Tag: Industrialisation

  • How value addition can fast-track industrialisation

    Nigeria’s huge size should be an economic advantage. But to the dismay of watchers, less endowed African countries are better off. Its industrial production value dropped by 41 per cent between 2012 and 2018, according to the African Development Bank (AfDB); Morocco’s expanded by 16 per cent and Ethiopia’s fivefold. At this year’s annual meetings of the AfDB Group in Busan, Korea, experts pushed for Nigeria and other African countries to prioritise value addition, among other viable options, to fast-track industrialisation and create jobs, Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    Despite Nigeria’s vast human and natural resources, it lags behind less-endowed African countries in the drive for industrialisation.

    African Development Bank (AfDB) President Dr. Akinwumi Adesina brought this reality home when he said Nigeria’s industrial production value dropped by 41 per cent between 2012 and last year.

    The occasion was the opening ceremony of the 53rd annual meetings of the AfDB Group in Busan, South Korea. The AGMs, which are one of the largest economic gatherings on the continent, had:“Accelerating Africa’s Industrialisation” as its theme.

    The meetings brought together thousands of delegates and participants, Heads of State, public and private sector stakeholders, development partners and people in the academia to reflect on Africa’s industrialisation, one of the bank’s High 5 strategic priorities and an avenue to improve the living conditions of Africans.

    At the meetings during, which the bank organised a series of knowledge events to generate new ideas for developing and financing Africa’s industrialisation, Adesina said between 2012 and this year, Africa’s industrial value add declined from $702 billion to $630 billion, a loss of $72 billion.

    He said among countries with the largest industrial output, industrial value added dropped sharply by 41 per cent in Nigeria, 26 per cent in South Africa, 64 per cent in Egypt and 67 per cent in Algeria. According to him, the loss of industrial production value was responsible for the massive unemployment on the continent.

    Curiously, while Nigeria, despite her potential in terms of population and rich agricultural and mineral endowments, was hit by sharp drop in industrial production value, a few other African countries came up strong. For instance, Morocco’s industrial output expanded in the same period by 16 per cent.

    Adesina said: “Ethiopia also witnessed a fivefold increase in its industrial value added, driven by its heavy investments in industrial parks, special economic zones, and strategic partnerships with Chinese companies for its leather industry, and with global textile and garment companies.”

    However, for Nigeria and indeed, other African countries seeking to fast-track their industrialisation, there appears to be light at the end of the tunnel. For instance, the AfDB, at the meetings, announced that to help reverse the continent’s trend of de-industrialisation, it planned to invest over $35 billion in the continent in the next 10 years.

    Adesina said: “Africa must fast-track industrialisation. That is why the AfDB plans to invest $35 billion over the next 10 years in its focus on industrialisation. The bank’s industrialisation strategy hopes to help Africa raise its industrial Gross Domestic Product (GDP) from a little over $700 billion today to over $1.72 trillion by 2030.

    “This will allow Africa’s GDP to rise to over $5.6 trillion, while moving GDP per capita to over $3,350.”

    This was as the government of South Korea announced at the conclusion of the AfDB Ministerial Meeting in Busan a financial assistance of $5 billion for Africa.

    Korean President Moon Jae-in also said the country was committed to sharing its technological and industrial experience with Africa and to help it compete in the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

    While noting that Africa is no longer the sleeping lion, Jae-in said the theme of the Annual Meetings was appropriate for the industrial transformation of the continent, and in facilitating the sharing of experiences with Korea and other partners.

    Understandably, the AfDB’s planned $35 billion investment and South Korea’s financial and technological assistance were music in the ears of African countries particularly Nigeria. For one, the crash in oil price had plunged Nigeria into a debilitating recession, forcing the authorities to turn to industrialisation as a way of diversifying the economy.

    But, of greater importance than the AfDB and South Korea’s heart-warming gestures was the fact that the meetings identified the factors responsible for Nigeria and indeed, Africa’s loss of industrial production value and subsequent long and tortuous road to industrialisation. They also pushed forward a number of robust, strategic options to change the narrative.

     

    Value addition takes centre stage

    For Nigeria to fast-track industrialisation and create jobs, experts say that she must prioritise value addition. Adesina put this in perspective when he said: “The formula for the wealth of nations is clear: rich nations add value to all they produce; poor nations simply export raw materials.

    “Africa needs to industrialise and add value to everything that it produces – from agriculture, to minerals, to oil, gas and metals. Africa needs to move from the bottom to the top of the global value chains.”

    He is right. At present, virtually the basic raw materials to feed the industries in the country are available locally. The snag however, is that they are not available in sufficient quantity and quality. More importantly, most of the available local raw materials are said to be in unusable form, requiring value addition before they can be used by industries.

    The value addition, The Nation learnt, is done mostly by Small and Medium scale Enterprises (SMEs) because they are the off-takers, taking the materials from the unusable form to the next intermediate stage. It is the intermediate raw material that industries require for production.

    However, because of the low capacity of the SMEs to add value to available local raw materials, coupled with lack of access to capital to set up processing facilities, process technology and techniques, and spare parts, among others, they have not been able to fill this gap.

    The Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC) has been consistent in its position that local raw materials in their natural forms do not have any value and would not attract any market demand hence, there is need to process them to meet internationally accepted quality and standards for use by manufacturers.

    Most of the local raw materials are being exported and later imported back in the country as finished products with the addition of certain additives at great cost. The Council, therefore, said there is the need to encourage the local supply of raw materials to halt the huge foreign exchange spent on raw materials importation when they can be sourced locally.

