Vice President, Prof Yemi
Osinbajo, has revealed that the Federal Government’s N2.3 trillion stimulus
package was designed to mitigate the shock, tackle the vulnerabilities, create
and protect jobs, as well as rescue businesses and reposition the economy.
The Vice President stated this in
his keynote at the 61st annual conference of the Nigerian Economic Society
(NES) themed “African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) in Post COVID-19
Era: What Next for Nigeria?”
“Our projections showed that
without the stimulus, the economy was set to contract by -4.4% in 2020, but
with implementation, including ramping up local production, we should be able
to limit the negative growth to -0.59%. Let me be clear, our desire to ramp up
local production is not a call to autarky but rather an expenditure switching
approach which can complement the AfCFTA desire to deepen regional
value-chains,” he added.
Referring to Nigeria’s experience
with the COVID-19 pandemic, Prof. Osinbajo said, “indeed, one thing that has
become clear from our experiences of the last few months is the need for a
vibrant and successful AfCFTA.
“The pandemic has exposed our
dependence on commodity exports to other parts of the world and on the import
of manufactured goods from them.
“As at 2017, intra-Africa trade
in goods was $135 billion, which was just about 15% of Africa’s total trade.
This is in sharp contrast to trade in other regions, which is as high as 70% in
the European Union and 60% in Asia.
“The imposition of export bans,
including on food items by some countries and the disruption of global supply
chains at the height of the pandemic, showed just how exposed and vulnerable
African countries are because of limited productive capacity and a lack of
regional value chains.”
The Vice President then noted
some of the proactive steps taken by the Federal Government to participate
effectively in the AfCFTA.
In his words, “…the Federal Government is investing heavily in power, road, rail and port infrastructure projects. It is also why we are taking active steps to improve the business environment and to facilitate trade across our borders, including through the implementation of the National Trading Platform or Single Window Project. Part of that project is the installation of scanners at our ports.
“Government also realizes, of
course, that it needs to be able to enforce trade rules and apply trade
remedies so that our partners in the AfCFTA, especially our neighbours, do not
take undue advantage of our large market. You will be glad to know that the
National Action Committee on the implementation of the AfCFTA, which is chaired
by the Honourable Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, is actively
seized with these matters.”
He added that, “if the AfCFTA is
to achieve the desired objectives, then it is also very important that Nigeria
should push for the implementation of complementary programmes and protocols,
including the Protocol on Free Movement of Persons, the pan-African payments
system and other sectoral programmes.”
On the need for academics to be
more involved in conversations that would deepen public knowledge and
understanding of the economy, the Vice President called on members of Nigerian
Economic Society to be more engaged in public policy debates.
He said, “I find every often that
some public commentators make assertions that have no basis in economic theory
or practice, and because they dominate the public space, they contribute to
public misunderstanding of economic principles and their application to public
policy. Some of you should take up the gauntlet and help to shape an informed
and reasoned national discourse on the economy.”
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