The Guardian (Nigeria)

Poor patronage, high production costs shrink textile firms to below 20

- By Femi Adekoya

POOR implementa­tion of the patronage policy, high cost of production, high level of importatio­n, smuggling among other challenges have continued to undermine Nigeria’s textile sector, shrinking the number of viable textile firms to less than 20 from 175 firms in 1985.

According to the Nigerian Textile Manufactur­ers Associatio­n ( NTMA), the textile sector, which used to be the highest employer of labour, lost at least 117,000 jobs within 26 years, with more losses underway without government’s interventi­on.

The associatio­n noted that the industry's declining export capacity, having led to the loss of preferenti­al market access in the EU and US, was attributab­le to inconsiste­nt implementa­tion of Export Expansion Grant ( EEG) policy, particular­ly, the perennial backlog of EEG claims, and the inconsiste­ncies in the implementa­tion of ECOWAS Trade Liberalisa­tion Scheme.

NTMA added other factors to include, high- cost production that has rendered its products non- competitiv­e; unrestrain­ed smuggling and counterfei­ting of Made- inNigeria textiles; poor patronage despite Federal Government’s Executive Order 003 of 2017, inadequate and costly electricit­y supply, poor infrastruc­ture, high taxation and interest rates, high cost of diesel and LPFO and the depreciati­ng value of the naira.

NTMA President, Folorunsho Daniyan, while speaking on the state of the textile industry in Nigeria and its lack of competitiv­e edge, noted that its membership had shrunk from 175 firms in 1985 to less than 20 in 2022.

"Employment- wise, the number of jobs provided by the industry took a dive from 137,000 jobs in 1996 to 24,000 jobs in 2008. Today the number of jobs provided in the industry is less than 20,000 jobs," explained Daniyan.

The NTMA president also stated that Nigerian textiles used to be exported to W est and Central Africa but suffered a setback between 2003 and 2008.

"Textile exports reached their lowest ebb in 2006. However, it recovered some lost ground in 2007 and 2008. T oday, the situation is even worse as our exportabil­ity is next to zero ," he added.

Daniyan warned that the promised benefits of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement ( AFCFTA) would elude Nigeria if illegal imports of textile fabrics and other products that Nigeria can produce locally continue to find their way into its markets unchecked.

"However, the NTMA, along with our labour union, wishes to acknowledg­e some measures by the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, the Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN), and the Bank of Industry ( BOI) aimed at the textile industry revival and called for urgent stakeholde­rs meeting that must include the Union to objectivel­y review some of these measures to ascertain the level of success as well as the challenges.

"We are also calling on President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure holistic implementa­tion of the Cotton Textile Garment ( CTG) policy. The textile industry remains a critical plank for addressing the current high level of unemployme­nt and attendant security challenges in the country," Daniyan said.

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