    Interestingly, Nigeria’s potential for production of a wide range of raw materials and products has never been in doubt. The country boosts human and natural resource endowments as well as good climatic conditions to support the production of agro-raw materials and products required by industries.

    The country is also blessed with abundant solid mineral deposits awaiting exploitation as well as huge market. This must be why Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) President, Dr Frank Jacobs, has been calling for continued support for resource-based industrialisation programme.

    He explained that resource-based industrialisation involved the utilisation of the country’s abundant natural resources in producing goods needed in the country. “This is a more sustainable and enduring form of industrialisation, compared with the import-dependent industrialisation, which has been practised in Nigeria for long,” Jacobs said, in Lagos.

    The MAN chief, who said it would also save the country a lot of foreign exchange currently used in importing raw materials and free funds for development projects, called for the deepening of the ongoing backward integration efforts in the agric sector to catalyse more industrial input supply from the sector.

    The performance of the manufacturing sector is said to have improved in recent times. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), for instance, put the real GDP growth in the sector in the first quarter of the year at 3.39 per cent (year on year).

    The figure is higher than that of the first quarter of last year, which was 2.03 per cent and the one for the last quarter of the same year, which was 3.26 per cent.

    Jacobs noted that the growth strategies were initiated when the sector’s performance dipped to 2.85 per cent in the third quarter of last year. The sector’s performance dip prompted government to offer the necessary stimulus required for the sector’s survival.

    The sector’s improved performance, according Jacobs, was also driven in part by MAN’s sustained advocacy, resilience and ingenuity to drive economic rebound.

    He, however, said to sustain the positive growth trajectory as enunciated in the 2018 budget that has a growth target of 3.5 per cent, government needed to effectively synthesise monetary and fiscal policies.

    Experts also say the government must address the constraints holding the manufacturing sector and the economy down such as lack of infrastructure, especially electricity supply, weak bureaucratic institutions and corruption, among other factors that impinge on national competitiveness.

    To them, therefore, the AfDB meetings, apart from putting these issues on the front burner, they drew attention to the need to force a paradigm shift from over dependence on imported raw materials and products to local raw materials utilisation and backward integration in areas where Nigeria has comparative and competitive advantages namely, agric and solid minerals.

    The Emir of Kano and former Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Muhammadu Sanusi II, traced Nigeria and Africa’s post-colonial economic woes to fiscal indiscipline and endemic disregard for its competitive advantages. He said this was why development was stunted and the continent’s global trade ties lopsided in favour of offshore trading partners.

    Sanusi, who participated at the AfDB meetings in Busan, pointed out that nine out of every 10 countries in Africa have huge trade deficits with China, for instance. He said Asia developed mostly on domestic investments and resources, noting that this underscored the need for Nigeria and other African governments to invest in and promote creativity and indigenous enterprise.

    The economist and financial risk expert also advocated a series of structural reforms, including strategic investments in key sectors such as agriculture, infrastructure, education, and SMEs. He also called for deliberate industrial diversification, noting that China has begun to move its mega-sized manufacturing capabilities out of low-cost industries.

    That was not all. Sanusi also said there was the need to eradicate constitutional provisions and structures that increase the cost of governance at national and sub-national levels, manage demographic growth, and revamp and harmonise moribund and ineffective customs and excise duties that promote cross-border smuggling and revenue losses to governments.

    “Africa’s economic transformation will be best achieved through fast-tracking regional cooperation and the execution of hard-nosed structural reforms that focus on the development of the continent’s human capital and material resources,” the Emir added.

    For the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Strategy and Finance, Republic of Korea, Dong Yeon Kim, a new approach was urgently needed, one that encourages innovative industrialisation to translate Africa’s potential into economic prosperity.

    “Industrialisation policy should take into account the unique conditions of each country. New technologies can provide leapfrogging opportunities by speeding up the industrialisation process and creating new value,” he said, noting that smart infrastructure presents a promising area for Korea’s contribution.

    “Smart infrastructure can provide a new solution to Africa’s shortage in roads, airports and harbours. It allows optimal use of resources and can even replace traditional infrastructure.

    “Africa is already producing substantial outcomes in this area. Going forward, Korea is strongly committed to sharing its rich expertise and experience as Africa’s close partner,” Kim said.

  • Industrialisation prospect rises as steel firm re-opens

    Nigeria’s hope of industrialization is looking up as a steel rolling company, Premium Steel and Mines Limited opens in Delta State.

    The rolling steel section of company, which is an offshoot of the old Delta Steel Company, was commissioned at the weekend by Delta State governor, Ifianyi Okowa.

    The Managing Director/CEO of the company, Prasanta Mishra, said the other sections of the company would also take-off at the shortest possible time, emphasising that the company will develop to make Nigeria the hub of rolling steel business in Africa.

    Okowa, at the inauguration, urged the company’s management to always comply with the local content policy of government, stressing that the host communities should be engaged in relevant undertakings of the company.

    The former Delta Steel Company Oviwian –Aladja had been moribund for the past twenty years before its resuscitation by the Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON).

    The Minister of Solid Minerals, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, said the rebirth of the steel company underscores the commitment of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration to develop the extractive sector of the economy towards a comprehensively industrialise in Nigeria.

     

  • Why I am passionate about industrialisation, by Udom

    Why I am passionate about industrialisation, by Udom

    Akwa Ibom State Governor Emmanuel Udom has explained his undying passion for industrialisation of the state is borne out of the fact it is the only gateway to economic prosperity and security.

    He vowed to stop at nothing until the state becomes fully industrialized.

    Udom spoke when a delegation of Christian leaders under the auspices of Akwa Ibom fathers of faith initiative paid him a courtesy visit recently.

