Friday, May 2, 2025
25.8 C
Lagos

CBN: Nigeria’s Food Import Drops by $21bn

The policy of the Federal Government to reduce import of food seems to be yielding the desired result as the country’s food import dropped by $21 billion since January 2015. This translates to $160.4 million in October 2018 from as high as $665.4 million in January 2015.

Mr. Godwin Emefiele, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said at the Bankers Dinner in Lagos that rice, fish, milk, sugar and wheat accounted for the drop while assuring Nigerians that the government will continue to implement farmer-friendly policies to further reduce the country’s dependent on food import.

Emefiele said: “Noticeable declines were steadily recorded in our monthly food import bill from $665.4m in January 2015 to $160.4m as at October 2018; a cumulative fall of 75.9 per cent and an implied savings of over $21billion on food imports alone over that period. Most evident were the 97.3 per cent cumulative reduction in monthly rice import bills, 99.6 per cent in fish, 81.3 per cent in milk, 63.7 per cent in sugar, and 60.5 per cent in wheat. We are glad with the accomplishments recorded so far. Accordingly, this policy is expected to continue with vigour until the underlying imbalances within the Nigerian economy have been fully resolved. We have maintained a particular focus on supporting farmers, entrepreneurs as well as small and medium scale businesses, through our various intervention programmes such as the Anchor Borrowers Program, Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for Agricultural Lending and the National Collateral Registry.”

Emefiele who attributed the reduced food import bill to the CBN’s Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP)  said the Programme has created over 2.5 million employment opportunities across the country while 835,239 hectares of 16 varied crops had been planted by 862,069 farmers so far.

“It is in light of the success of the Anchor Borrowers Program with regards to cultivation of rice and maize that the Monetary Policy Committee in its last meeting on the 21st of November, 2018 recommended that the Anchor Borrowers program be applied to other areas such as palm oil, tomatoes and fisheries to mention a few.”

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

emPLE Unveils BETA Life: A Three-in-One Endowment Plan for Smarter Savings and Protection

emPLE Life Assurance Limited has announced the launch of...

STI CEO, Soyinka, Lauds Nigerian Workers on May Day

As the world marks this year’s edition of Workers’...

NGX Group, Min of Industry, Trade and Investment, Collaborate to Advance Economic Transformation

Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group) recently hosted the...

Inspenonline Summit to Stimulate Interest for Good Retirement

The 2025 Inspenonline Retirement Summit is aimed at stimulating...

Banks, Telecoms, Mobility Brands Dominate Q1 2025 Media Performance Charts

Following the Central Bank of Nigeria’s directive to harmonize...

Topics

Linkage Assurance:  Strong Partnership with Brokers Reason for Market Growth

L-R:  Mr. Rotimi Olukorede, Chairman, Nigerian Council of Registered...

$60m Sealink Project: Integrating African Economies by Sea

The ground-breaking $60 million Private Placement Offer for the...

SMILE Excites Customers with New Device, Bonus Offers

Smile, pioneer 4G LTE telecommunications service provider in West...

Linkage Assurance CEO among Top 25 Capital Market Performers in 2017

L-R: Mr. Abimbola Ogunbanjo, President of the Nigerian Stock Exchange(NSE)...

FG Reviews Mining Rates to Boost Sector Reforms

  * Mining lease licence now N3 million; more royalties...

Liquid Intelligent Technologies Assures Nigerians of Digitally Connected Future

L – R: Shahzad Manzoor Khan, Group Chief Technical...

AIICO Sponsors Cancer Treatment for 30, Mammogram Testing for 100 Others

AIICO Insurance Plc, a frontline and innovative insurance company...

SEC: Banks’ Growth Hinges on Firm Regulatory Framework

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has said the remarkable...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img