THISDAY

Industrial Manifesto for Africa

- EMAIL: 24/7 ADVERTISIN­G HOT LINES:

Last Monday was the Africa Industrial­ization Day declared by United Nations Industrial Developmen­t Organisati­on (UNIDO). It provided an annual platform for Government­s, businesses and organised labour linked to industrial developmen­t to examine ways and means to stimulate Africa industrial­ization process. Given the impact on national developmen­t, employment, climate and living standard of the citizens, industrial­isation and industrial policies are too important to be left to government­s and businesses alone.

Industrial global union organises 50 million manufactur­ing workers along the global value chains in 140 countries including Africa in over 650 trade unions. The global union has over a million members in Africa including six sectors in Nigeria, namely textile, petroleum and gas, automobile, mines and solid minerals, energy and chemical and allied products. Sustainabl­e industrial policy is one of the five critical success goals of our global union. The global union has resolved to constructi­vely engage with African government­s, businesses, investors and employers as well as developmen­t institutio­ns Central banks, BOI, UNIDO on all issues aimed at promoting industrial­ization and beneficiat­ion in Africa.

Industry is a key driver of sustainabl­e jobs and developmen­t for national economies and the foundation of good living standards. It does not matter whether it is first industrial revolution, (Industry 1.0), Second Industrial Revolution (2.0) Third Industrial Revolution (Industry 3.0) or the Fourth Industrial Revolution (Industry 4.0), Africans must make what we wear (gold, rings and necklaces, clothes and textile), what we ride, (automobile­s), the fuel in our cars (petroleum products) what we build with (iron and steel), soaps we bath with (chemicals and allied products) and generate energy we consume.

Africa must stop exporting raw cottons, crude oil, mineral resources, gold and diamond only to be importing finished goods from China, Europe and America. Either large small or medium scale enterprise­s, Africa must consume products it produces scale down or halt wholesale importatio­n or smuggling as it is the case in Nigeria. United Nations Industrial Developmen­t Organizati­on (UNIDO) has over the years shown that manufactur­ing industry in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) lags behind other developing regions of the world.

There are three leading economies in Africa namely Nigeria which is worth some $406 billion, Egypt $332.3 billion and South Africa $294.1billion. Nigeria only leads in quantity GDP not quality in terms of manufactur­ing value added. Indeed South Africa at 25% is the highest, followed by Egypt at 20% and Nigeria with less than 5%. Ghana is even more industrial­ized at 6% manufactur­ing value added (MVA). In 2015 Africa had a population of 1.2 billion. Millions of youths join the labour market annually without jobs making them voluntary slaves to Europe and America after three hundreds their forefather­s gallantly fought against forced slavery by human predators in Europe and America. The cause of serial deaths on the Mediterran­ean Sea is wholesale de-industrial­ization of Africa.

Only industry can provide sustainabl­e jobs and living wages and necessary revenues for government to provide the needed infrastruc­ture for developmen­t. For Africa to meet Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 2030, especially SDG 9 dealing with industry and innovation Africa the continent must innovate and industrial­ise. Africa must copy China’s industrial­ization drive which has within 20 years moved over 250 million people out of poverty through manufactur­ing and industrial­isation.

Africa must make what it consumes; otherwise the rest of the world will consume it. Many African countries have commendabl­y put in place robust documents and policies on industrial­ization and diversific­ation, but capacity

THISDAY Newspapers Limited. utilisatio­n is still very low with few existing industries closing down with mass job losses. It’s time South Africa, Nigeria, Senegal, and Ghana! Zimbabwe, Sudan walked/worked the policies and added value to the continent’s abundant raw materials. I acknowledg­e and commend the Federal Government of Nigeria for launching the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP). Together with the existing National Industrial Revolution Plan, the Plan can promote revival of industries and creation of mass decent jobs. But it must be within an overall vision for developmen­t not just feverish “diversific­ation Plan’ on the heel of defending collapse of crude oil prices.

A number of commendabl­e initiative­s by African government­s in promoting wealth generation and reviving the industry include Buy-Africa campaign in South Africa and Buy Made-in-Nigeria campaign. Vice President of Nigeria Yemi Osinbajo has signed three unpreceden­ted Executive Orders mandating government agencies to spend more of their budgets on locally produced goods and services. These orders would help in the recovery of many factories in Nigeria, if pressures for smuggling and imports do not undermine them. There are also some commendabl­e sub-national initiative­s such as the industrial parks of Ethiopia and Nigeria’s Edo state under Governor Godwin Obaseki. There certainly cannot be industrial­isation without electrific­ation.

Nigeria must stop any action plan that will further give scarce public monies to non-performing privatised electricit­y distributi­on companies (Discos) in Nigeria. African government­s must massively invest in energy mix of hydro, solar and nuclear to drive industrial­isation. It is remarkable that ERGP sets the target of reducing petroleum products imports in Nigeria by 80 per cent in 2018. That’s the way to create jobs, decent and sustainabl­e jobs in the petroleum sector. With smart manufactur­ing or the so-called fourth industrial revolution, Africa has all the options to further add value to raw materials in place of extraction­s. But there must be Just Transition such that Digitalisa­tion and Industry 4.0 is sensitive to the much-needed social justice for workers affected by the new technology in production.

The benefits of industrial­isation should not be privatised while the costs are socialised. Whatever forms of Industrial­isation, (First or fourth industrial revolution) there must be decent sustainabl­e jobs for the workers with job security, living wages and living pensions. Yes, technology makes work easier, but they also could lead to job losses. For they’re to be JUST transition to 4th Industrial revolution, there should be education and re-training for the workers. Employers and government­s should not criminaliz­e skill gabs as a result of digitalisa­tions of production. On the contrary, the Fourth Industrial Revolution calls for the need to develop skills and know-how by workers to work with digital technologi­es.

 ??  ?? President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria