Daily Trust Sunday

FG Budgets N 3.4Bn For Rice, Cotton Value Chain

- By Nuruddeen M. Abdallah, Vincent A. Yusuf, Francis Arinze Iloani, & Safina Buhari

The federal government is planning to spend N3.47 billion on the developmen­t of value chain of rice and cotton - the two areas government said it is determined to attain selfsuffic­iency.

This figure is about N200 million less than what the government budgeted last year, according to the analysis of 2018 budget proposal.

Despite series of interventi­ons by federal government, agricultur­e has failed to attract adequate private investment­s and generate decent job opportunit­ies.

Dwindling fortune of value chain

In 2017, the federal government budgeted N3.63 billion in value developmen­t of rice and cotton.

The key area of agricultur­al developmen­t with the potentials to create millions of jobs is in the various crops value chain developmen­t, which the government­s at all levels are paying little attention to.

Analysis of the 2018 estimates revealed that the federal government has proposed N24.9 billion on agricultur­e value chain developmen­t, about 14.7 percent reduction on what it budgeted last year.

In 2017, the total budget for agricultur­al value chain developmen­t was N29.2 billion.

Of the N24.9 billion value chain votes this year, only N3.47 billion was earmarked for rice and cotton against last year’s N3.63 billion, despite the government’s trumpeted commitment to the developmen­t of the two crops.

This year, the federal agricultur­e ministry earmarked N1.47 billion for developmen­t and promotion of cotton, against last year’s N1.62 billion.

The government earmarked N2.04 billion for rice value chain, compared to the N2.01 billion provided for the crop in 2017.

Data from the Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t shows country’s demand for rice stands at 6.3 million tons, while the supply is 2.3 million.

The ministry said the cotton demand is between 1-1.5 million tons while the supply is 0.2 million tons.

As of 2015, over 101 textile industries were closed and 121,000 jobs lost across the country, according to Dr Fatai Aremu of the Developmen­t Research and Policy Centre (dRPC).

He said 60 textile firms were closed in Lagos and 66,252 jobs lost; 19 companies shut down in Kano and 16,700 jobs lost; 8 firms were closed in Kaduna which rendered 18,750 workers jobless; while19,300 jobs were lost due to the collapse of 18 factories across other locations in the country. Too little to make impact This is coming at a time of the government’s much-trumpeted determinat­ion to move away from oil to agricultur­e as the mainstay of the economy.

This year, the federal government is planning to spend N172.78 billion, about two percent of the total estimates of N8.6 trillion, on agricultur­e and rural developmen­t.

Of this figure, N118.98 billion (68.86%) is earmarked for capital votes, while N53.81 billion (31.14%) is for recurrent expenses.

The 2018 federal agricultur­e budget is 27.48% higher than the 2017 budget. Capital expenditur­e got 69.48% increase, while recurrent estimates were jerked up by 14.64%.

Of the N7.3 trillion budgets for 2017, the federal government voted only N123 billion (1.6 percent) for agricultur­e. Salaries and overheads get N31.7 billion while the remaining N91.6 billion was left for capital projects.

The central government budget is slightly higher than the N75.8 billion (1.26 percent) spent on agricultur­e and rural developmen­t in 2016.

N29.6 billion of the amount was for bureaucrat­ic expenses, leaving N46.17 billion for agric service.

The federal government has been allocating low figures to the sector since 2010. It budgeted 1.3 percent in 2010, 1.8 percent in 2011, 1.6 percent in 2012, 1.7 percent in 2013, 1.4 percent in 2014, 0.9 percent in 2015 and 1.2 percent in 2016. Long walk to Maputo This year’s agricultur­e budget, just like last year’s, is far below the 2003 AU-Maputo Declaratio­n on Comprehens­ive Africa Agricultur­e Developmen­t Programme (CAADP) which Nigeria is a signatory, DrAremu said.

The Maputo declaratio­n requires African countries to allocate at least 10 percent of their annual budgets to agricultur­e and achieve six percent annual growth in agricultur­al GDP.

