Nigeria turns to agriculture as recession bites harder

Nigeria turns to agriculture as recession bites harder

- Nigeria is turning to farming in the face of dwindling oil income

- More people are going hungry as the recession bites harder

- The federal government seeks to diversify the economy with heavy focus on agriculture

The federal government and Nigerians in general are turning to agriculture as an alternative as the economic recession currently ravaging the nation gets worse.

Nigeria turns to agriculture as recession bites harder
Nigeria's minister of agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh

The government already have plans to capitalize the Bank of Agriculture with 1 trillion naira so it can lend to farming projects at less than half the commercial rate.

The government also has plans to set up staple crop-processing zones with support from the African Development Bank and the World Bank.

Successive Nigerian governments ignored farming when the country started earning majority of its revenue from oil.

READ ALSO: Rice farmers accuse corporate bodies of causing scarcity

The dwindling international oil prices and the renewed Niger Delta militancy have however made the Muhammadu Buhari government vulnerable as the government seeks to diversify the economy with heavy focus on agriculture.

The Buhari government plans to stop statistics such as Nigeria spending more than 1 trillion naira importing food last year.

“It’s only agriculture that’s going to feed us and employ more of us, not oil,” minister of agriculture, Audu Ogbeh said in an interview recently.

The Buhari government aims to use its farming to achieve self-sufficiency for most consumed foods and boost its foreign-currency position by reducing imports and exporting surplus farm produce.

“The potential is there and still huge. It’s time to return to the farms, and never ignore agriculture again,” Cross River state based farmer Muyi Ladoja told Bloomberg.

Dimieari Von Kemedi, managing director of rice producer Alluvial Group, said: “Investments are increasing in Nigeria’s agriculture, and will increase at an even faster rate if government can help fix these infrastructure and access to credit problems.”

READ ALSO: Recession: State governments explore other sources of income

In a related development, tomato paste processing will be prioritized by the federal government next year as part its strategic implementation plan to become self-sufficient in the product.

This was disclosed by President Muhammadu Buhari through Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Monday, December 5, in Abuja while declaring open the 2016 Africa Economic Conference, NAN reports.

The theme of the conference was “Feed Africa: Towards agro-allied industrialization for inclusive growth.”

Source: Legit.ng

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