmers are falling deeper into poverty while we export their jobs and income to rice producing countries abroad? Few decades ago, Nigeria was one of the world’s largest producers of palm oil but today we import nearly 600,000 Metric Tonnes while Indonesia and Malaysia combine to export over 90 per cent of global demand. Under these circumstances, I believe it is appropriate, and in fact, expected, that the CBN contributes to protecting the jobs and incomes of local farmers, using some of the same principles Western Economies use to justify the protection of their farmers through huge subsidies.

    He said that agriculture remains the largest employer of labour in Nigeria and contributes about 24.2 per cent of our GDP. In addition, a good share of the demand for forex today go directly to importing agricultural produce. So, the CBN has both a direct and indirect rationale to ensure that this sector is revived in a significant way. In this regard, we are gratified that the CBN’s Anchor Borrowers’ Programme, together with other initiatives like the Commercial Agriculture Credit Scheme and NIRSAL, are proving to be successful in several states.

    He explained that in Kebbi State alone, over 78,000 smallholder farmers are now cultivating about 100,000 hectares of rice farms. It is expected that over one million metric tonnes of rice will be produced in that State alone this year.

    And this is the bedrock of the recently-launched Lake rice, which is an innovative partnership between the Governments of Lagos and Kebbi States. The CBN remains committed to do more in the identified crops such as rice, maize, sorghum, tomatoes, cassava, cocoa, cotton, dairy, and groundnut.

    “We also need to find ways to make land titling much easier especially for smallholder farmers. In this regard, the Nigeria Incentive-based Risk Sharing System for Agricultural lending (NIRSAL) can assist with technical knowledge and deployment of relevant GIS and Satellite imaging that will realize this within a short period of time,” he said.

    Emefiele said at a workshop on innovative agricultural insurance products, in Lagos that the agricultural sector provides up to 70 per cent of employment in Nigeria and accounts for about 42 per cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Emefiele said the large import food products include wheat, rice, flour, fish, tomato paste, textile and sugar.

    “We are confronted, as a nation with a wide range of development challenges especially with the dwindling global crude oil prices and the nation’s dependence on it as its major source of revenue. There is the need to diversify the mono-cultural tendencies of the economy by developing other sectors of the economy especially agriculture,” he said.

    He said that Nigeria’s formal financial system is lending about four per cent of all formal credit to the agricultural sector compared to three years ago when only about one per cent of all credit went to agriculture. He insisted that lending is still low given the lingering perception by banks that agriculture is highly risky.

    Emefiele said development and expansion of the agricultural insurance sub-sector will go a long way in mitigating against natural disasters and eventually encouraging banks to lend to agriculture.

     

    Bankers’ Committee

    The CBN and deposit money banks, under the aegis of the Bankers’ Committee also restated its commitment to expanding bank lending in agro-business in order to discourage importation of goods can be produced locally.

    The bankers also stated their resolve to explore large corporates as anchors to lend to participants across the value chain to improve the capacity of Nigeria’s agro-businesses so as to create sustainable jobs and inclusive growth.

    The bankers also affirmed their commitment to financial deepening of the economy, improving financial access to key sectors of the economy, innovative solutions for the critical finance of generation, provide finance for small and medium enterprises, among others.

    “We note that four basic commodities that are consumed by Nigerians – rice, wheat, fish and sugar jointly account for a significant amount of the country’s annual import bill. We are convinced that the nation has the capacity to produce these consumables in required amounts to meet our domestic consumption needs. With its attendant impact on Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and job creation, agriculture remains a critical focus sector of the financial system,” it added.

     

    CBN’s roles

    The CBN set the tone when it introduced Nigerian Incentive-Based Risk Sharing Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL) to the banks. By that single policy, banks can lend to agricultural sector and its value chains without fear of losing such funds. The NIRSAL is already being implemented by the banks and is expected to drive agricultural revolution in the country.

    The CBN explained that NIRSAL, unlike previous schemes which encouraged banks to lend without clear strategy to the entire spectrum of the agricultural value chain, emphasises lending to the value chain and to all sizes of producers.

    The Federal Government also plans to double agriculture’s share of banks’ credit to 10 per cent in two years. Also, the Federal Government has made a fundamental shift that agriculture is not a developmental activity, but a business. “The CBN has shifted the mind-set of the banks. It’s a new agriculture sector in which they can actually invest money and make money,” the bank said.