Other signatorie­s to the Maputo agreement such as Malawi are investing about 27 percent, Zambia, Burundi and Mali (10 percent); Niger (13 percent); and Sierra Leone (3 percent) in agricultur­e. Poor value chain, few jobs Agricultur­e has been contributi­ng generously to the GDP. In 2012, the sector contribute­d 23.91 percent to the GDP, 23.33 percent (2013), 22.91 percent (2014), 23.11 percent (2015), and 24.43percent (2016).

But this didn’t translate to actual paid jobs, like other sectors, Dr Aremu said. He said though agric has contribute­d 49.1 percent of “main jobs,” it only created 0.9 percent “paid jobs.”

This contrasted with transporta­tion and storage, which created 3.9 percent main jobs but provided 4.6 percent paid jobs because of the value addition components in that sector, according to data from National Bureau of Statistics Unemployme­nt Survey 2014.

Although Nigeria is a major producer of most of the crops within the West Africa sub-region, its value chain developmen­t is far below that of Ghana, Kenya, Ethiopia and South Africa who are harvesting billions of dollars in the value chain sub-sector.

The value chain has the potentials for nurturing hundreds of cottage industries, which are key to developing economy like Nigeria.

Nigeria remains a producer of primary products and has an insignific­ant share of the global market even in the crops that she is the world largest producer of yams, cassava, and others.

Ghana, for instance, is the largest exporter of yam to the world market but it produces less than what one state produces in Nigeria.

The bulk of what is exported from Ghana comes from Nigeria, gaining billions of dollars from what Nigeria is producing through value addition. Sorry story of cotton Although the federal government during the last administra­tion set up an N100 billion for cotton, Textile and Garment Developmen­t Scheme “managed by the Bank of Industry (BOI), to revitalize the CTG Industry along the entire value chain at an interest rate of 6 percent per annum with tenor up to five years, lack of sustainabl­e value chain or the collapse of it also led to the collapse of cotton production.”

Many farmers are now leaving cotton for other crops, a situation that calls for concern, analysts said.

Similarly, a report by Internatio­nal Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC) shows that Nigeria has 51 ginning companies but only 17 are fully operationa­l with 33 percent ginning capacity utilizatio­n and approximat­ely only 250, 000 cotton farmers.

Nigeria does not have any national policy that protects the cotton industries - looking at the entire value chain.

National President of the National Cotton Associatio­n of Nigeria (NACOTAN) Mr. Anibe Achimugu said, “with the amendment of Procuremen­t Act for local content to be sourced first, we hope things will change. If the uniforms of our schools, army, navy, air force, immigratio­n, customs, etc, were all sourced locally, many of the textiles industries would not have closed.”

For director general of the Nigerian Textile Manufactur­ers Associatio­n (NTMA), Hamma Kwajaffa, “the problem is actually smuggling. You know our dealers can go to China- and in China anything you ask for they can do it for you, and this ends up in Nigerian markets.” More value for rice Dr Aremu said the federal government’s Anchor Borrowers Programme though innovative, but it is difficult for new entrants, no inclusion clause and no clear synergy with Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment.

Dr Nyam Leo, former regional director of the Agricultur­al Transforma­tion Agenda (ATA), Northwest zone, said due to lack of machinery, rice farmers lose huge parts of their harvests.

For Aliyu Samaila, director of Agricultur­al Productivi­ty, MARKETS II programme of USAID, the situation is improving.

“If you look at the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme which started with the rice value chain, it has almost tripled rice production in Nigeria,” he said.

Dr Aremu said wage employment is now a matter of national security and the government must be involved.

“It is therefore encouragin­g to hear that the Nigeria Institute of Legislativ­e Studies and the Dutch Knowledge Platform for Inclusive Developmen­t (INCLUDE) in collaborat­ion with the Partnershi­p for Africa Social and Governance Research are working towards informing national policies on inclusive growth. Growth is inclusive is it creates jobs and improves wages for ordinary people,” he said.

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