    He said: “For me, industrialisation of Akwa Ibom is more or less a covenant mandate with God. I am committed to ensuring we move the state from reliance on civil service to fully becoming economically-driven.

    “If we become industrialised, our people can pursue true economic prosperity and the crime rate will reduce drastically.

    “People will be able to achieve their economic goals and pay more taxes without much ado. For me, the industrialisation policy is the best way to go.”

    The governor pointed out the Ibaka Deep Seaports and cargo handling capacity of the Uyo International Airport were conceived to turn the state to the economic hub of the South South region.

    He added the Ibom Industrial City project is also geared at shoring up the industralisation drive of his administration.

    He called on the Christian leaders to continue to pray for the full realisation of the industralisation drive of his administration.

  • FG urges African nations to scale up innovation, industrialisation

    Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama has called on African countries to scale up employment generation, infrastructure development, innovation and industrialisation.

    Onyeama spoke in a statement by his spokesman, Dr Tope Elias-Fatile, in Abuja yesterday.

    The minister spoke at the ongoing 32nd Ordinary Session of the Executive Council of the African Union at the AU Headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

    He was reacting to the Report of the AU Ministerial Follow up Committee on the implementation of Agenda 2063.

    Onyeama underscored the need for Africa to scale up employment generation for the youth, Social Investment Programmes, Youth and Women empowerment, Good governance, Infrastructure development, Science, Technology, Innovation and industrialisation.

    He said Nigeria strongly believes that through the accelerated implementation of Agenda 2063- “The Africa We Want,” the African development landscape will change for the better.

    “To this end, Nigeria is committed to four strategic vehicles of implementing Agenda 2063, which are: orientation, ensuring efficiency, financing, and accountability.”

    He intimated the Council that in its effort to align and deliver on Agenda 2063 and its first 10-year implementation, Nigeria had mainstreamed the Agenda along with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs) into its national planning process.

    He explained that this was reflected in the Nigerian Economic Recovery and Growth Plan launched in 2016 by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The minister assured that Nigeria would continue to play an active role in the implementation of the flagship projects under the First 10-Year Implementation Plan (2014-2023).

    He stressed that this in particular included the establishment of the Continental Free Trade Area, free movement of persons, silencing the guns in Africa by year 2020, and establishment of the single African Air Transport Market.

    “Altogether, these are meant to enhance intra-Africa trade and integration of the entire continent,” he said

     

  • Chinese firm set to develop Inland Container Depot in Edo

    Chinese firm set to develop Inland Container Depot in Edo

    A Chinese firm, China Harbour Engineering Company (Nig.) Ltd, has indicated its readiness to go into partnership with Atlantique Marine Engineering Services, Edo Inland Container Depot,  known as AMES-Edo ICD on export.

    Mr Jason Wang, who led a seven-man delegation of the firm to the state on the invitation of Edo Government, dropped the hint on Friday in Benin.

    Wang and his team also visited the Gelegele seaport, the operational base of the AMES-Edo Inland Container Depot to assess the work done so far.

    Wang said he was impressed and that his firm would look at possible ways of collaborating and partnering with AMES-Edo to drive the project to its earliest conclusion and begin full operation.

    “We are impressed with the work done here so far. China Harbour Engineerng Company ( Nig.) Ltd will look at possible ways of collaboration to drive the project to its earliest conclusion,” he said.

    He said the team was in the state as a follow up to  Gov. Godwin Obaseki’s business visit to the company in China about three weeks ago where an MOU was signed by the state government and the company to develop the Gelegele Seaport.

    READ ALSO: Gelegele Seaport: China Harbour arrives Benin, commences work on project

    Dr Charles Akhigbe, Chief Executive Officer ( CEO ) of Atlantique Marine and Engineering Services, AMES, the promoters of the AMES-Edo inland container depot, said the organisation was confident that the proposed inland container depot would reduce the cost of export of agricultural produce and increase government’s GDP.

    Akhigbe disclosed that the port was just three steps from final approval for full operations to commence.

    He said  the project would create not less than 3,000 jobs for youths and provide the platform for exchange of knowledge between government and foreign investors.

    He also said that the container depot would emerge as the pioneer full-fledged inland container depot in Southern Nigeria to commence operation and would immediately serve the need of haulage services.

    According to Wang, the company has already commenced negotiation with the Federal Government to build modern railway lines as a primary mode for long distance haulage of cargo, noting that 75 per cent of Nigeria’s total export passed through Edo.

    “Discussion is ongoing with the Nigeria Railway Corporation to use BOT PPP mode to construct 110km short spur line from Agbor to Edo inland container depot.

    “For now the inland container depot will operate 100 per cent by road but in the next 6-10 years, 40 per cent will go by road while 60 per cent will be by rail.

    “The phases one and two of the inland container depot would accommodate 12, 000 units of 40ft TEUs and 8,000 units of 40ft TEUs with a maximum of 25,000 TEUs at any given time,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the Senior Special Assistant to the Edo Governor on Business Bureau, Mr. Edward Osayande, said the governor was committed to industrialising the state by encouraging public private partnership.

    He said the inland container depot was the central plank of the state government’s effort at creating jobs through industrialisation.

    He also stressed the need to bring the Gelegele Seaport, AMES-Edo inland container depot and Edo Industrial Park together to drive development in the state.

