Tag: Nigeria’s economy

  • Transforming Nigeria’s economy: Policies, progress and continuity

    Transforming Nigeria’s economy: Policies, progress and continuity

    Today’s article is an adaptation of the keynote speech this columnist delivered at the Southwest Integrity Summit 2025 held in Osogbo, on 17 November. The summit was convened by the National Chairman of the Integrity Group of Nigeria (The Renewed Hope Ambassadors), Dr. Oke Idawene, and hosted by the Osun State branch of the group headed by the state Chairman, Comrade Salam Mustapha Olamilekan.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, has demonstrated that, however much a person may have noble and workable economic ideas, they must first acquire the requisite political power in order to be able to put into practice those great ideas. So, he made huge intellectual, psychological, emotional, physical, social and material investments into seeking presidential power. Once he got it through pragmatic patience and strategic sacrifice, the President acquired the ability to institute economic policies he believed could enhance the welfare of Nigerians.

    As is now common knowledge, then-presidential candidate Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu promised to remove fuel subsidy; and he kept that promise right from his inaugural address as president on 29 May, 2023. The President also embarked on the floating of the naira and the unification of the multiple exchange rate regime. These policies led to a fall in the value of the naira and high inflation.

    Notwithstanding, some economists believed that the policies were sound, and would eventually stabilise and generate growth in the economy. However, critics condemned the President for being hasty in the introduction of the policies. This argument was countered by those who thought that delaying the implementation of the policies would have given the fuel subsidy cabal and exchange rate racketeers the opportunity to re-strategise and mobilise against the corrective economic policies to protect their obscene privileges.

    President Tinubu acknowledged the fact that the economic policies had come with some unintended pains. He also assured Nigerians that those pains were like the pangs of childbirth which are normally followed by pleasure after safe delivery. The President therefore used every opportunity he got to plead with the citizens to be patient and to show understanding.

    To ease the pains, the government introduced Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) buses; CNG vehicle charging centres; the monthly award to federal civil servants of thirty-five thousand naira for six months; the upward review of the minimum wage of federal workers from N30,000 to N70,000; the increase in the salary of judges; the approval and signing into law of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) to ensure that nobody who desired to acquire tertiary education was prevented from fulfilling the noble dream due to lack of funds; and the introduction of the Tertiary Institution Staff Support Fund (TISSF), a loan scheme under which a beneficiary could get up to ten million naira, subject to the ability to repay.

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    Moreover, in line with the proverbial principle that when the issue of food has been sorted out, poverty abates (“Tí oúnje bá kúrò nínú ìsé, ìsé bùse.”), the government put in place a number of policies. These include the temporary removal of tariffs on grains and essential food items; enhancing irrigation facilities and improving water resource management; increasing agricultural mechanisation; enhancing access to credit for farmers through the Bank of Agriculture; establishment of the National Commodity Board; addressing the challenge of insecurity through the establishment of Forest Guards; introduction of dry season farming; and the creation of the Federal Ministry of Livestock Development, among other measures.

    In addition, undergirded by the principle that “Health is wealth,” the government removed tariffs on some imported pharmaceutical products to halt the worrisome rise in the cost of medicines. The government also embarked on the direct importation of essential medicines to ensure their availability and affordability. Furthermore, cancer centres were established in the six geo-political zones to reduce the need for medical tourism and relieve the pressure on the country’s foreign exchange reserves. 

    Meanwhile, power supply had become a huge challenge to the nation’s economic well-being. The unstable supply or very high cost of electricity had aggravated inflation, and made goods produced in Nigeria more costly than the same kind of goods imported from abroad. To address this and related problems, on 8 June 2023, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu signed the Electricity Bill 2023 into law as Electricity Act, 2023.

    In a June 2023 article titled “Commentaries on the Electricity Act, 2023,” Ayo Salami, Partner & Head, Energy and Natural Resources Group, at KPMG in Nigeria, noted: “Section 63(2)(b) allows persons to operate an undertaking for generation, transmission, distribution, supply, and sale of electricity within a State, pursuant to the law enacted by the House of Assembly of the relevant State …” This means that a state, a group of private investors or individuals can participate in the generation, transmission, distribution, supply and sale of electricity and other renewable forms of energy in this country today.

    In fact, in a 16 October, 2024 Nigerian Tribune report titled “I generate about 15% of Nigeria’s electricity – Davido’s father, Deji Adeleke,” Adam Mosadioluwa stated: “Adedeji Adeleke, the father of award-winning Nigerian artiste, Davido, has revealed that his company, Pacific Energy, generates about 15% of Nigeria’s electricity. … The billionaire businessman highlighted his investments in the nation’s power sector, particularly focusing on his thermal power plant, which is expected to become fully operational by January 2025.”

