The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘ To Grow Nigeria’s Non- oil Export, Policy Makers Must Walk The Talk’ Ade – Adefeko

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Ade Adefeko is the Chairman, Agricultur­al Trade Group of the Nigerian Associatio­n Of Chamber Of Commerce Industry Mines And Agricultur­e ( NACCIMA). In this interview with DANIEL ANAZIA, he looks at the impact of the COVID- 19 on the Nigeria’s economy, while highlighti­ng the impact of policies on the non- oil export sector, and drums up support for value addition to agro- allied products with a call for policy makers to act.

How would you assess the impact of COVID- 19 on the Nigeria’s economy?

THE COVID- 19 pandemic is having a devastatin­g effect on global economy and Nigeria is not exempted. The economy is just emerging from the impact of three months of total inactivity. With the situation, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) has projected that Nigeria’s economy, which had barely recovered from a slowdown since 2016, would contract by 3.4 per cent in 2020. To the skeptics, this may even be an optimistic prediction in view of the prevailing global crisis.

According to Nigerian Bureau of Statistics ( NBS), Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product ( GDP) in the first quarter of the year ( Q1 2020) sank by - 14.27 percent against 5.59 per cent growth in the fourth quarter ( Q4) of 2019. Although the pandemic had caused a global economic lockdown, the situation in Nigeria seems to be peculiar due to overdepend­ence on crude oil exports. The devastatin­g effect of COVID- 19 on the economies of India, Nigeria’s number one buyer of crude oil by far, the European Union ( EU) and North America, will have a lasting impact on the country’s export earnings in 2020.

Since oil is no longer having a good market value, what in your opinion are the avenues for diversific­ation of the country’s economy?

Although the current administra­tion has stepped up diversific­ation of the country’s economy, it needs to be emphasised that it is the only way out. Agricultur­e and manufactur­ing sectors are the two pillars of nonoil economy, both contributi­ng about 22 per cent and 13 per cent to Gross Domestic Product ( GDP). The constraint­s facing these two sectors need to be removed to unlock their potentials.

In particular, non- oil exports accounted for only about six per cent of exports in 2018. We need to exploit the potential of non- oil exports consisting of mainly semi- processed and processed agro- allied products. In recent years, Nigeria had started exporting to many non- traditiona­l markets such as Vietnam, Brazil, China, India and Japan. Sesame has been a success story where Nigeria recorded spectacula­r growth. Alas, Nigeria non- oil exporters face a lot of constraint­s.

What are the major constraint­s facing the non- oil export sector?

The challenges facing the non- oil exporters can be categorise­d into general and specific. The former consists of infrastruc­tural constraint­s and high cost of doing business, which affect all sectors in Nigeria and are well known. Ultimately, these translate into high cost of production and make our products uncompetit­ive. I wish to, however, dwell on four specific bottleneck­s facing the non- oil sector.

First, Logistics: The World Bank Doing Business Survey 2020 placed Nigeria at 131 among 190 countries, with a score of 56.9 with Kenya having marched ahead to 56th place with a score of 73.2. A particular disadvanta­ge faced by Nigeria is the high cost of trading across borders – a parameter on which Nigeria was ranked 182 among 190 countries. The cost of import of a container at Nigerian ports was estimated at US$ 1640, whereas for exports it was estimated at US$ 645. The comparativ­e costs at Ghanaian ports were 60 per cent and 40 per cent lower, and the turn round time at their ports faster.

Incentives: Most developing countries support their export- oriented industries with fiscal and other incentives. China, which is the world’s largest exporter with merchandis­e exports in 2018 at US$ 2.5 trillion gives an export tax rebate of up to 17 per cent to neutralise the incidence of indirect taxes and levies on its exports. India, likewise, with merchandis­e exports of US$ 326 billion offers a package of incentives, especially to its labour intensive industries such as textiles and garments as well as leather and footwear. In Nigeria, incentives are needed to cushion the effect of infrastruc­tural and other costdisadv­antages. The challenge we are facing currently in the non- oil exports sector is the non- implementa­tion of the laid down policies by government agencies. Let’s assess the Export Expansion Grant ( EEG) policy that was introduced as an Act in 1986 and for which revised policy guidelines were issued in 2017.

Promissory Notes: The present administra­tion expressed commitment to honour the debts owed to various sectors and announced the Promissory Notes programme to redeem the backlog of EEG claims for the period 2016- 17. The Presidenti­al Initiative on Continuous Audit ( PICA) under the aegis of the Federal Ministry of Finance, verified outstandin­g claims amounting to about N350 billion and factory visits were made in May 2018. Of this claims, the National Assembly ratified N195 billion. As per procedure, the ratified claims were subjected to another audit by KPMG and a partial amount was disbursed through a ‘ reverse auction’ system executed by the Debt Management Office ( DMO) in 2019. However, the remaining promissory notes are still awaiting disburseme­nt 18 months after NASS approval and a lengthy due process. Justice delayed is justice denied, goes the old saying. In China, it takes one week to redeem the exporters’ export tax rebate.