    NAN

  • Job losses force focus on entrepreneurship, industrialisation

    Job losses force focus on entrepreneurship, industrialisation

    Over four million Nigerians lost their jobs last year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). Unemployment rate rose at an all-time high of 18.8 per cent in the third quarter of 2017, with NBS projecting that the figure might get worse. The grim statistics, which underscored the economy’s vulnerability despite exiting the recession, may have prompted renewed focus on entrepreneurship, industrialisation and stronger public-private sector collaboration this year. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    Grim statistics abound to challenge economic managers working with the private sector to halt the unemployment rate in the country.

    The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) brought the reality of the crisis in the labour market nearer home when it said that in nine months, last January to September, 4.07 million Nigerians lost their jobs.

    The Bureau, in its unemployment report for third quarter of last year, said the number of Nigerians that became unemployed rose from 11.92 million in the first quarter of last year to 13.58 million and 15.99 million in the second and third quarters.

    It said between the second and the third quarters, the number of economically active or working age population (15-64) increased from 110.3 million to 111.1 million.

    It said the population of Nigeria’s labour force increased from 83.9 million in second quarter 2017 to 85.1 million in third quarter, while the total number of people in full-time employment (at least 40 hours weekly) declined from 52.7 million in second quarter to 51.1 million in third quarter.

    The Bureau added that unemployment rate increased from 14.2 per cent in fourth quarter 2016 to 16.2 per cent in the second quarter and 18.8 per cent in third quarter.

    The NBS report further said the number of people within the labour force who are unemployed or underemployed increased from 13.6 million and 17.7 million in the second quarter, to 15.9 million and 18 million in third quarter.

    According to it, the total unemployment and underemployment combined increased from 37.2 per cent in the previous quarter to 40 per cent in third quarter.

    The Bureau, among other disturbing revelations, emphasised that the increasing unemployment and underemployment rates implied that though the economy was out of recession, the domestic labour market was still fragile.

    NBS added that growths in the past two quarters of last year had also not been strong enough to provide employment in Nigeria’s domestic labour market.

    Though disconcerting, the unemployment figures churned out by the NBS only confirmed what not a few Nigerians and operators in various sectors already knew: Nigeria’s unemployment crisis has reached frightening dimension.

    The situation, they noted, requires more efforts by various tiers of the government, private sector operators, development partners, unemployed Nigerians and other critical stakeholders to stem the tide this New Year.

    Even before the NBS report, which jolted Nigerians and also put the administration on the spot with regards to promise in job creation, experts in the employment space had consistently canvassed increased support for entrepreneurship, particularly for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).

    They also argue that there is no better time than now to put more steam into the drive for industrialisation.

    The United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) Regional Office, Nigeria, is one of those that has long pushed this position by calling on both the Federal and State Governments to increase their support for entrepreneurship and industrial development, noting that this could be done by putting in place more business –friendly policies and incentives.

    The Officer in Charge, UNIDO Regional Office, Nigeria, Dr. Chuma Ezedinma, did not mince words when he noted: “Entrepreneurship and industrialisation are two important ingredients for stimulating economic growth, job creation and poverty reduction in both developed economies and economies in transition including Nigeria.”

    Ezedinma, who spoke at a UNIDO Stakeholders’ Workshop in Abuja, also said increased support for SMEs could help tame the unemployment monster.

    “Successful SMEs are the primary engines for job creation, income growth, and poverty reduction. Small businesses broaden the base of participation in society, create jobs, decentralise economic power, and give people a stake in the future.”

    He said the government could encourage entrepreneurship and small businesses through its tax policy (corporate tax rate reductions, tax credits for investment and tax holidays).

    Others are regulatory policy (simpler regulatory processes and reducing the cost of compliance with government regulations), access to capital (here the proposed development commercial banks can be of assistance), and the legal protection of property rights.

    UNIDO has been at the forefront of promoting Inclusive and Sustainable Industrial Development (ISID) in Nigeria and globally. It has never hidden its intention to support and partner the government and private sector in order to achieve this.

    But, going by the NBS latest unemployment statistics, the government and private sector appear to have failed to work with the Organisation to enable Nigerians benefit maximally from UNIDO’s global expertise in the area of entrepreneurship and industrial development.

    However, a new dawn may be in the offing for unemployed Nigerians this year as job creation appears to engage the attention of government and the private sector.

    Worried by the fragility of the domestic labour market, despite the economy’s exit from recession, members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) have urged the Federal Government to adopt measures to create jobs this year.

    The OPS in its reaction to the 18.8 per cent unemployment rate, noted that many employers, including the public sector, found it difficult to pay workers as and when due.

    The OPS said this had necessitated the need for measures that would impact on citizens’ welfare, especially lower food prices, reduced cost of healthcare, improved transportation system, constant power supply and security of lives and property.

    Noting that Nigeria’s unemployment rate was one of the highest in the world, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) Director-General, Mr. Muda Yusuf, said increased support for SMEs and business start-ups through capacity building and funding would help.

    He identified lack of finance, inadequate infrastructural facilities, shortage of skilled manpower, poor entrepreneurial skills and lack of enabling operating environment, among others, as some of the challenges holding SMEs down. He, therefore, said there was the need to address these challenges to unleash SMEs’ potential.

    According to Yusuf, SMEs boast huge potential for employment generation and wealth creation, if adequately encouraged. He said by helping to create more jobs, SMEs reduce unemployment and its associated high crime rate.

    Indeed, the rising spate of unemployment, particularly among the youths, according to the experts, was responsible for the various vices plaguing the country. They include political instability, civil unrest, rising crime wave (kidnapping, robbery, cultism, prostitution, advanced fee fraud, otherwise called ‘419’) and reduced wages, among others.

    To curtail the rising crime wave across the country, experts have called on the government to fast-track its diversification strategy as encapsulated in the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) by supporting growth in income enhancing and job creating sectors, such as SMEs, mining and agriculture.

