Daily Trust

Dangote wants oil price to remain low

- By Hamisu Muhammad

Billionair­e and President of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote has called for prayers for the internatio­nal oil price to remain low, saying that “this helps wean us off the dependency on revenues from petroleum.”

Addressing investors at the sidelines of the 72nd session of United Nations General Assembly in New York, Dangote said “Agricultur­e, agricultur­e, agricultur­e. Africa will become the food basket of the world.”

In a packed room at the headquarte­rs of global law firm Shearman and Sterling LLC high level business leaders and internatio­nal diplomats invited by the Corporate Council for Africa to hear Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, and Rwandan president Paul Kagame openly converse on Africa’s opportunit­ies and challenges.

A statement from APO said both leaders underscore­d the ongoing movement to diversify African economies. In the case of Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, Dangote stated “we should pray that oil prices remain low. This helps wean us off the dependency on revenues from petroleum. We must take oil to be the icing on the cake. We already have the cake,” he added.

In addition to agricultur­e Dangote cited Nigeria’s vast mineral resources and gas as well and the need to manufactur­e more goods locally for domestic consumptio­n. Both he and President Kagame cited continued need for heavy investment­s in education and connected the need for young people to be well trained for the jobs of tomorrow.

Dangote predicted that “five of the twelve million jobs needed in Africa soon must be created in Nigeria.”

Dangote’s fortune which stems from cement, sugar, and other household commoditie­s has expanded into fertilizer and other processed high-value goods. “Technology of course helps us a lot and our factories are state of the art with the use of robotics but we shouldn’t be overly tech oriented to create wealth,” he told investors.

Mr. Dangote who is often cited as one of the most inspiring business leaders in the world today and a model for young entreprene­urs offered advice to Americans who tend to rely on outdated news and wrong perception­s of Africa, “Don’t be lazy. Go there and find the real story for yourself. Things have changed.”

Dangote noted the Rwanda success story where he has business interests as an example of positive change, good governance and leadership, and where corruption has been cured. He cited a personal experience of offering a $100 US tip for services at the Kigali Airport to staff who refused to take money for work they were paid to do. President Kagame was praised for delivering the environmen­t for growth he promised. “There is nothing African about corruption,” the Rwandan president added.

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