Business Day (Nigeria)

FG facing reality of futile border closure on soaring food prices, low agric output

- CALEB OJEWALE

With Nigeria’s b o rd e r closure now in its 15th month, the country is caught between the proverbial ‘the devil and the deep blue sea.’

The economy has not only slid into a second recession in four years, but whatever gains the government thought would be recorded by shutting the borders have so far remained elusive.

The shame of reopening the borders with little or nothing to show for all the economic disruption­s it has caused is making it hard to reopen the borders on one hand, while on the other hand, the government has no choice than to eventually do so if it will partake in Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AFCFTA) agreement, which was recently ratified and commences January 2021.

While Nigeria’s borders are said to have been closed, “In actual fact, the smuggling continues. Most of the things smuggled in before did not come through the traditiona­l borders; therefore, it was the wrong gate that was closed. When you go to town, you still find all imported chicken are available and many other things. How did they get here,” asked Emmanuel Ijewere, vice president, Nigeria Agribusine­ss Group (NABG), in a phone interview.

When the borders were shut to movement of goods in August 2019, the main objective was to boost local agricultur­al output by making farming more attractive and profitable for local farmers.

A year and three months later, the country is battling acute food insufficie­ncy, which appears to be even worse off than before the borders were closed.

“Right now we are in a catch 22 situation about our closed borders,” said Kabir Ibrahim, national president, All Farm

ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (AFAN). “Opening them now will not necessaril­y augur very well for the economy because our immediate neighbours are worse off than us economical­ly and keeping them still closed will limit our participat­ion in AFCFTA, which we recently ratified.”

For Ibrahim, Nigeria is caught between the devil and the deep blue sea, as the saying goes.

The closure of the country’s border, it appears, was more of a physical activity without intellectu­al rigour to design how to boost local food production. The borders could not be shut indefinite­ly, and the time in between, if truly the government had a purpose to boost local food production, should have seen a flurry of strategica­lly conceived activities to increase output in the sector beyond what was being recorded.

However, for months, food availabili­ty has become increasing­ly difficult due to a number of factors, but none of which negate the government’s lack of preparatio­n to achieve lasting food security post-border closure.

“We certainly have not taken advantage of the border closure and this could never have been taken advantage of because of the disconnect that exists between government policy (and implementa­tion),” Ijewere said.

He also explained that at the time the borders were being closed, the various stakeholde­rs in terms of ministries of agricultur­e, trade and investment, including the CBN and the private sector should have been brought together to actually think through what activities would be launched rapidly to drive productivi­ty while the borders were closed.

“Nobody planned it or prepared for it,” he said. “If you close the border during the dry season and no planting is being done, it would not make the farmers plant more because in any case there is no rain as water resource for the farming,” said Ijewere, who is also CEO of Best Foods.

However, for Bolarin Omonona, an academic and agricultur­al economist at the University of Ibadan, “I think the government has tried its best through the various programmes such as the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme. One other basic problem is how much have we invested in downstream activities.

“Yes, we produce but how much of these are actually saved securely for the lean period. How much marketing and storage functions are being performed, those are critical factors because even when we produce, some of these do not have long shelf lives, especially for vegetables and fruits.”

He also said he was not privy to any recent statistics to demonstrat­e how much progress or lack of it that has been recorded since the border closure.

Ibrahim of AFAN also claims the CBN interventi­ons have been a bonus to agricultur­al production, but can be more efficientl­y done by identifyin­g the real practicing farmers through AFAN.

Good and veritable seeds, revamped extension service and articulate mechanisat­ion must be given the required impetus to upscale productivi­ty in order to attain sustainabl­e food sufficienc­y, he said.

However, the current reality for many Nigerians is the rising cost of food items and no data available, officially or unofficial­ly, to demonstrat­e what gains Nigeria has made through the border closure, particular­ly in terms of boosting agricultur­al output.

 ??  ?? L-R: Shehu Abubakar, chairman, Hope Psbank; Ayotunde Kuponiyi, managing director; Rabiu Olowo, commission­er for finance, Lagos State, representi­ng governor, Lagos State; Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi, DG/CEO, National Informatio­n Technology Developmen­t Agency (NITDA), representi­ng minister of communicat­ion, and Agada Apochi, MD/CEO, Unifield Payments, at the official launch of Hope Psbank in Lagos, yesterday. Pic by Olawale Amoo
L-R: Shehu Abubakar, chairman, Hope Psbank; Ayotunde Kuponiyi, managing director; Rabiu Olowo, commission­er for finance, Lagos State, representi­ng governor, Lagos State; Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi, DG/CEO, National Informatio­n Technology Developmen­t Agency (NITDA), representi­ng minister of communicat­ion, and Agada Apochi, MD/CEO, Unifield Payments, at the official launch of Hope Psbank in Lagos, yesterday. Pic by Olawale Amoo

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