     

    Govt: More jobs coming this year

     

    But the President Muhammadu Buhari administration has said the government was slowly stabilising the economy through sustainable policies and programmes captured in the economic recovery plan, as part of efforts to create millions of jobs this year.

    Buhari in his New Year speech said the massive public works being spearheaded by his government would lead to the nation’s recovery and simultaneously create millions of jobs.

    According to him, the diversification efforts have resulted in improved output, particularly in the agriculture and solid minerals sectors, while the relative exchange rate stability has improved the manufacturing sector’s performance.

    “Two years ago, I appealed to people to go back to the land. I am highly gratified that agriculture has picked up, contributing to the government’s effort to restructure the economy.

    “Rice imports will stop this year. Local rice, fresher and more nutritious will be on our dishes from now on,” the president added.

    Apparently aligning with the call for public-private sector collaboration in job creation, Buhari appealed to “enterprising Nigerians” with useful ideas to get involved in job creation, noting that advanced countries were built through the involvement of enterprising persons.

    Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, also assured Nigerians of a brighter 2018. According to him, efforts were in top gear by the Federal Government to stem job losses and create new ones.

    The minister in a New Year message urged Nigerians not to tremble over the statistics on job losses. According to him, a similar release by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) indicated more than seven million job growth in the agricultural sector.

    Ngige said: “I wish to assure Nigerians that 2018 will not be as bleak as 2017 in terms of job losses as the Federal Government has put enough checks to forestall a repeat of what was encountered in 2017.

    “The figure released by the NBS must be placed alongside statistics by the CBN, which showed that over seven million jobs have been created in the agricultural sector. This is the only way to arrive at a balanced job situation in the country.”

    The Minister reiterated that the Federal Government will work harder in the New Year to create more jobs and sustain the efforts at protecting the existing ones. “We shall continue to maintain our principled stand against retrenchment and encourage the state governments to do same,” he added.

    However, beyond getting state governments’ buy-in to rein in the unemployment monster that is believed to be responsible for the various vices currently plaguing the country, experts in diverse sectors argue that there is the need to overhaul the programmes and courses being run by universities and also change the current paradigm from emphasis on credentials and certificates to competence, among other solutions .

     

  • Dangote gets kudos for industrialisation

    Dangote gets kudos for industrialisation

    Kano State Governor Umar Ganduje has praised the President/CEO, Dangote Industries Limited, Aliko Dangote, for his industrialisation effort in almost all sectors of the economy.

    Ganduje, who spoke at Dangote Special Day at the Kano Trade Fair, said Nigeria is lucky to be blessed with Aliko Dangote, who has made Nigeria and Africa proud.

    Represented by the Commissioner for Commerce, Industry, Cooperatives and Tourism, Ahmad Rabiu, the governor said Dangote is synonymous with development, given his initiative in the economy.

    His words: “Dangote Group and Dangote Foundation have touched lives in Nigeria and beyond. There is no household that does not use Dangote products. Everywhere you go, there are Dangote products and services from which many are benefitting.”

    Ganduje hoped the 38th Kano International Trade Fair will be a success because Dangote is involved.

    Aliko Dangote said the government’s diversification agenda put the economy on the right trajectory for growth.

    According to him, diversification will take the country to the next level and away from overdependence on oil.

    Dangote, who was represented by the General Manager, Stakeholder Management, Dangote Group, Bello Abdullahi Dan-Musa, said the country should continue to explore opportunities in various sectors to grow the economy.

    His words: ”We are committed to diversification as it is what Nigeria needs and indeed Africa, to add value to our basic endowments for economic growth.

    “That is why we are also exploring opportunities in the different sectors, cement, flour, salt, sugar and recently, Oil and Gas and agribusiness to move the country forward.

    “Dangote businesses are meant to impact the people’s lives in different ways, that is why Dangote Group is structured to deliver basic goods and services that are essential for improving standard of living.”

  • “Industrialisation driving our economy”

    Akwa Ibom State government said it has intensified efforts at making the state economy robust and resilient.

    Speaking with The Nation, its Commissioner for Information & Strategy, Mr. Charles Udoh, said the state has set up more industries in order to allow more inflow of Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) and create more jobs for the people.

    He described the state as a “huge work station” in reference to the various infrastructure development and industries springing up in several parts of the state.

    Udoh also said the inauguration of syringe and metering industries, as well as other key projects initiated by the current administration in addition to massive investments in agriculture has created opportunities for the economic prosperity of the state and employment opportunities.

    “Beyond the businesses that are on ground, we are also working on a cattle ranch. We have an agreement with an investor from Mexico, who is going to bring in 2,000 herds of cattle into the ranch once it is ready.

    With the ranch on ground, we will have a milk processing factory in addition to hosting a yoghurt processing factory including the value chain,” Udoh said.

    Elaborating more on the state’s industrialisation policy, he said the toothpick and pencil factories established by Governor Udom Emmanuel are producing over 15,000 kilo grammes of toothpick and 20,000 pencils within few hours of production.

    The state, Udoh further said, was putting in place infrastructure to attract foreign investors as opportunity exists in building a gas fired thermal power plant in the state.

    “There is an opportunity to build a gas fired thermal power plant designed to generate 500 megawatts of electricity into the national grid. Akwa Ibom State has the largest reserves of oil and gas in Nigeria. Any power generated is guaranteed to be purchased by the Federal Government. It is also possible to generate for a secluded area (captive power). The gas required to power the plants in abundance,” he said.

    While also noting that there were abundant rubber trees in the Akwa Ibom/Cross River belt, Udoh said an opportunity also exist for the setting up of a tire manufacturing plant.

