A former Special Adviser to ex-president Muhammadu Buhari on
agriculture, Dolapo Bright, has said that President Bola Tinubu was misled by
his advisers that the suspension of duties, tariffs, and taxes on the
importation of food staples through land and sea borders would reduce
inflation.
Bright made this statement on Sunday’s edition of Inside
Sources with Laolu Akande, a socio-political programme aired on Channels
Television.
The ex-aide said the surge in the cost of diesel and petrol
which are essential to the transportation of food items, have grossly affected
the prices of commodities.
“I don’t think it happened. The person who advised the
government to do that, the person is clueless, if you understand what is
happening, you won’t give such advice.
“The person is misleading the president. Do you know why?
Let’s assume that you are going to import. Importation is going to be into
Lagos. Are you not going to transport the thing to other states? It doesn’t
make sense because that is going to make our agriculture stagnant,” he said
DAILY POST reports that food and commodity inflation have
skyrocketed as Nigerians battle what can pass for the worst cost of living
crisis since the country’s independence over six decades ago.
Recall that when President Tinubu was sworn in as president
in May 2023, Nigeria’s inflation rate was 22.41%, according to official numbers
by the National Bureau of Statistics, NBS.
The inflation rate increased astronomically to 34.6% in
November 2024, more than 12% higher, a development that economic wizards have
attributed to Tinubu’s twin policies of petrol subsidy removal and unification
of the forex rates.
Significantly, the food inflation rate in November 2024 was
39.93% on a year-on-year basis, from 32.84% recorded in November 2023.
The surge in food inflation has increased the average prices
of fish, rice, yam flour, millet whole grain, corn flour, egg, milk, milk,
frozen chicken, among others.
To stem food inflation, the Tinubu administration in July
2024 announced the suspension of customs duties on imported food items but the
policy has reportedly not seen the light of the day due to bureaucratic
bottlenecks.
According to Bright, who was Buhari’s aide on agriculture
from 2015 to 2023, the government has been partly responsible for inflation
because the administration is trying to sit on the driver’s side of agriculture
instead of allowing the private sector to do so.
He further stated that farmers won’t necessarily need the
government’s intervention if the right environment is set for them to make a
decent profit.
“A lot of farmers are not producing the capacity they were
producing before because of high input costs,” he said.
Recall that on December 23, 2024, during the president’s
first chat, he said he has “over 2,000 tractors coming into this country for
mechanised farming to make farming easier.
However, Bright said tractors only won’t solve the food
shortage problem in Nigeria.
He argued that using local labour would ensure job creation
for locals and that over 80% of farmers in Nigeria are into subsistence
farming.
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