President Muhammadu Buhari has given his words that the administration will keep a keen eye on food inflation in the New Year while giving a strong directive to the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, not to give any money for food importation.
Speaking at the fifth regular meeting with the Presidential
Economic Advisory Council held on Tuesday at the State House in Abuja,
President Buhari directed that the CBN “must not give money to import food.
Already about seven states are producing all the rice we need. We must eat what
we produce.”
In taking note of the strides made in agricultural production
following the program of diversification from over reliance on oil instituted
by his administration, President Buhari wondered where the country would have
found itself by now in view of the devastating economic crisis brought about by
COVID-19 if the country had not embraced agriculture.
“Going back to the land is the way out. We depend on petrol at
the expense of agriculture. Now the oil industry is in turmoil. We are being
squeezed to produce at 1.5 million barrels a day as against a capacity to
produce 2.3 million. At the same time, the technical cost of our production per
barrel is high, compared to the Middle East production,” he said.
The President emphasized the place of agriculture in the efforts
to restore the economy but agreed that measures must be put in place to curtail
inflation in the country:
“We will continue to encourage our people to go back to the
land. Our elite is indoctrinated in the idea that we are rich in oil, leaving
the land for the city for oil riches. We are back to the land now. We must not
lose the opportunity to make life easier for our people. Imagine what would
have happened if we didn’t encourage agriculture and closed the borders. We would
have been in trouble.”
The meeting, which was for a review of, and reflections on the
global and domestic economy in the outgoing year, was attended by the Vice
President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, as well as Ministers of Finance and
Humanitarian Affairs and agreed on a number of measures.
In specific terms, it noted the sharp deterioration in
international economic environment and its impact on Nigeria’s continuing but
fragile economic recovery; that Nigeria’s economic growth continues to be
constrained by obvious challenges including infrastructural deficiencies and
limited resources for government financing. It emphasized the need to make the
private sector of the economy the primary source of investment, rather than
government.
The meeting reviewed progress towards structural reforms in
response to the economic crises, including the institution of the Economic
Sustainability Plan, the changes in electricity tariff and fuel pricing regime,
the partial re-opening of the Land Borders, the movement towards unification of
exchange rates and budgetary reforms through Finance Bill 2020 and 2021.
It agreed that, to prepare the country for the challenges ahead,
it is imperative to ensure Macro-economic stability, create certainty and
re-build investor confidence in the economy. It emphasized the need to deepen
structural reforms initiated by the administration as a basis for stimulating
investments from domestic and international sources with a view to raising
productivity in key sectors of the economy.
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