    According to him, all vehicle tyres used in Nigeria are currently imported. He added that with a population of over 180 million, vehicles plying Nigeria roads are estimated to be in the region of 30 million, conservatively.

    On the governor’s performance, the commissioner said: “In just two years in office, Governor Emmanuel has implemented several people oriented socio-economic programmes and projects, which have catapulted Akwa Ibom State into the premier league of states in Nigeria.

    He said the state governor was building on the foundation laid by his predecessors, while leading the state on the path of economic prosperity anchored on sustainable development.

    He added that the current administration’s cardinal objective was to transform the state into an industrial hub, a preferred destination for tourism and a major food basket.

    “The success level recorded was accentuated in a recent report of the Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics, which listed Akwa Ibom as the second best FDI destination in the country for the year 2016,” Udoh said.

  • Industrialisation: Akwa Ibom model

    During a recent trip to South Korea, my admiration for this coastal Asian nation soared. Any visitor to South Korea would be amazed at the level of automation of the society which is a direct function of her high industrialisation status. Remember, South Korea is the home of Samsung, KIA, Hyundai, LG among other conglomerates originally called Chaebols (family-controlled conglomerates). They provided the impetus for a heavily industrialised South Korea of today. Though, most Chaebols started out as family-owned businesses, they enjoyed significant government support and patronage. In some cases, government of Korea had to intervene just so the conglomerates do not go to ruins. Ever since they have kept afloat and have become the pride of South Korea, providing the country’s biggest export earnings from automobiles to electronics.

    In Japan, under the leadership of Emperor Meiji, the spirit of Fukoku Kyohei or ‘rich country, strong army’, was born to birth a new era of industrial revolution. Whether it is the Zaibatsu or Keirestu (Japanese conglomerates) from the 19th and 20th centuries that prefaced modern day Toyota, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Sony, Nissan among others, Asians have a rich history of industrialization spurred by family and deliberate government interventions.

    These Asians have become models for emerging economies. Africans would do themselves well to understudy the amazing miracles wrought by these Asians in the complex sphere of industrialization. Africa is under-industrialised, not because of market size but by an amalgamation of several factors which a new report by the World Bank Group – Global investment Competitiveness Report 2017/2018, exposed and explained. The report said reducing risks in developing countries is key to driving the needed development and to spur investment and growth in these nations.

    According to the investor survey report, political stability and security along with a stable legal and regulatory environment are the leading country characteristics considered by executives in multinational corporations before they commit capital to a new venture. These considerations far outweigh such issues as low tax rates and labour costs.

    Investment incentives may help attract Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) but are generally effective only when investors are wavering between similar locations as a new base for their exports. The report says when investment is motivated by a desire to access a domestic market or extract natural resources, incentives are generally ineffective.

    The report asserts further that the level of legal protections against political and regulatory risks, such as expropriation of property, currency transfer and convertibility restrictions, and lack of transparency in dealing with public agencies are key to FDI flows.  The World Bank report adds that reducing these risks at the country level is a foundation without which reducing project-level risks will not lead to increased investment and growth in developing countries.

    This is the context in which the industrialisation policy of Governor Udom Emmanuel of Akwa Ibom State deserves a disquisition. The governor made it clear that the plank of his governance would be the industrialization of a state that has remained largely a civil service state. Perhaps drawing from his private sector experience as an investment banker, Governor Udom has created within a short period of his leadership, oasis of industries which has brought FDI to the state, created thousands of direct and ancillary jobs and improved the skills set of the people.

    A few examples would suffice here. Hitherto moribund industries such as the Peacock Paint factory has been resuscitated and now in full operations; a syringes manufacturing company was recently commissioned by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo. Nigeria is a heavy importer of syringes which is an abnormally because all the raw materials required to produce syringes are within our shores. The syringes company will produce initial 400,000 syringes with the capacity to produce a billion a year.  Also commissioned was a Metering Solutions company which will ensure Nigerians get billed accurately by electricity companies. Jobs are being created so also is economies of scale built around these industries all of which put money in the hands of the people. Direct Foreign Investments are flooding the state. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) recently reported that Akwa Ibom State enjoys the second largest in- flow of direct foreign investments after Lagos. The NBS listed Lagos, Akwa Ibom, Ogun, Oyo, Rivers states and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, as the most investors-friendly destinations in the country in the first quarter of 2017.

    A breakdown showed that the five states and the FCT attracted a total of $908.268m capital inflow in the first quarter of 2017.  Lagos tops the list with 95 per cent of the capital, attracting inflow of $865.718. This is not surprising as Lagos is still by far the hub of commercial activities in the country. Next to Lagos is Akwa Ibom, which in recent years has become a major tourism destination. The state attracted $18.361m capital inflow pushing behind the FCT ($14.867m), Ogun ($5.351m), Oyo ($3.419m) and Rivers ($550,000) respectively.

    The emergence of Akwa Ibom as a rapidly industrializing state is a direct function of the vision of Governor Udom. The former banker is quietly applying a domesticated form of the Asian and World Bank formula for industrialization by providing legal protections against political and regulatory risks through the state House of Assembly for investors. The peace and security in the state buoyed by political will on the part of the governor to lead the charge on industrialization, in the fashion of Asian leaders, have contributed to lifting the state to its new status ahead of hitherto more strategically located states.

    The people of Akwa Ibom may not fully grasp the significance of the Udom industrial revolution mission but in years to come, these companies which are today regarded as start-ups considering their size and capacity would grow to become conglomerates especially when you factor the wisdom to float the companies as public-private-partnerships (PPP). This is the model that thrust the Chaebols and the Zaibatsus from family start-ups into global reckoning as conglomerates in what is today regarded as the Asian industrialization miracles.

