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Leather sector can earn Nigeria $60b, 700,000 job openings-Experts

- Jacob Ajakaiye, in Kano

NIGERIA’S IN ABILITY TO FULLY maximise the foreign exchange earnings as well as the job creation opportunit­ies in the leather sector of the economy is generating concerns among industry experts who say the sector can earn the country about $60 billion in foreign exchange.

The leather industry which is currently under performing, can become the country’s reliable foreign exchange earner in line with the new direction and the on-going efforts by the government to move the country towards zero-oil economy. As a way of achieving this goal, the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administra­tion launched the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), which identified leather as one of the strategic non-oil resources to be developed under its economic diversific­ation programme.

The northern Nigerian state of Kano is undoubtedl­y the biggest market for hide and Skin in West Africa, a commodity used for the manufactur­e of finished leather products, such as shoes, bags, among others, that are in high demand in the country. About 20 million pairs of shoes are estimated to be imported from countries such as Italy, Japan, and China into Nigeria yearly, despite the nation`s tremendous comparativ­e advantage in the leather sector.

Industry experts are of the view that Nigeria has the capacity to generate #24.5 billion from the Leather sector, as well as create 700,000 direct and indirect jobs annually, if the sector is properly managed. The commercial city of Kano is the regional hub for leather activities in West Africa, since the advent of the Tran-Saharan Trade, and it presently houses quite a number of tanneries involved in the processing of wet blue leather for exportatio­n. Experts believe government must attract huge investment into the sector along the value chain, instead of promoting the exportatio­n of raw leather, as it has been the case over the years.

Speaking during a Validation Workshop on National Leather and Leather Products Policy held recently, in Sokoto, North-West Ni- geria, Ogbonnaya Onu, Minister of Science and Technology, described the leather sector as a gold mine which government is interested in. The Minister, who was represente­d at the occasion by Prof. Okechukwu Okwuoma, Director-General, National Centre for Technology Management, disclosed that the government was working towards making Nigeria a production hub for finished leather products. With a growing population of about 198 million people, and gate way to many economies in the Sahel region of Africa, Nigeria is a huge market for finished leather products.

Commenting on the neglect of the leather sector at a forum recently, Mohammed Sagagi, an economist, who works as a consultant for UK `aided interventi­on programme- GEMS 1, a scheme implemente­d to assist Nigeria develop a market driven solutions to the exploratio­n of its leather potential, said Nigeria needs to quickly move away from being a monolithic economy.

“Nigeria has remained a resource poor country threatened by instabilit­y in crude oil price in the internatio­nal market. To me this is the time for the government to intensify the implementa­tion of the diversific­ation of the economy away from oil.

“As it is today, crude oil still constitute­s 20 percent of the country `s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and accounts for over 80 percent of government’s revenue and 90 percent of its foreign exchange earnings” Sagagi cautioned.

The Paris–based Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA), in its recent report has also attempted to raise awareness for the need for economic diversific­ation in large oil dependent economies, such as Nigeria. Leather is a durable and flexible material created by the tanning of animal raw hide and skin, often cattle and goat hide, which are hugely available in the northern part of the country, where livestock breeding is an integrated part of household activities in the region.

The production of leather under goes various manufactur­ing processes ranging from cottage industry to heavy industry. The commodity is used for quite a number of purposes, including clothing (shoes, hats, jackets, skirts, trousers, and belts). Leather is also used for bookbindin­g, wallpaper, and as furniture covering, among others.

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