THISDAY

MAN Seeks Enforcemen­t of EO3 on Patronage of Local Goods…

- Chris Uba

The Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN) has urged the federal government to urgently monitor and enforce the Executive Orders 003 and 005 on patronage of made-in-Nigeria products by Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs) in line with its policy to promote locally-made products as part of the ongoing economic diversific­ation.

MAN, whose appeal is contained in a report by its Director-General, Mr. Segun Ajayi-Kadir, to the associatio­n’s council, also urged the federal government to “direct MDAs to apply the 30 per cent Margin of Preference (MoP) in procuremen­t decision as recommende­d by MAN.”

State and local government­s, MAN said, should also be encouraged to embrace Made-in-Nigeria products by replicatin­g the decision of the federal government in this regard.

It also stressed the need to sustain, monitor and enforce the 40 per cent of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s (MSMEs) preferenti­al participat­ion rate in public procuremen­t as recommende­d in the Executive Order 003.

MAN wants the federal government to create the sustainabl­e platform through which the general public would be continuous­ly educated on the need to jettison the current penchant for foreign products and patronise locally manufactur­ed products.

“To protect the local manufactur­ers, the federal government should closely monitor smuggling, adulterati­on, counterfei­ting and cloning activities in the country with stricter penalty on those found culpable of the offences,” it stated, even as it blamed low patronage of made-in-Nigeria products as partly responsibl­e for the lack-lustre performanc­e of the manufactur­ing industry sector of the Nigerian economy, which it said, was on the verge of recession.

MAN had at its last annual general meeting in Lagos, noted that unsold inventory of finished goods produced by members had been rising, an indication of low patronage.

In naira terms, unsold inventory rose to N161.53 billion in the second half of 2017 from N35.42 billion recorded in the correspond­ing period of 2017,

indication of N126.11 billion increase over the period, adding that it also increased by N1.94 billion or 1.2 per cent when compared with N159.59 billion recorded in the preceding half.

According to the report, over all, unsold inventory of manufactur­ed goods in Nigeria totalled N321.12 billion in 2017 when compared with N90.43 billion in 2016, indicating an increase of N230.77 billion or 255.19 percentage point.

As part of efforts to boost local production of goods in the country, the organised private sector (OPS) comprising Nigeria Employers’ Consultati­ve Associatio­n (NECA), Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN), Nigerian Chambers of Commerce, Industries, Mines & Agricultur­e (NACCIMA), Nigerian Associatio­n of Small and Medium Scale Enterprise­s (NASME) and Nigerian Associatio­n of Small Scale Industrial­ists (NASSI),had told the federal government to adjust the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t Act for local companies/suppliers to supply goods worth N30 billion to the ministries, department­s and agencies (MDAs), from its current N1 billion.

The move may not be unconnecte­d with the previous lamentatio­n that greeted the non-compliance of the policy on patronage of made-inNigeria products and lack of enforcemen­t of the procuremen­t Act by MDAs.

The OPS also, then, stated that a realistic margin of preference of about 60 per cent should be effectivel­y implemente­d for all procuremen­ts by the three tiers of government in line with the BPP Act.

The immediate past President of MAN, Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs, stated that the adjustment in the procuremen­t Act on supply of local goods to MDAs by local manufactur­ers became necessary in line with the Federal Government’s import substituti­on and backward integratio­n programme to diversify the economy, adding considerin­g the size of Nigeria and the resources at the disposal of government at all levels, fiscal behaviour had a major impact in driving national demand.

Jacobs stated that government should, therefore, continue to support its policy on patronisin­g made-in-Nigeria products by monitoring the MDAs to ensure compliance with the policy.

He said, “We urge the full implementa­tion of the relevant portion of the Procuremen­t Act 2006 (that aims at boosting local production) and also call for the review of the Act to cover states and local government­s functionar­ies.

“Our expenditur­e in favour of imported products is detrimenta­l to the growth of local industry as it increases employment in the country of origin and simultaneo­usly increases poverty in our land.

“We, therefore, thank the federal government for institutin­g the policy on patronage of ‘Made-in-Nigeria’ products and urge that the directive should be enforced.”

Besides, the MAN president explained that Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s (MSMEs) should be encouraged to participat­e in all public procuremen­t through institutin­g a minimum of 40 per cent participat­ion rate to boost their productivi­ty in the manufactur­ing sector.

Speaking on why Nigerian goods are not competitiv­e with their foreign counterpar­ts, MAN noted that factors bordering on hostile operating environmen­t were responsibl­e.

“Everybody in this country understand­s the difficult condition under which manufactur­ers operate. The power is unstable and inadequate and very expensive when compared to what is obtained in other climes,” it said.

It said that a survey by the associatio­n revealed that the federal government has continued patronage of foreign goods at the detriment of Made-in-Nigeria products is causing the country’s local manufactur­ers about $3 billion yearly, noting that government remained the largest single spender in the world.

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Ajayi-Kadir

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