Nigeria’s rise to poverty from the abundance of natural resources started nearly fifty years ago when foreign crude oil in monumental quantities buried in the different communities of the Niger-Delta region were found.
This discovery of crude oil and the concomitant massive cash flow from the exportation over the years of these crude oil resources by Nigeria led to the reckless abandonment of the once vibrant Agro-allied Sector of the economy.
At a point some scholars cited the Nigerian irony of being so poor in the midst of abundance of natural resources as a curse rather than a cause for national wealth.
This is due to the way government officials have continued to operate the crude oil sector with no transparency and accountability.
This vicious circle of criminal neglect of the only viable alternative foreign exchange earner which is Agriculture by successive governments meant that Nigeria depended largely on the incomes from the exportation of crude oil resources which essentially are spearheaded even as I write by foreign expatriates in liaison with officials of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).
The operational modalities of these upstream and downstream sectors of the economy have largely been shrouded in criminal secrecy. The entity that runs the crude oil sector operates like a criminal enterprise.
By some estimates, Nigeria has lost over $400 billion USD to crude oil related corruption over the past few decades that the nation became a global player in the petroleum industry.
Only less than one percent of Nigerians and their foreign collaborators are dining and wining with virtually 90 percent of the total revenues that ought to have accrued to the national treasury from the exports of crude oil resources over the past five decades since the commodity was discovered.
Unfortunately, the International asking price of crude oil has plummeted in the last few years which meant that Nigeria’s only viable source of foreign exchange and other huge revenues to service social governance of the country has since started dwindling.
No thanks to official corruption and poor saving culture, the Nigerian economy is said to be nearing recession even as the exchange rate of the national currency has become annoyingly lower than any economists had predicted only a year ago.
Nigerians are praying fervently that the basket case of the Zimbabwean currency doesn’t repeat itself here whereby people would have to convey their money in KEKE NAPEP to the bread seller just to buy few loafs.
The current government has therefore started retooling her strategic economic approach with an eye towards finding a viable alternative to Nigeria’s hitherto mono-commodity’s dependent economy-crude oil.
The Federal government has predictably embraced Agriculture as the next best alternative to the increasingly declining value of crude oil resources.
The focus towards reviving the moribund agro-allied sector is however buffeted by the inconsistent monetary policies churned out by the highly unstable leadership of the Central Bank of Nigeria. Even the tepid assurances to the contrary offered by the vice president of Nigeria only last Monday is not sufficiently reassuring.
Daily Trust, an Abuja based newspaper brought out these apprehensions in its editorial opinion of Friday August 19th 2016 in which the dangers posed by the hike in interests rates as stipulated by the Godwin Emiefiele-led Central Bank of Nigeria may constitute a cog in the drive by this administration to resuscitate the dysfunctional agricultural sector of the economy.
Daily Trust stated as follows; “The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) recently increased the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) from 12% to 14%, leading to fears that lending rates by money deposit banks will also rise correspondingly.”
The newspaper which has affiliation to President Buhari argued that the MPR is a major determinant of interest rates at which the deposit banks lend money to borrowers.
According to the economic analysts of this newspaper, while the MPR was at 12% the MDBs (Money deposit Banks) were granting loans at between 20% – 25%. With the new development it is feared that they will lend money at higher levels of between 28% – 30%.” “The CBN justified its action on the grounds of fighting inflation which it sees as its cardinal goal in the challenge of maintaining the health of the Nigerian economy.”
According to the Nigerian central bank it was faced with the task of securing a balance between reducing interest rates with the goal of stimulating growth at the risk of further inflation, and tightening liquidity as well as checking inflation by increasing lending rates.
The central bank however, chose the second option of increasing lending rates by increasing the MPR and hopefully curbs inflation. The medium argued that the interest rate is the price at which banks lend money to borrowers hence it is the price for borrowed money.
In their wisdom, given Nigeria’s free market economy, any attempt to control the price of any resource such as credit through regulation outside the extant protocol of the CBN, may trigger fears of government interference in the dynamics of the free market and launch retrogressive tendencies associated with lender apathy. Such an outcome it submitted may not help an economy that is needy of fast track growth like Nigeria’s.