     

    Agric potential

    Already, banks and the CBN are discussing how to increase lending to the sector. For the apex bank, government needs to pay more attention to agriculture, which still has one of the greatest potentials in growing the economy.

    The CBN said that one way of achieving this, is by collaborating with the banking system to fix the value-chain problems in the agricultural sector. She said economic development was about enhancing the productive capacity of an economy by using available resources to reduce risks, remove impediments, which otherwise could hinder investment.

     

    NIRSAL performance

    According to the CBN, NIRSAL is also expected to be a catalyst for innovative risk management strategies, long-term financing for agribusiness and significant job creation by new entrepreneurs.

    “The mandate of NIRSAL is to act as the custodian of all credit guarantee schemes, interest draw back schemes, and commercialisation initiatives related to an integrated value chain approach to agriculture and agribusiness in Nigeria,” the CBN said. Under NIRSAL, there are five pillars to be addressed by an estimated $500 million that will be invested by the CBN, according to the programme document.

    There is also a Risk-sharing Facility of $300 million, planned to address banks’ perception of high-risks in the sector by sharing losses on agricultural loans. There is equally an insurance Facility of $30 million intended to expand insurance products for agricultural lending from the current coverage to new products, such as weather index insurance, new variants of pest and disease insurance.  Besides, there is also a Technical Assistance Facility amounting of $60 million meant to equip banks to lend sustainably to agriculture, producers to borrow and use loans more effectively and increase output of better quality agricultural products, among others.

    The improvement in the sector was linked to access to credit through the new policy on increasing private sector participation, emphasis on the entire agriculture value chain, and using agriculture to boost employment, wealth creation and food security.

    Analysts have commended the performance by the banks as a demonstrating of their belief in the ability of agriculture to transform the economy. The CBN said with the credit trend in the banks, Nigeria may be close to realising its economic diversification objectives that will lead to less dependence on oil.

     

    Stakeholders speak

    Chairman, the Tractor Owners & Hiring Facilities Association of Nigeria (TOHFAN), Alhaji Danladi Garba,

    said Nigeria could produce food, noting that agric business is profitable. He said that gone were the days when borrowers beg banks to lend to the agric sector. Today, the tides have turned. The buzz for agric financing is on, and no lender wants to be left behind.

    Also some banks are also supporting agriculture. For instance, Sterling Bank Plc has financed the purchase of tractors for members of the TOHFAN. The bank noted that its involvement in the agricultural sector was based on the need to reposition the sector as the main stay of the economy given the dwindling oil revenue.

    The bank’s Managing Director, Yemi Adeola, said it finances the purchase/acquisition of tractors from reputable manufacturers such as Massey Ferguson, Mahindra, New Holland, John Deere and Tak Tractors, who will also provide basic training on utilisation and offer after-sales maintenance services.

    The tractors which have been distributed to members of the association following the first disbursement would help in the adoption of mechanised agriculture, leading to additional hectare coverage, higher yields and enhance food security in the country.

    “Sterling Bank Plc has continually restated its commitment to the strategic growth of the agricultural sector by providing adequate funding in alignment with the ongoing reforms in the sector aimed at repositioning it as an attractive business proposition, an input provider for the manufacturing sector and a key foreign exchange earner.

    “The best bank in Agric Award was conferred on the Bank in recognition of its critical role in the dispensing of financial services to actors in the Nigerian agricultural value chain. This we have demonstrated again with the financing of the tractors which will add value to the sector,” he said.

    Also, First City Monument Bank said it will continue to  intensify its support to the agricultural sector and its value chain including lending more to the subsector in the interest of the economy.

    “We note that four basic commodities that are consumed by Nigerians – rice, wheat, fish and sugar jointly account for a significant amount of the country’s annual import bill. We are convinced that the nation has the capacity to produce these consumables in required amounts to meet our domestic consumption needs. With its attendant impact on GDP and job creation, agriculture remains a critical focus sector of the financial system,” it said.

    The bank said the lender is focused on being a strategic partner to the government and other stakeholders in the agric sector to ensure food sufficiency, employment and revenue generation.