    So, the next time you find a post on social media claiming cynically that President Tinubu said that if he does not provide stable electricity in Nigeria, the electorate should not vote for him for a second term in office, let the critics know that, in fact, rather than merely providing Nigerians with fish, the President has, as the proverb goes, taught them how to fish. As such, if the stakeholders do not seize the opportunity for electricity sufficiency provided through the liberalisation of the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI), that would be their fault, because as our elders say, “Alágemo ti bímo rè tán, àìmòójó dowó rè.” (‘The chameleon has already performed its duty of giving birth to and enabling its child; if the child does not know how to dance, that’s the child’s fault.’)

    Moreover, with respect to the “Crude-for-Naira Deal”, a piece in The Nation newspaper of 6 October, 2025 reported the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr. Wale Edun, as stating: “The sale of crude oil and refined products in Naira has officially begun as directed by the Federal Executive Council. This initiative marks a bold step towards economic sustainability and currency stability.”

    A 10 April, 2025 report in The Nation newspaper also quoted the Federal Ministry of Finance as stating: “The Crude and Refined Product Sales in Naira initiative is not a temporary or time-bound intervention, but a key policy directive designed to support sustainable local refining, bolster energy security, and reduce reliance on foreign exchange in the domestic petroleum market.”

    With respect to blocking revenue leakages in the mining sector, President Tinubu has been reported to have directed that all new mining licences must have local value. That is, licences would be issued only to those who give a commitment to process, locally, minerals they extract in Nigeria, as a means of boosting local employment opportunities, rather than export them in raw form.

    This range of policies and many related ones have cumulatively had a positive impact on the Nigerian economy. This has earned positive ratings by various international institutions, resulting in increased confidence in the Nigerian economy. In an 18 November, 2025 story in The Nation, the Controller-General of Customs, Bashir Adewale Adeniyi, was reported to have said: “In the first half of 2025, Nigeria’s trade with other African countries reached N4.82 trillion – an increase of more than N600 billion compared with the previous year.”

    Moreover, internally, state governments have been receiving increased allocations from the federation account and have been able to pay their employees more easily. Dr. Muda Yusuf, CEO, Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprises (CPPE), commenting on the Nigerian economy on 21 November, 2025 in a TVC news interview said: “We’re heading in the right direction.” He noted that there was a stable and even marginal rise in exchange rate, steady decline in inflation, and robust external reserve (which according to the Central Bank, has risen to $46.7 billion as at 14 November, 2025).

    Dr. Yusuf further observed that the impact of these achievements is already visible in the drop in the prices of consumer goods. For example, a 50kg of rice which was around N120,000 last year, has fallen to around N58,000 this week. He also cited the price of a street motorcycle (Okada) which was around N1,200,000 last year, but is around N800,000 now. Checks with sellers of food items and motorcycles confirm a remarkable reduction in prices. The reduction in the prices of medicines has also been confirmed.

    To sustain the positive economic trend the nation is experiencing now, it is important to implement robustly the 11 July, 2024 Supreme Court landmark judgement affirming the autonomy of Nigeria’s 774 Local Government Councils. This would enhance the optimal participation of a significant proportion of Nigerians living at the grassroots level in the economic life of the nation and consolidate the efforts of the federal government. It would also minimise the alienation and disengagement of a large section of the citizens from the government. This alienation has made it attractive for them to exchange their votes for a piece of gala, a can of malt and N500 or N1,000.

    A more intense engagement of the youth in the economic progammes to the government would also be immensely invaluable in ensuring the continuity of the well-directed policies. The youth are energetic, resourceful and exceptionally courageous. They therefore constitute invaluable components of any enterprise. It is for this reason that the former Lagos State Governor and former Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), asked recently in Lagos, why our youth have not been sufficiently oriented towards participation in the affairs of the society at large, such that there would be students wings of political parties even in our universities. These exist in the Botswana political culture.

    Meanwhile, even some of the traditional critics of President Tinubu and the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) are acknowledging the improving economic situation of the country, as the Renewed Hope Agenda is steadily progressing towards full actualisation. It is this happy trend that the factional National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Kabiru Tanimu Turaki (SAN), a former Minister of Special Duties, set out to disrupt when he invited United States President Donald Trump and other leaders to invade Nigeria, to help PDP to resolve its internal crises and ‘save democracy’.

  • Tinubu must be credited for stabilising Nigeria’s economy – Okonjo-Iweala

    Tinubu must be credited for stabilising Nigeria’s economy – Okonjo-Iweala

    The World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has lauded President Bola Tinubu for the stability of Nigeria’s economy.

    She said this after a meeting with the President in Abuja on Thursday.

    When asked what her perception of Nigeria’s economy is, the WTO DG said the economy is stabilised but that the next step is to grow the economy.

    Iweala said, “We think that the President and his team-and we just exchanged with him- have worked hard to stabilise the economy and you cannot improve an economy unless it’s stable, so he has to be given the credit for the stability of the economy.

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    “The reforms have been in the right direction, what is needed next is growth, we now need to grow the economy and we need to put in a social safety net, so that people who are feeling the pinch of the reforms can also have some support to be able to weather the hardship.