Notwithstanding these clear technical and financial lapses towards the attainment of a realistic agricultural revolution in the present day Nigeria, President Muhammadu Buhari is going ahead to assert his administration’s resolve towards rebuilding the Agro-allied sector to make it function as the largest employer of labor and one of the greatest yielder of foreign exchange for Nigeria. Already, the Federal Government has launched a four-year agricultural blueprint tagged “Green Alternative: The Agriculture Promotion Policy 2016-2020″.
Vice President Yemi Osinbajo a Professor of law, at the public presentation of the scheme on Monday this week, said it would involve the employment of 100,000 agricultural extension workers by the Federal Government, to provide support services to farmers. The extension workers will be taken from the 500,000 teachers currently being recruited by the Federal Government.
The government was quick to proffer solution theoretically to the rising rate of interests charged on borrowed funds by Commercial Bank vis-à-vis the need to ensure that the take off of the agricultural blueprints is not impeded.
One of Nigeria’s leading newspapers -Daily Sun incidentally wrote an editorial on this broad range of approach of the Federal government towards reviving agriculture in their Friday August 19th 2016 edition even as the editors tasked the current government on the need to ensure policy consistency and efficient implementation. Just like the editorial of Daily Sun had pointed out, yours faithfully is old enough on the journalism terrain and practice in Nigeria to know that the current ministers heading the Agricultural Sector need to elevate their game and become realistic in their approach to the concrete implementation of key policy guidelines.
A key component of the agricultural polices passed on to this administration is the cassava bread project but in 2016 budget there is not a mention of it but yet we are being told that the government is desirous of scaling up activities in the agro-allied sector of the economy.
Experts believe that the problem according to independent observers began with the last government that moved the Cassava Bread Initiative from Ministry of Science and Technology to the Ministry of Agriculture.
While the Initiative is still experimental, Science and Technology should have continued with experimentation and training of Master Bakers until the conversion is made before transferring to Agriculture for maintenance of Policy.
The best move by this government will be to return the initiative to where the experimental stage belongs- science and Technology. With 20% cassava and the use of the proper bread improver, the cost of bread production will drop and so will the price of bread in spite of High cost of wheat.
The Ministry of agriculture in the preceding administrations began the equipment empowerment program in reaction to the fact that the Bread improver they imported from South Africa and introduce to bakers required the use of highly sophisticated bakery equipment unaffordable by 98% bakers nationwide.
This empowerment program was targeted to just less than 2% of bakers in the first instance. The program (at hindsight) is definitely unsustainable as no government would avail the entire 450,000 members of the association with N10 million to N14 million equipment, according to experts.
However, even with this level of equipment, the finished cassava bread hardens like brick within a day or two, making it unacceptable to the consumers. This is a finding by many scientists.
But the same federal Ministry of Agriculture made a major breakthrough under the immediate past dispensation.
The agriculture ministry discovered a USA made Bread Improver called Baker Sure, which can be used in any bakery environment with the most basic rudimentary equipment.
They initially demonstrated the efficacy of this Bake Sure Improver to only members of National Executives, witnessed by Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi Lagos and the Federal University of Agriculture Abeokuta.
It was a resounding success according to reports because the improver yielded so much dough as not one has seen before. Such is a dream for any baker. Lack of yield had been the single variable that made bakers nationwide to shun cassava bread program.
Then the issue of the Wheat levy fund started over two years ago whereby importers of wheat into Nigeria are required by law to deposit a percentage daily into a fund of which nearly N200 billion is said to have been generated is shrouded in secrecy.
What is the status of this WHEAT LEVY FUND which is controlled jointly by Finance and Agricultural ministries?
President Muhammadu Buhari must note that without a transparent and an accountable commitment by his set of Agriculture ministers this lofty dream of reviving the agricultural sector may remain a tall order and indeed a pipe dream.
Training 500,000 agricultural extension workers won’t make much meaning if the real farmers all over Nigeria are not carried along and if credible farmers aren’t provided with the credit facilities to mechanize their farming activities and raise the standards and profiles of the packaging of their finished products for export markets, then this new policy may end up like it’s many White elephant predecessors such as Green Revolution; Back to Land amongst others. A stitch in time saves nine.
*Emmanuel Onwubiko is Head of Human rights Writers association of Nigeria and blogs @ www.emmanuelonwubiko.com
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