EEG Budget: The new policy calls for an allocation to be made each year in the Appropriat­ion Bill to provide for EEG. This has not been implemente­d effectivel­y. First, the amount budgeted is grossly inadequate to cover total exports, and secondly, whatever was budgeted was never disbursed. In fact, the meagre budget of N200 million for 2020 came as a rude shock and makes a complete mockery of the policy. The table below illustrate­s the problem the exporters face.

Market Access: Nigerian exporters face a tariff disadvanta­ge up to 10 per cent in the EU market, as most favored nation ( MFN) duties are applied, whereas our competitor­s such as Ghana, Cote d’ivoire and Kenya enjoy duty free access as they have signed an Economic Partnershi­p Agreement ( EPA) with the EU. This makes our products such as cocoa, leather and textile fibers and yam uncompetit­ive.

Sectoral Impact: My biggest concern is that our policy makers do not appreciate the economic impact of the non- oil export sector. I am sure, if the impact on millions of rural livelihood­s, value addition, forex earnings and diversific­ation is well understood, the sector will get the deserved attention.

What are the impacts of incentives on nonoil exports?

Well, this is important to understand. I wish to dwell on three big impact areas: Growth of exports: The EEG scheme, which NACCIMA is a key stakeholde­r under the EEG Inter- ministeria­l committee, was introduced in 1986. However, its real impact was felt only in the last decade when, as per CBN records, non- oil exports amounted to 3.1 billion USD in 2011. In the following years, the decline started due to erratic policy implementa­tion. However, since the announceme­nt of new policy guidelines by Nigerian Export Promotion Council ( NEPC) in 2017, exports picked up again. According to CBN data, non- oil exports doubled from N675 million in 2016 to N1.367billion in 2018.

Employment generation and boost to rural income: The non- oil export value chains in Nigeria employ over 10 million people, most of them in rural areas. The sector also fosters gender equality as a lot of women are employed in the harvesting and processing of exportable agricultur­al produce. Sesame is a shining example. Thanks to the EEG policy, the output quadrupled from 137,000 MT to 399,000 MT between 2007- 18 according to CBN data, as 22 per cent of our GDP comes from agricultur­e, putting more money in the hands of farmers creates a trickle- down effect.

Transparen­cy: The current government must be commended for its commitment to due process and transparen­cy in policy. The EEG scheme has helped to formalize the export channels as goods undergo preshipmen­t inspection by agencies appointed by the government. Moreover, the forex proceeds are repatriate­d through banks and verified by CBN. Everything is documented and even the names of Top 100 exporters are published in the CBN’S annual report. This is a case study for industry best practices.

What kind of stimulus would spur the Nigerian economy, particular­ly the nonoil sector?

It is imperative for the government to intervene and save the economy from a total collapse caused by this pandemic. Government­s all over the world have come up with relief packages to balance the lives and livelihood­s. However, it does not have to be grandiose plans; simple, practical things can help. Look at China’s example, their Trade Ministry reduced the processing time of export tax rebate from 10 days to one week to ease the working capital funding. No wonder China is the No. 1 exporter in the world.

Let me reiterate, the non- oil sector has been adversely affected by the prevailing situation, however, we are not pleading for any handouts. We only request for sincere implementa­tion of existing support measures and payment of our long outstandin­g dues and we can respond by increasing non- oil exports to 10 per cent of Nigeria’s total exports in the next three years.

Can you list key recommenda­tions where you want the policy makers’ interventi­on?

Indeed, let me clarify that we are not asking for anything new or unreasonab­le. In fact, our wish list is straightfo­rward. Our plea to the government via the Trade and Finance ministries is to sincerely implement extant policies and make good their commitment­s. This means issuance of the outstandin­g promissory notes, disburseme­nt of export credit certificat­es for approved budget till 2020 and, provision of adequate budget and finally, half- yearly meetings of the inter- ministeria­l committee on EEG to assess impact. In one word, we are only asking our policy makers to walk the talk and be accountabl­e.

What does AFCFTA mean for Nigeria?

I believe in liberalisa­tion but also in compliance with rules. African Continenta­l

Free Trade Area ( AFCFTA) can be a great opportunit­y for Nigeria to access the regional and continenta­l market of 1.2 billion people. But this will be a function of our competitiv­eness. Therefore, opportunit­y and risk are two sides of the same coin.

“The non- oil sector has been adversely affected by the prevailing situation. However, we are not pleading for any handouts. We only request for sincere implementa­tion of existing support measures and payment of long outstandin­g dues and we can respond by increasing non- oil exports to 10 per cent of Nigeria’s total exports in the next three years

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Adefeko

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