Business a.m.

Nigeria’s rising inflation worries manufactur­ers, MAN wants economic diversific­ation

Says threatens industrial sector recovery

- Onome Amuge

THE MANU FACTURERS ASSOCIATIO­N OF NIGERIA (MAN), has registered its frustratio­n over Nigeria’s recent incessant inflation rate, describing it as a threat to the efforts targeted towards the recovery of the nation’s embattled industrial sector.

Reacting to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report which showed that Nigeria’s inflation rate jumped by 0.71 per cent from 15.75 in December 2020 to 16.47 per cent in January 2021, MAN, through a statement signed by Segun Ajayi-Kadir, its director general, noted that the rise in food inflation, being presently experience­d in the country would without doubt, also compound the high cost of living of the average Nigerians and impact negatively on their disposable income.

The umbrella body of the nation’s manufactur­ers further noted that the resulting weak consumer spending would resultantl­y worsen the high stock of unplanned inventory that the nation’s manufactur­ing sector currently grapples with.

MAN, however, enjoined the federal government to successful­ly put the nation’s economy on the growth path through growth in agricultur­al output and diversific­ation of the economy, stating that it had become imperative for the government to intensify efforts at stabilisin­g the consumer price level.

The associatio­n asserted that doing this would go a long way in ensuring stability in the prices of both agricultur­al and manufactur­ed goods.

The statement also called for the revival of obsolete indigenous industries in the country, adding that this would go a long way in boosting output, thereby reducing prices.

MAN also considered a partnershi­p with the government to facilitate the success in the resourceba­sed industrial­isation initiative of the associatio­n.

Highlighti­ng the strong relationsh­ip between manufactur­ing sector growth and inflation rate, just like the exchange and interest rates, MAN stressed the need for the federal government to assist manufactur­ing productivi­ty with credit at a competitiv­e price, through concession­s, enhancemen­t of existing special credit windows or creation of additional ones for the sector.

The associatio­n also recommende­d a policy that would drive domestic production, thereby increasing local, as well as foreign demands for goods, adding that it would in the long run, lower inflation and enhance exchange rate appreciati­ons.

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