    What is happening in Akwa Ibom in the area of industrialisation is not an accident. It is a product of careful planning and commitment to a promise. During his inaugural speech on May 29, 2015, the Governor said one of his missions among others was: “To leverage and build on the uncommon transformation of the Governor Godswill Obot Akpabio administration; to transform the economy of our state via industrialisation and sustained public-private sector initiative, thereby opening up opportunities for growth and improved living standards”.

    The recent ranking by NBS of the state as second only to Lagos in the area of investment capital inflow is a fulfilment of a campaign promise; the result of strategic thinking from a leader who sees opportunity where others see challenges. In this age, only frontier thinkers triumph in leadership. They rule the roost because they combine character and strategy. They are leaders for whom talk is not enough; you must walk the talk; you must show the way for others to follow. Governor Udom is writ large here. He is a leader who has matched effective thinking with productive action. Good leaders don’t just talk; they act, do and perform. Akwa Ibom governor has mastered this art and his people are the happier for it.

     

    • Ekong writes from Lagos.
  • How dearth of skilled artisans hurts industrialisation

    How dearth of skilled artisans hurts industrialisation

    The global artisan economy is $34 billion. Nigeria has failed to leverage this group in the informal sector to drive industrialisation and create jobs. Instead, the sector, according to experts, is 80 per cent dominated by foreign artisans and craftsmen. The foreigners are said to be repatriating as much as N900 billion from Nigeria annually, leaving many local artisans jobless. However, efforts to empower local artisans and hopefully reverse the trend are on course. Asst Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    The National Union of Civil Engineering, Construction, Furniture and Wood Workers (NUCECFWW) President General, Comrade Amaechi Asugwuni, is literarily up in arms. The labour unionist is livid over the massive loss of jobs by his members to expatriates’ invasion of the local construction industry.

    “We now see Indians and Chinese taking the jobs of technicians and artisans that can be done by Nigerians. This should be unacceptable to a country in search of development,” Asugwuni fumed, putting the blame at the Federal Government’s doorstep.

    The NUCECFWW helmsman did not mince words, last week, when he accused the Federal Government of failing to halt the abuse of expatriate quota. “Nigeria should be enhancing the development of the country through provision of jobs,” he said, observing that: “Unfortunately, successive governments have been very weak in resisting abuse of expatriate quota and casualisation of workers.”

    Asugwuni argued, for instance, that the kind of jobs that the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) should approve should be clearly defined, insisting that people coming into the country as carpenters under the guise of expatriates should no longer be tolerated.

    “What is expatriate about carpenters, technicians and iron benders, among other jobs done by so-called expatriates that cannot supervise projects?” the labour leader asked, adding that there are multinational companies owned by Nigerians that also perpetuate practices that dehumanise Nigerian workers.

    Asugwuni’s worries are not without justification. For long, Nigerian artisans and craftsmen have been under their foreign counterparts’ shadow, as artisans from India, Japan, China, and neighbouring West African countries, such as Ghana, Togo, Republic of Benin, Chad, and Niger take over jobs meant for Nigerian artisans in construction and other sectors.

    The affected local artisans and craftsmen, who remain idle and jobless while foreigners call the shot, include bricklayers, carpenters, steel fabricators, plumbers, electricians, tillers, painters and casters.

    Others are tailors, barbers, masons, cobblers and other micro, small and medium-scale service providers. Also included are operators in events management, automobile repairers and car washers, to name but a few.

    Former Chairman, Board of Directors, A.G. Leventis (Nig) Plc, Chief Joseph Babatunde Oke, put the foreign dominance of Nigeria’s artisan economy in perspective when he revealed that as much as 80 per cent of artisans working in Nigeria are foreigners, mostly from neighbouring West African countries.

    Oke, a mechanical engineer, spoke in Lagos, on the sideline of the public presentation of his autobiography, “A Rose For My Mother.” He expressed worries that various categories of artisans are usually imported from neighbouring West African countries to work in building and related industries since the scrapping of Trade Centres many years ago.

    The foreign artisans, he lamented, are into various aspects of the housing, construction and related industries like carpentry, iron bending, tiling, welding, Plaster of Paris (PoP) and bricklaying, among others. He said they took over those areas of trade because the few trained local artisans were aging and new ones have not been trained to replace them.

    Dearth of artisans forcing huge capital flight

    Oke lamented that the dearth of junior technical manpower and subsequent dominance of foreign artisans has resulted in huge capital flight and also worsened unemployment in the country.

    The technocrat, who is also a  member of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), harped on the need to “Bridge this gap in technical manpower.”

    The Nation learnt from industry operators and stakeholders that the capital flight foisted on Nigeria by the gap in technical manpower is huge. For instance, the Chairman of Artisans and Craftsmen Training Board, Mr. Musa Mshalgaya, revealed that foreign artisans and craftsmen working in Nigeria repatriate about N900 billion every year.

    Mshalgaya, who spoke in Abuja, shortly after his inauguration as chairman, Advisory Board of Construction Skills Training and Empowerment Programme (C-STEmp), attributed the disturbing situation to the fact that Nigerian-trained artisans were aging out and new ones haven’t been trained to replace them. Besides, many Nigerians, he said, feel they have other forms of work outside artisanship and craftsmanship.

    Indeed, most artisans are aging out and retiring from their professions, while new entrants are minimal. The older artisans can hardly operate their businesses without the services of apprentices and younger workers. Both the older and younger artisans that would have, perhaps, challenged the dominance of the foreigners are faced with difficult operating environment.

