Business Day (Nigeria)

Review lending rate, waive import duties on inputs, MAN tells FG

- GBEMI FAMINU

The Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN) has urged the federal government to review the interest rate and waive import duties on active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s (APIS) and food-related raw materials to support the manufactur­ing sector reeling from corona virusrelat­ed challenges.

Speaking during the associatio­n’s 48th Annual General Meeting held in Lagos last week, Mansur Ahmed, MAN president, said that the COVID-19 pandemic created unpreceden­ted challenges in the global and local economies, leading to an economic shutdown and a halt in manufactur­ing activities, including low productivi­ty, job losses, decline in consumer demand, and a general deteriorat­ion in living standards.

“Support manufactur­ing concerns by reviewing the terms of existing loan facilities, especially reducing interest rates to five percent with two years moratorium. Manufactur­ers that are investing in order to scale production should be granted loans at five percent interest rate for a period of five to seven years,” he said.

Ahmed said regulatory agencies must aid the revival the manufactur­ing sector through necessary reviews and palliative­s, following the impact of the coronaviru­s on the business environmen­t.

Mansur further said that manufactur­ers were yet to recover from the impact of the pandemic and weeks of the lockdown, stressing that many sub sectors collapsed to the point of almost shutting down.

He implored the government and regulatory agencies to support the sector through the provision of stimulus packages, reversal of the Value Added Tax rate to five percent, review of existing loan facilities, waiver of import duties and demurrages, among other things.

He urged the CBN to extend its COVID-19 stimulus packages to manufactur­ers not covered by

existing CBN initiative­s and also grant manufactur­ers increased access to the foreign exchange at PRE-COVID-19 rate to support the importatio­n of raw materials, machines, and spares that are not available locally.

Mansur equally called for the introducti­on of fiscal measures by waiving import duties on inputs, while exempting manufactur­ers from demurrages payable between February and July 2020, especially those occasioned by the lockdown directives of government and others associated with the COVID-19 management.

He urged the federal government to direct all regulatory agencies to prioritise the request of manufactur­ers and also carry out their roles with empathy and while reducing their respective administra­tive charges by 50 percent.

Similarly, he said that the timelines for filing and paying taxes should be extended by six months after the economy returns to normalcy, adding that the excise duty should be based on sales and not production.

Mansur noted that in order to improve the disposable income of consumers, stimulate consumptio­n, promote an upsurge in demand and increase production output, it was necessary to reverse the VAT back five percent and also reduce the Personal Income Tax to a flat rate of 10 percent for a year.

Mansur also commended members of the associatio­n who donated no less than N8 billion in cash and N300 million naira worth of palliative materials to both federal and state government­s despite the decline in business activities.

 ??  ?? L-R: Isaac Ade-agoye, national treasurer, Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigerian (MAN); Mansur Ahmed, president, and Ambrose Oruche, acting director general, during the press briefing at the 48th annual general meeting of MAN in Lagos.
Pic by Olawaleamo­o
L-R: Isaac Ade-agoye, national treasurer, Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigerian (MAN); Mansur Ahmed, president, and Ambrose Oruche, acting director general, during the press briefing at the 48th annual general meeting of MAN in Lagos. Pic by Olawaleamo­o

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