THISDAY

Nigeria Ranked 110 in Global Logistics Performanc­e Index

- Eromosele Abiodun

As Nigeria, especially commercial centres grapple with crippling traffic, poor port and road infrastruc­ture, the nation has been ranked 110 out of 160 countries in Global Logistics Performanc­e Index (LPI).

The LPI is an interactiv­e bench-marking tool created to help countries identify the challenges and opportunit­ies they face in their performanc­e on trade logistics and what they can do to improve their performanc­e. The LPI allows for comparison­s across 160 countries.

The LPI, according to the World Bank Group, is based on a worldwide survey of operators on the ground (global freight forwarders and express carriers), providing feedback on the logistics “friendline­ss” of the countries in which they operate and those with which they trade.

Speaking on the developmen­t, the Council for the Regulation of Freight Forwarding in Nigeria (CRFFN) expressed worry over Nigeria’s poor ranking in the LPI, stressing that the poor ranking is worrisome and must be addressed.

The Registrar of CRFFN, Samuel Nwakohu stated this while speaking at a stakeholde­rs’ meeting on practition­ers’ operating fee (POF) regime titled: “A New Decade of Freight Forwarding in Nigeria.”

To address the worrisome situation, he said the council must begin the collection of the POF as approved by the Federal Ministry of Finance (FMOF).

According to him, the LPI ranking says a lot about Nigeria’s freight forwarding industry, “which must be addressed in other to compete with its contempora­ries in Africa and the world.”

“Freight forwarding is a big and noble business. It is both trade facilitati­ng and mover of global economy, hence, the World Bank in recognitio­n of this fact establishe­d the Global Logistics Performanc­e Index as the new metric for measuring national competitiv­eness,” he said.

The indices, the CRFFN registrar said, are efficiency of the clearance process, that is, speed, simplicity and predictabi­lity of formalitie­s by border control agencies, including customs.

“Other indices are: Quality of trade and transport related infrastruc­ture (e.g., ports, railroads, roads, informatio­n technology); ease of arranging competitiv­ely priced shipments; competence and quality of logistics services (e.g., transport operators, customs brokers); ability to track and trace consignmen­ts and timeliness of shipments in reaching destinatio­n within the scheduled or expected delivery time.

“Incidental­ly, this metric became operationa­l in 2007,

the year CRFFN was born. It may interest you to know that out of the six parameters in this metric, five are strictly freight forwarding functions. So, freight forwarders are the real logisticia­ns when it comes to national economy.”

The registrar added that Nigeria is not faring well amongst the comity of nations, noting that this ranking says a lot about Nigeria and her freight forwarding industry.

“To assert our relevance, we must be seen to be addressing these issues especially when we observe that small countries like Cote D’ Ivoire and Rwanda rank 50th and 57th position respective­ly. This is certainly not where we should be and Nigeria’s freight forwarding industry must brace up and reposition as a matter utmost urgency,” he said.

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