    Apart from the difficulty in accessing capital, local artisans are hamstrung by Nigerians’ penchant for foreign goods/services, which manifests in lack of patronage of made-in-Nigeria goods/services. Other challenges that stand in their way include lack of supportive infrastructure, particularly power, insecurity, policy inconsistency, and insincerity amongst artisans.

    Job creation, industrialisation suffer

    According to experts, the global artisan economy is $34 billion per year industry. But Nigeria has not been able to claim a chunk of this burgeoning informal sector of the global economy to give fresh impetus to her current industrialisation drive.

    Despite her competitive advantage in this sector, given her rich cultural traditions, large army of artisans, though mostly unskilled, and unique raw materials, Africa’s largest economy and most populous country has yet to fully exploit the potential of her artisan economy to create jobs and drive industrialisation.

    Already, there are fears that technical labour skills may soon disappear completely from the development landscape, with serious negative consequences for economic growth and development, unless urgent and concerted efforts are made to halt the decline.

    This is so considering the fact that the artisan sector is believed to be the second largest employer behind agriculture in the developing world including Nigeria. Millions of people—most of them women—participate in the artisan economy, practicing traditional crafts as a means to earn income and sustain their livelihoods.

    In fact, experts said developing countries currently account for 65 per cent of handicraft exports around the world. They, however, regretted that Nigeria’s artisan sector still has a long way to go to reach its full potential as a sustainable source of income generation, employment, and economic growth for impoverished communities.

    At present, about 20, 000 Nigerian artisans particularly those in the construction industry, are said to be jobless, with many resorting to commercial motorcycle riding, popularly called okada to make ends meet.

    Others have also turned to petty trading to make ends meet, while others, for lack of means of livelihood, have taken to armed robbery, kidnapping, advance fee fraud, otherwise called ‘419’ and other vices.

    The Association of Building Consultants and Artisans of Nigeria (ABCAN), for instance, confirmed that over 20, 000 of its members across the country are without job. ABCAN took a swipe on home builders and government, accusing them of preferring foreign artisans to indigenous ones.

    To drive home their frustration, ABCAN President, Mr. Jimmy Oshinubi, threatened that if government does not stop giving construction jobs to foreign artisans at the detriment of locals, “it will result to xenophobic attack in Nigeria just as it happened in South Africa.”

    His threat underscored the need to heed Oke and other experts’ wise counsel on the need to establish a technical college that will provide training opportunities and development of various categories of artisans. Oke said the establishment of a technical college for this purpose was one of the aims of his Foundation.

    Public, private sector wade in

    To halt the impending disappearance of technical labour skills and services from the informal sector and also unleash its potential to significantly contribute to grassroots empowerment, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth and industrialisation, both the public and private sectors have rolled out various empowerment programmes for artisans in the form of training and provision of capital.

    For instance, at the last count, 23,400 artisans and traders in 13 states and the Federal Capital Territory are said to have benefited from soft loans disbursed under the Federal Government’s Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP), under President Muhammadu Buhari’s Social Investment Programmes (SIPs).

    The loans, which ranged from N10, 000 to N100, 000 per applicant, were paid directly to individual artisan or trader, who was expected to belong to a registered association and/or cooperative. The Nation learnt that this was to ensure that the beneficiary was peer-endorsed as credible, and also to facilitate timely repayment.

    The micro-credit scheme was a no-interest loan scheme, with only a one-time five per cent administrative fee charged for costs. Broadly, it was targeted at micro-enterprises: traders, artisans, market men and women, entrepreneurs, and farmers with the involvement of cooperatives, and executed through the Bank of Industry (BoI).

    As part of its determination to reduce unemployment rate and skill deficiency among artisans, the Governor Akinwumi Ambode led administration in Lagos State has since stepped up efforts at providing the enabling environment for young entrepreneurs, artisans and tradesmen to do business, deliver innovation, and boost the growth of the state’s economy.

    The Lagos State Ministry of Wealth Creation and Employment (MWC&E) does this in collaboration with Lagos State Technical and Vocational Education Board (LASTVEB). It has intensified the campaign to train tradesmen and artisans in the state to enhance their productivity and upgrade their skills.

    According to the Permanent Secretary, MWC&E, Mr. Abdul Ahmed Mustapha, the state has contributed N25 billion to an Employment Trust Fund (ETF) to support small scale enterprises. He said the government hopes to encourage start-up businesses and small-scale redevelopment projects by creating incubation centres across the state.

    Individuals, corporates join the empowerment fray

    Last week, a total of 100 artisans were rewarded with a grant of N300, 000 each to be invested in their businesses, under an empowerment programme tagged “ISEDOWO” for youths from the Southwest.

    The 100 beneficiaries were the first batch of youths that will benefit from a N30 million Community Partnership Scheme by Goldberg, produced by Nigerian Breweries Plc.

    At the unveiling of the empowerment programme in the palace of the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi- Ojaja II, NB Plc’s Marketing Director, Franco Maria Maggi, said ISEDOWO was designed to equip young Yoruba men and women with the support they need to grow their businesses.

    He expressed optimism that the gesture would positively transform the lives of its beneficiaries, have spill over effects on the larger economy while also increasing income and creating jobs.

    Interested participants were required to showcase their business ideas and how it impacts the society in order to benefit from the empowerment scheme.

    More screening and selection process will continue across the seven states in the Southwest after which the brewery giant will select another batch of beneficiary artisans for the largesse.

    The thinking is that if current efforts by the private and public sector in empowering artisans are sustained, significant boost will come the way of this informal sector.