    “So that’s the next step. How do we build a social safety net to help Nigerians cushion the hardship they are feeling and then how do we grow the economy so we can create more jobs and put more money in people’s pockets, these are issues that we discussed with Mr. President.”

  • Reforms transforming Nigeria’s economy, says Edun

    Reforms transforming Nigeria’s economy, says Edun

    To help Nigeria’s economy match the goals of Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration, Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Mr. Wale Edun, has identified how important it is to keep carrying out economic reforms to shape the country’s future.

    Delivering a keynote address at the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) Conference in Abuja yesterday, Edun reflected on the country’s 25 years of democratic governance, stressing the importance of sustained progress in governance and the expansion of economic opportunities.

    One of the significant points raised by Edun was the introduction of Nigeria’s first US dollar domestic bond, a groundbreaking initiative designed to tap into the savings of Nigerians in the diaspora.

    This move, he noted, is expected to boost domestic economic growth by channeling foreign currency into the local economy, thereby strengthening the naira and creating a more resilient financial system.

    This initiative is a clear signal of the government’s intent to leverage international capital for domestic development, fostering a more robust and diversified economy.

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    Despite the positive strides in financial innovation, Edun acknowledged the ongoing challenges within Nigeria’s agricultural sector, particularly in the areas of food inflation and food security.

    He reiterated the government’s commitment to addressing these issues through targeted interventions aimed at stabilising food prices and ensuring a more secure and sustainable food supply chain.

    The Minister underscored the importance of learning from successful international models to enhance the effectiveness of these strategies, pointing to the necessity of strategic planning and consistent policy implementation.

    Edun commended the NESG for its continued efforts in facilitating critical economic discussions, which have been instrumental in shaping the nation’s economic policies. He reiterated President Tinubu’s unwavering commitment to advancing comprehensive economic reforms, which are central to the administration’s vision of a prosperous and inclusive Nigeria.

    The Minister commended NESG for their crucial role in facilitating these vital economic discussions and reiterated President Tinubu’s unwavering commitment to advancing comprehensive economic reforms.

    The Minister’s address reveals the country’s economic reforms agenda has received a significant boost, and that the present administration’s commitment to attracting foreign investment, curbing food inflation as well as improving food security, is expected to yield positive outcomes.

  • Rep expresses confidence in prospect of Nigeria’s economy

    Rep expresses confidence in prospect of Nigeria’s economy

    Member representing Kwande/Ushongo Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Hon. Terseer Ugbor, has said the economy has all the indicators to be stronger if the reforms implemented to navigate the current economic challenges are allowed to mature. 

    The lawmaker stressed that Nigeria is currently at a critical juncture where citizens must avoid actions that could undermine the delicate economy and security of the country, thereby making things worse for the already suffering people and the country. 

    Hon. Ugbor, who was in the company of the Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Prof. Joseph Terlumun Utsev, along with several members of the Benue State House of Assembly, addressed a gathering of teeming youths and other groups who gathered in Makurdi, the Benue State capital.

    He discouraged the planned protest in the country.

    He said, “We are at a very important junction in the life of our great country. Nigeria is facing a lot of challenges at this point in our history.

    “This presents an opportunity for us to move this country from where we are today to where we want to be a few years from now.”

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    “Nigeria, at this point in our history, has the prime opportunity to take a giant step forward in developing our economy, our infrastructure, and the agricultural base of our country.”

    “But we acknowledge the hunger in the land, We acknowledge that even the poor farmers in the villages find it difficult to get food to eat.”

    “Let’s continue to endure for a little while. We can’t afford to disrupt the fragile security and the economy our president is trying to resuscitate. 

    “God has given us a president in Bola Tinubu who has shown the capacity to make difficult decisions that will move our country forward.”

    He also highlighted the collective decision of the National Assembly to support the President to alleviate the challenges faced by Nigerians.

    He stated that the tenth National Assembly will ensure Nigerians experience a better life.

    “Now, those of us in the National Assembly have decided that we will support the president, we will support his policies, and we will support the reforms that he has introduced.

    “We have ensured that every progressive policy that is introduced by this administration does not meet bottlenecks in the Federal House of Representatives and the National Assembly as a whole.”

    “And that is why we passed the minimum wage bill in less than 2 hours because we want to see Nigerian workers being paid livable wages.

    “We also passed a supplementary budget for the president to supply food and fertilizers to our farmers and our people across the grassroots of Nigeria,” he said.

    He said that the leaders are working all hours of the clock to ensure Nigerians are relieved through urgent nationwide interventions.

    “We at the National Assembly watch the SGF with a close focus and as he spends sleepless nights to ensure that he contributes every single day to support Mr. President, to move Nigeria forward,” he said.

    The Honourable Member who was the Adhoc Committee Chairman of Students Loans and Access to Higher Education concluded, by announcing that 20, 000 students from Benue State have so far been captured on the Students Loans program and the process for the disbursement of funds is already in progress.

