THISDAY

Rand Merchant Bank Pledges to Partner Nigeria on Trade Facilitati­on

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Rand Merchant Bank has promised that it would continue to partner and support Nigeria’s government towards ensuring that the country becomes a hub for trade in the continent.

The Co-Head, Banking Rand Merchant Bank Nigeria, Taiwo Shote, said this as part of his contributi­on on a recent panel with the theme, “Implementi­ng a 21st century trade economy: The challenge of transformi­ng Nigeria into Africa’s business hub.” The panel was part of the GTR Trade conference, one of the world’s leading trade finance events.

“As a bank, we intend to find ways to continuous­ly partner and support the government in Nigeria becoming a hub for African trade,” Shote explained.

Trade facilitati­on has been highlighte­d as a key objective in the country’s mission to boost economic growth.

To support this, Nigeria’s Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment had announced a group of policies aimed at promoting the nation as an African trade and investment hub, ranging from the enhancemen­t of logistics corridors for perishable goods to the simplifica­tion, modernisat­ion and harmonisat­ion of trade documents and procedures.

This is in addition to the support the Central Bank of Nigeria is providing through its various policies and incentives to drive non-oil exports in Nigeria with the interventi­on funds and recently the RT200 program which the CBN is aiming to drive exports to $200 billion in the next three to five years.

“We have embraced the policies that have been implemente­d to drive economic developmen­t and have the expertise and resources to support the government from a private sector perspectiv­e,” he added. The Export Expansion Facility Program (EEFP) is one of the initiative­s borne out of the impact of Covid-19 pandemic on export businesses. The Nigerian Export Promotion Council also created a fund with BOI acting as custodian of the Export Developmen­t Fund of N50 billion, a part of the federal government’s N2.3 trillion Economic Sustainabi­lity Plan. To date, over 1000 exporters had benefited from the program through fund assistance and capacity training,” Shote added.

“Trade and Export can only be successful with the supporting infrastruc­ture. The National Quality Infrastruc­ture Project (NQIP) was initiated to support the developmen­t of missing standards and quality control bodies in Nigeria in order to improve the competitiv­eness of Nigerian goods and services.

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