MAN demands 5% interest rate, forex policy review
The President of Manufacturers’ Association of Nigeria (MAN), Dr. Frank Jacobs has demanded a downwards review of the current interest rate to five per cent.
Dr. Jacobs was speaking against the backdrop of the current Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) of 14 per cent.
Speaking at the 33rd Annual General Meeting of Oyo/Osun/Ondo/Ekiti State Branch of MAN which was held at Jogor Centre, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, Dr. Jacobs said: “We are not happy about the current MPR. If truly we want to industrialize this country, we want the interest rate in the neighbourhood of five per cent. It is the only way we can diversify the economy”.
Similarly, the manufacturers’ helmsman called on the federal government to review items restricted from accessing forex.
Jacobs emphasized that manufacturing deserved attention and therefore reiterated that some of the items on the “not valid for forex allocation” should be removed as they are not locally available.
He however said the association has had regular engagements with the Federal Government, saying the body sympathized with the government because the forex is not there.
On the proposed increase of Value Added Tax (VAT), Jacobs stressed that this is not the time to increase taxes, stressing that the country is in recession.
He added: “This is the time to give incentives to the people to produce. If there are a lot of taxes, they would not be able to produce and create employment.”
In a lecture titled: ‘’Fiscal Policy Thrust for Inclusive Growth in Nigeria Manufacturing Sector,’ Prof.(Mrs.) Olajumoke Familoni-Adeosun, who is the Founder/ Chief Executive Officer of International Centre for Leadership and Entrepreneurship Development (ICLED) urged government to set aside some land as industrial parks.
Prof. Familoni-Adeosun who was the guest lecturer stressed that building infrastructure, conduct value-adding research and partnership are vital for industrial development.
While calling on the government to inject funds into the economy, Prof. Familoni-Adeosun said this is not the time to strangulate the system.
“Money must circulate to the local and indigenous contractors. This is the time to borrow as much as possible. The local manufacturers must not suffer,” Familoni-Adeosun who lectures at Lead City University, Ibadan said.
The lecturer who was a manufacturer in the USA for years pointed out that manufacturers are the lifeline of the nation.
According to her, “It is a labour intensive sector. It absorbs a lot of human capital”.
She however decried low patronage market of locally made goods, wondering why Nigerians always prefer to buy imported items.
Speaking further, the entrepreneur-turned academic charged manufacturers no to compromise on quality, maintaining that as government is playing its role, manufacturers must ensure quality production.
“Don’t remove in the quality of your products. You can cut in other areas that will not directly affect the consumers, but not the quality.
“We need to do ours while government is doing its bit. Abide by the rules,” she said.
Urging them to train and retrain their workers so that they would not be doing the thinking alone, the professor emphasized that training would enhance staff capabilities and capacities.
Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State who was represented by Commissioner for Trade, Industries and Cooperatives, Princess Taibat Adeyemi-Adaba said the state government was making efforts to respond to dwindling revenue and pursue policies to rescue the state economically.
He solicited data and information that would aid the government in its policy formulation.
Also speaking the Chairman, Oyo/Osun/Ondo/Ekiti State Branch of MAN, Chief Kola Akosile said: “In the midst of a gloomy economic climate, our members remained resolute and hopeful that the economy will recover soon so that the manufacturing sector will once again operate at its full potential and contribute positively to the gross domestic product (GDP) of the nation”.
On his part, the Oyo State Director of Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON), Engr. Dele Ayeni, urged Nigerians to increase their patronage of made-in-Nigeria goods. Ayeni reiterated the agency’s resolve to partner with MAN in making Nigerian products competitive in the global market.
He urged the manufacturers to produce quality products, stressing that, “nothing sells in a product better than the quality of such a product”.
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