  • BREAKING: Nigeria’s economy not distressed, says Tinubu

    BREAKING: Nigeria’s economy not distressed, says Tinubu

    President Bola Tinubu on Tuesday, Tuesday, March 5, said the country’s economy is not distressed, emphasizing that the current circumstances are not beyond repair.

    This is as a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Prof. Kingsley Moghalu said it will take between three to five years for the economic crisis to go away.

    The president’s stance against the characterization of the economy as distressed is rooted in the ongoing efforts aimed at steering the country out of its current challenges.

    He spoke at the 16th edition of the Leadership 2023 conference and Awards held at the Transcorp Hotel, Abuja with the theme “An Economy in Distress: Which Way Forward?

    The president was awarded Person of the Year 2023 in recognition of his “undisputable can-do spirit” that marked him out as a quintessential politician who defied monumental odds to emerge as the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), after which he went on to win the 2023 presidential election.

    The award, the Newspaper also said is to acknowledge the President’s courage in taking a number of difficult but necessary decisions in order to reposition the country towards economic prosperity.

    Tinubu who was represented by the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris accepted the fact that the country is facing some challenges but it is not helpless.

    He said: “Interestingly, that last line offers itself as a perfect answer to the question that is the theme of today’s event, which is “An Economy in Distress: Which Way Forward?”

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    “I should start by respectfully challenging the notion that the Nigerian economy is in distress. Distress suggests helplessness, being at the mercy of something we have no control over. But that is not the case here.

    “We are in challenging times, no doubt, but these times have also been marked by unprecedented opportunities, to reset course and to build a new and sustainable economy, away from the rent-seeking and the waste that was once the order of the day.

    “The Leadership Group has itself alluded to the “difficult but necessary” decisions that we have taken. Since the removal of petrol subsidies, our imports of petrol have dropped by about 50 percent, which translates to roughly 1 billion litres of petrol every month, according to the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics.

    “In addition, the revenues accruing to the three tiers of Government – Federal, State, and Local – have grown by between 50 percent and 100 percent since the removal of the petrol subsidy. This means more funds are available to directly impact the lives of Nigerians through investments in critical infrastructure, social security, and other areas.

    “For example, the additional funding we are receiving is going into a new minimum wage for which negotiations have started, between the Federal and State Governments and Organized Labour.

    “I have approved the disbursement of N200 Billion Naira, through three (3) new special intervention funds established to support Nigerian businesses.

    “The first is a 50 Billion Naira Presidential Conditional Grant Scheme (PCGS) that will provide business grants and loans to traders, food vendors, transport workers, ICT businesses, creatives, and artisans. Verification of all submitted applications is ongoing, and disbursements will commence through the Bank of Industry (BOI) as soon as this verification is completed.

    “The second is a 75 Billion Naira FGN MSME Intervention Fund that will provide single-digit-interest loans to our MSMEs.

    “The third is a 75 Billion Naira FGN Manufacturing Sector Fund targeting manufacturing businesses, with selected beneficiaries eligible to access up to 1 Billion Naira each.

    “In addition, our new Federal Student Loan program will take off within the next few weeks, providing interest-free financing not just for students in our tertiary institutions but also covering those in vocational and skill acquisition programs as well.

    “For the poorest and most vulnerable among us, the Social Investment Programme, currently under review to reposition it for maximum impact, will support millions of households with direct cash transfers that will enable them to meet their basic needs.

    “I have approved 100 Billion Naira for a Presidential Initiative on CNG, which will deliver CNG-powered buses and engine conversion kits. Let me ask Nigerians for a little more patience as we await the imminent rollout of these CNG-powered buses which will bring down the cost of transportation by as much as 50 percent.

    “In the area of food security, I am pleased to say that our dry season farming program which kicked off with wheat in November 2023 is well on course, and we are already set for the first round of harvest. We have received tremendous support from partners like the African Development Bank (AfDB) in this regard. As part of our own commitments as a Government, I have approved 100 Billion Naira for the National Agricultural Development Fund for the year 2024, while we have commenced the repositioning of the Bank of Agriculture to better deliver on its mandate.”

    The president further shared some numbers to buttress that the reforms and other steps taken by the administration were on the right track.

    According to him, “Since we assumed office in May 2023, we have attracted $30 billion in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) commitments into the real sectors of the economy, including Manufacturing, Telecoms, Healthcare, Oil & Gas, and others. Those investments have already started coming into the country.

    “Just a few days ago, I was in Qatar on an official visit, where the Emir assured me that a senior government delegation would visit Nigeria after Ramadan, to begin taking action on some of the new investments they are looking at here. I have asked the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy to directly interface with the Qatari authorities to ensure that speedy progress is made.

    “The Nigerian economy saw a better than anticipated performance in the last quarter of 2023, growing by 3.46% (year-on-year), compared with 2.54% in the preceding quarter.

    “Capital Importation into Nigeria was up 66% in Q4 2023, reversing a 36% decline in the previous quarter.

    “In January 2024, the Nigerian Stock Exchange All Share Index (ASI) crossed the 100,000 points mark, its highest ever.”

    He added: “There is no one who looks at this data who will conclude that “distressed” is the accurate way to describe the Nigerian economy. Yes, we are challenged in a number of ways. But these are the outcomes of necessary reforms, and a lot of effort and energy is going into alleviating these pains and setting the economy on firm footing.

    “And we are seeing incredible opportunities for investment in every sector of the economy, as we stabilize our foreign exchange market and our macroeconomic indices.

    “I ask for the continuing patience and support of all Nigerians, including the elite that is very well represented in this room today. To the Nigerian media, I urge you to strive to report not only the challenges but also the solutions and the opportunities as well. Ours is a story of a country that is taking the right steps, and feeling the fleeting pains that will come with this course of action. A glorious dawn is indeed assured.”

    The President also paid a special tribute to the memory of the late founder of the Leadership Newspaper, Sam Nda-Isaiah.

    “Your memory will continue to live on, not only in our hearts but also in your brilliant writings and in the family and the business legacies that you left behind.

    “To Madam Zainab Nda-Isaiah, thank you for carrying on so boldly and powerfully from where Sam stopped. We appreciate what you’re doing, and we will continue to support you.”

    Speaking earlier in his keynote paper, Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria said he is behind President Bola Tinubu for his bold step in removing the fuel subsidy and forex reform.

    Moghalu who expressed concern by the number of politicians in the current administration, urged the President to revamp his cabinet within the first year of his administration.

    The presidential candidate of the Young Progressive Party (YPP) in the 2019 General election also urged the president to set up a 7 member economic team comprising of only economists.

    Moghalu who delivered a keynote paper titled “Nigeria’s distressed economy, which way forward” said this is necessary if the country is to get out of its current crisis.

    He also applauded the current measure taken by the Central Bank to tighten cash liquidity.

    Though belated, he said it was necessary given the level of assault carried out on the bank by the last administration.

    He also suggested seven key steps that can help the country get out of the current crisis.

    Moghalu stressed that it would take the country about three to five years for the country to get out of the current Economic crisis, which preceded the coming of President Tinubu.

  • Nigeria’s economy sees strong agric growth

    Agriculture has benefited from macroeconomic and structural reforms initiated by the Buhari administration aimed at economic stability, inflation reduction and trade expansion. Analysts say the reforms could pave the way for competitive agricultural operations, if the government takes steps to reduce production costs and enhance the agro business environment, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    For watchers, within the last  four  years, agricultural production has confronted difficulties due to the negative impacts of climate change, high cost of production and natural calamities.

    Also, Nigeria  faced some  challenges in the international market on agricultural produce, including commodities rejection, especially the European Union (EU) ban on Nigerian staples.The EU banned Nigeria’s dried beans in June 2015 because it contained a high level of pesticide dangerous to human health.

    In June 2016, the ban was extended by three years because of the presence of dichlorvos (pesticide) in dried beans from Nigeria, and maximum residue levels of pesticides showed that compliance with food law requirement as regards pesticide residual could not be achieved in the short term.

    Despite this, with efforts by people from all walks of life and the political will demonstrated by the government, the nation is achieving positive results.

    In the four years under review, a series of important policies were introduced to promote key branches in the agriculture sector.

    For example, the Federal Government launched the agricultural sector roadmap, known as The Green Alternative, for promotion of agriculture from 2016-2020. It adopted policies to develop the fishery sector, as well as restructuring production of rice and other crops.

    More importantly, the government has encouraged more enterprises to invest in rural agriculture while helping farmers and fishermen find consumers for their products.

    While Nigeria has not achieved much in other areas, experts believe the nation has made progress in agriculture.

    One of those who share this thought is the National President, Federation of Agricultural Commodities of Nigeria (FACAN), Dr Victor Iyama.

    Iyama told The Nation that  the  government had shown some commitment to revamping the sector.

    This followed the launch of Green Alternative policy and other programmes, presenting agriculture as a top priority.

    According to Iyama, the government  has  increasingly prioritised agriculture and food security as a national-level driver of economic growth.

     

    Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and agriculture

     

    Iyama said the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had impacted on the agriculture sector in the five-year leadership of Godwin Emefiele.

    Through its activities, he said the CBN creatively implemented programmes to diversify the productive base of the economy, through agriculture, thereby conserving foreign exchange.

    Aside conserving foreign exchange, he noted that the introduction of the policy that excluded 43 items from accessing foreign exchange from the Nigerian forex markets was largely aimed at improving domestic agriculture production.

    In addition, CBN’s engagements with oil palm value chain stakeholders have also been yielding fruits.

    It has helped to fast-track investments across the oil palm value chain. Oil palm is on the forex excluded list.

    According to analysts, official figures indicate that importation of oil palm had by about 40 per cent from 506,000 metric tonnes (MTs) in 2014 to 302,000 in 2017.

    Last year, the CBN governor met with Oil Palm Value Chain Stakeholders, where he rolled out further measures and set a partnership model that would stimulate investments in palm oil plantations, such that within the next five years, the global share of Nigeria’s oil palm production would increase. “Our ultimate vision is to overtake Thailand and Columbia to become the third largest producer in the next 10 years,” Emefiele said at the meeting.

    He also told the Oil Palm Value Chain Stakeholders that, “on the finance supply side, the Bankers’ Committee had established a special sub-committee to make recommendations on sustainable financing models for oil palm and four other critical agricultural commodities that include cocoa, sesame seed, shea-butter and cashew.

    His engagements with state governors on how to increase oil palm production are also yielding fruits. Emefiele said: “I am happy to announce that all the states in the South-south and South-east regions have agreed to provide at least 100,000 hectares for the oil palm initiative. This programme also accommodates the small holder oil palm farmers.’’

    For the country to attain self-sufficiency, Iyama  believes that must  be committed development of more estate plantations and coordinated partnerships between the small holder plantation farmers and processors.

     

    NIRSAL

     

    In his view, the Director-General, Feed Nigeria Summit, Richard-Mark Mbaram, said the hope of improved agricultural yields in Nigeria and indeed Africa has brightened as the Nigerian Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL)has  stimulated investment in technology to boost yields and generate gainful employment.

    According to him, NIRSAL Plc, a vision of the CBN is exploring ways of bringing technologies to millions of Nigerian farmers to enable them farm efficiently, effectively and sustainably.

    One partnership,  he  noted  was NIRSAL ‘s  Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Heritage Bank Plc, which he  said would ensure secured financing of agribusiness within all segments of the agricultural value chain.

    He   said the partnership was important because it would  help farmers to benefit from loans and credit available, at very low interest rates, to pursue commercially viable agricultural projects that have been packaged and fully de-risked.

     

    Anchor Borrower Programme (ABP)

     

    Analysts  believe  the  CBN ’s Anchor Borrower Programme (ABP) will   ensure  Nigeria emerges  from being a net importer to becoming a major producer of rice.

    As at October  last year, according to analysts, thousands of farmers cultivating about 835,239 hectares, across 16 different commodities, have so far benefited from the Anchor Borrowers programme, which has generated 2,502,675 jobs across the country.

    By March 15, this year, the CBN committed a total of N171.35 billion in the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme with active participation across the 36 states of the Federation and Federal Capital Territory (FCT), to improve local rice production. Annual rice production in Nigeria has increased to 5.8 million tonnes.

    The State Chairman, Kebbi/Sokoto Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria, Muhammed Augie  said the programme has helped  increase local production of the commodity.

    He  said the programme since inception had created economic linkage between small holder farmers and reputable large-scale processors, thereby increasing agricultural outputs and significantly improving capacity utilisation of processors.

    He advised the government to ensure farmers get inputs under the programme before the start of the farming season.

    He pleaded that the government ensures rice farmers get loans at five percent interest like rice millers.

    Iyama said CBN’s support   towards   rice production has contributed significantly to the success of the agricultural sector.

    Given the success achieved under this programme, the CBN has promised to continue to support it until the full potential of the sector is achieved.

    The ABP was launched by President Muhammadu Buhari on November 17, 2015 in Kebbi, aimed at creating a linkage between anchor companies involved in the processing and SHFs of the required key agricultural commodities.

    The fund was provided from the N220 billion micro, small and medium enterprises development fund.

    ABP evolved from the consultations with stakeholders comprising federal ministry of agriculture and rural development, state governors, millers of agricultural produce, and smallholder farmers to boost agricultural production.

     

    Tomato

     

    CBN’s  intervention in production of tomatoes stands at a little over N10 billion in eight projects. One of the projects is the Dangote Green House tomato manufacturing project, which has the capacity to produce 10 million tomato seedlings monthly. This would be sold to about 5,000 out growers that would grow and supply the tomato factory, which has commenced operations, with tomato fruits. The project has the capacity of generating one million jobs from supporting small holder farmers in tomato cultivation to paste. This project has the capacity to save the Nigerian economy over $250 million annually.

     

    Farmers’ challenges

     

    One of the challenges inhibiting agricultural growth is poor infrastructure. Country Director of HarvestPlus, Dr Paul Ilona said farmers face other challenges, particularly from weak links along the agri-business logistics chain.

    Ilona said Nigerian farmers are traditionally smallholders, farming less than two hectares of land.

    According to him, many of them are located in extremely remote areas.

    He said one of the largest structural challenges facing smallholder farmers is the lack of infrastructure,such as roads, railways, irrigation, and power that would enable their access to larger markets, improve the quality of their produce, and facilitate moving up the value chain into agro-processing activities.

    With some transporters unwilling to risk damage to their vehicles from substandard roads, Ilona said growers experience difficulties in bringing their crops to market, weakening the supply-chain links to processors, and subsequently leading to produce losses.

    Other stakeholders lamented   unreliable power supply in the country, which poses significant challenges.

    The  Group Managing Director, Niji Group,Kola Adeniji, said challenges such as poor agricultural practices, low technological adoption, and poor access to extension services, low quality inputs, and lack of credit has   continued   to hinder the sector from realising its full potential.

    Challenges notwithstanding, he said Nigeria’s  agriculture has enormous potential to transform the economy if the government works with the private sector to and make farming much more productive and profitable for smallholder farmers.

    Going forward, he said Nigeria needs to improve its policy environment, to enable investments that will allow the farm sector to continue to adapt to the opportunities created by rising demand and the challenges of climate change and limited resources.

    According to him, basic rural infrastructure needs to improve as well as investment to keep pace with economic growth.

     

    Medical marijuana

     

    According to him, Nigeria needs to boost its place in global agro-food markets, in exporting cocoa, cashews and medical marijuana.

    He said Nigeria would derive economic benefits from tapping into the marijuana market.

    With an estimated value of $145 billion in 2025, he said Nigeria would be short-changing itself if it fails to tap into the legal marijuana market.

    He explained that marijuana can earn for the government more money than oil. According to him, a litre of oil is one dollar while a litre of marijuana oil is $15.

    Instead of destroying it, he said the Federal Government should control processing of medical marijuana cultivation in controlled plantations under the full supervision of the (National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

  • Our curriculum should be refocused on diversifying Nigeria’s economy, says Osinbajo

    Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has said the country’s curriculum for tertiary institutions should be re-focused on diversifying the economy.

    Prof. Osinbajo spoke yesterday in Abuja, the nation’s capital, at the first national tertiary admissions performance merit award organised by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB).

    He said the current administration focused on people at the poverty baseline of the economy with the introduction of MarketMoni System and other strategies of economic development.

    Prof Osinbajo, who was represented by Special Adviser (SA) on National Social Welfare Programme, Mrs Maryam Uwais, noted that the sustenance of the policies and strategies as well as responses to world market economy resided in the tertiary institutions.

    He said: “The nation’s curriculum should be aggressively refocused on diversifying the economy towards knowledge-based and driven on development of solid minerals, sports and tourism and small scale enterprises.

    “This administration has started to focus on people at the poverty baseline of the economy with the introduction of MarketMoni System and other strategies of economic development. The sustenance of these policies and strategies and responses to world market economy resides in the tertiary institutions.”

    Osinbajo hailed the JAMB leadership for being responsive and responsible in the discharge of its mandate.

    The Vice-President said the effort of the board at ensuring that tertiary institutions perform excellently in access to institutions was commendable.

    According to him, this would engender healthy competition among institutions and open access to only those who deserve to be in them.

    He also said this would lead to having students that are well prepared for the challenges of research, discovery, development, invention and re-orientation, which are required to uplift development in the country and put Nigeria on the same pedestal with other nations in the global village.

    “This administration is proud of the achievements of the board, particularly its unique contributions to the Federation Account since 2017 and its re-invigorated efforts in frontally confronting examination malpractices and protecting the integrity of its examinations and the results awarded to candidates.

    “I commend the leadership of the Minister of Education, the Minister of State for Education and the entire Education sector, with special mention of the vice chancellors, Rectors and Provosts of our various tertiary institutions.

    “I also recognise the commendable roles of the regulatory bodies, like the National Universities Commission (NUC), National Board for Technical Education and National Commission for Colleges of Education and, of course, the untiring of intervention agencies, such as the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETfund), scholarship board and Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF).

    “Working together in unison with common purpose is key to our nation’s developmental efforts. Let us continue to partner positively together,” Osinbajo said.

    JAMB Registrar Prof. Is-haq Oloyede said the award, which was conceived in 2017 during the policy meeting of the board, was part of the discharge of the board’s corporate social responsibility (CSR).

    He added: “It is hoped that the awards would inspire all tertiary institutions to work within the stipulated guidelines, thereby creating healthy competition among themselves. It is also hoped that it would internationalise the Nigerian tertiary institutions, foster national unity through the admissions-national spread as well as to always cultivate a transparent admission process.

    “I would like to congratulate the winners of this maiden edition and urge them not to rest on their oars in doing the right things the right way. I also want to encourage the others who did not win this time to study the guidelines and aspire to be the winner next year.”

    The award was designed into five categories. Each category has a different winner. The University of Ilroin (UNILORIN) was named winner of the most subscribed institution by candidates; Kaduna State Polytechnic won the most national in admission of candidates, while Admadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, won the highest in number of admitted international students award.

    Other winners include: Rivers State University of Science and Technology, Port Harcourt (improved female gender award) and University of Maiduguri (best in compliance to the policy guidelines award).

    Each winner of the five categories went home with N25,000,000 approved by by the board.

     

  • Nigeria’s economy to grow at 3% next year, says minister

    Nigeria’s economy is expected to grow by two per cent this year and by three per cent next year, Minister of Budget Udoma Udo Udoma said yesterday.

    The World Bank expects growth at slightly less than two per cent this year, while the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) predicts that the economy will grow 1.75 per cent this year.

    “Our projection for the economic growth this year is two per cent, we believe it will be achieved, and that of next (year), which is projected at three per cent, will also be achieved. Our plans are working,” Udoma told reporters in Abuja, pointing to growth in the non-oil sector.

    The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Monday said the economy grew by 1.81 per cent in the third quarter, after 1.95 percent and 1.50 per cent in the first and second quarters.

    A sluggish recovery since the country emerged from recession last year could bode poorly for President Muhammadu Buhari, who is seeking a second term in February 2019 elections and for whom economic rejuvenation has been a key pillar of policy.

  • PZ Wilmar to grow Nigeria’s economy

    Food industry firm, PZ Wilmar, has stated its commitment to grow the Nigerian market and contribute to the growth of the economy.

    Its Category Marketing Manager, Chioma Mbanugo, said the firm will continue to provide Nigerians with healthy and tasty cooking options at affordable prices.

    Speaking during the unveiling of the firm’s new seasoning products under its existing brands, Mamador and Devon Kings in Ibadan, Oyo State capital at the weekend, she said good food enhances a healthy living which in turn improves productivity in work place.

    Speaking on the products, she said: “We ventured into the seasoning category to offer Nigerians much healthier, valuable and affordable options, something different from the norm, as our seasoning cubes all come in 5 grams as opposed to the 4 grams currently available in today market. By studying and analysing the needs of Nigerians as regards food products, we developed these seasoning variants to help fulfill our consumers’ nutrition needs by delivering on delicious and rich tastes. While both brands serve different purposes, they both deliver on the signature PZ Wilmar quality, and will certainly ensure that consumers can now create authentic dishes that are rich in taste, flavor and nutritional value. “More importantly, these seasoning brands will be available to Nigerians at competitive prices, so everyone can taste the difference.”

    Present at the event were Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Oyo, Dr. Adeyoola Theresa Olaitan; Sales Director, PZ Wilmar, Ipsit Chakrabarti; Category Development & Activation Manager, PZ Wilmar, Toyin Popoola-Dania; and Brand Manager, Devon King’s, Bamise Oyegbami, amongst other notable persons.

    The Mamador seasoning came in three variants – Classic, Beef, and Chicken, while the Devon King’s seasoning comes in Classic Tomato, Beef, and Chicken variants – as they are set to compete in the Nigerian markets.

    Mamador 5g Seasoning Cubes boast health benefits as it contains 15 per cent Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) of Zinc and Iron, while Devon King’s 5g Seasoning Cubes gives provides Nigerians with tastier meals at a lower cost with its ‘added tomato’. Both brands of seasoning cubes give consumers 25 per cent more volume than other seasoning cubes at competitive prices.

     

  • PZ Wilmar to grow Nigeria’s economy

    Food industry firm, PZ Wilmar, has stated its commitment to grow the Nigerian market and contribute to the growth of the economy.

    Its Category Marketing Manager, Chioma Mbanugo, said the firm will continue to provide Nigerians with healthy and tasty cooking options at affordable prices.

    Speaking during the unveiling of the firm’s new seasoning products under its existing brands, Mamador and Devon Kings in Ibadan, Oyo State capital at the weekend, she said good food enhances a healthy living which in turn improves productivity in work place.

    Speaking on the products, she said: “We ventured into the seasoning category to offer Nigerians much healthier, valuable and affordable options, something different from the norm, as our seasoning cubes all come in 5 grams as opposed to the 4 grams currently available in today market. By studying and analysing the needs of Nigerians as regards food products, we developed these seasoning variants to help fulfill our consumers’ nutrition needs by delivering on delicious and rich tastes. While both brands serve different purposes, they both deliver on the signature PZ Wilmar quality, and will certainly ensure that consumers can now create authentic dishes that are rich in taste, flavor and nutritional value. More importantly, these seasoning brands will be available to Nigerians at competitive prices, so everyone can taste the difference.”

    Present at the event were Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Oyo, Dr. Adeyoola Theresa Olaitan; Sales Director, PZ Wilmar, Ipsit Chakrabarti; Category Development & Activation Manager, PZ Wilmar, Toyin Popoola-Dania; and Brand Manager, Devon King’s, Bamise Oyegbami, amongst other notable persons.

    The Mamador seasoning came in three variants – Classic, Beef, and Chicken, while the Devon King’s seasoning comes in Classic Tomato, Beef, and Chicken variants – as they are set to compete in the Nigerian markets. Mamador 5g Seasoning Cubes boast health benefits as it contains 15 per cent Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) of Zinc and Iron, while Devon King’s 5g Seasoning Cubes gives provides Nigerians with tastier meals at a lower cost with its ‘added tomato’. Both brands of seasoning cubes give consumers 25 per cent more volume than other seasoning cubes at competitive prices.