15-month Border Closure: Manufacturers Fault FG, Committee Report Ready For Buhari
- Prolonged border closure discourages long-term investments – MAN Export Group
- Preferential opening of borders shows government’s decision political, says don
- President to get presidential committee’s report on land border reopening soon
Stakeholders in the manufacturing sector, including the Manufacturers’ Association of Nigeria’s Export Group and the Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry, on Wednesday, took a swipe at the Federal Government over prolonged closure of borders.
The export group of MAN and the ACCI, in separate interviews, reviewed the closure of land borders since August 20, 2019 by the Federal Government and concluded that uncertainty it created was bad for the economy.
But the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, in an interview with State House correspondents after the Federal Executive meeting on Wednesday, said the committee on border closure set up by the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), would soon submit its report.
She also assured Nigerians that the borders would soon be reopened.
Recall that on August 20, 2019, the government closed land borders to stop smuggling and encourage local production.
It also demanded that neighbouring countries should check smuggling from their own ends as part of the conditions for reopening the borders.
The President set up a ministerial committee consisting of Ahmed, her counterpart for interior, Rauf Aregbesola; the Foreign Affairs Minister, Geoffrey J Onyeama, as well as heads of immigration and customs to review the decision.
But more than a year after it was set up, the committee has yet to submit its report to the President.
Discussions over border closure came to the fore on Wednesday as stakeholders assessed its impact on the economy, which had been hit by a recession.
Prolonged border closure discourages long-term investment – MAN Export Group
The President of MAN’s Export Group, Chief Ede Dafinone, in an interview with one of our correspondents, said that the uncertainty surrounding the prolonged border closure affected investment decisions of manufacturers.
According to him, manufacturers who export to neighbouring African countries have lost confidence in the government as the border closure has discouraged long-term investments and affected the economy.
He said a particular company had stopped production completely as a result of the border closure as its products were produced solely for export and were too heavy to be airlifted.
However, Dafinone said a few companies said they benefited from the closure because influx of fake products through the land borders reduced.
He said,
It is actually difficult to have an exact measurement of its impact because there are some companies that have reported that it has helped their businesses because fake and cheap imports were stopped and there are some exporters who have complained that the border closure has affected their businesses drastically.
What is very clear is that the sudden prolonged and unanticipated closure of the border is bad for business because of the business community cannot make projections at all for production for export. That uncertainty is clearly bad for long term investments. In that sense, it is definitely bad for the economy.
Dafinone noted that a lot of manufacturers closed down their export segments because of border closure.
According to him, the government has to earn its goodwill by opening the borders and explaining to investors in more details than it has done.
Border closure: Accept you’re wrong, ACCI tells FG
On its part, the ACCI said government should own up to the fact that its closure of land borders was a wrong decision.
The President of ACCI, Adetokunbo Kayode, said the decision by government to close the borders without consulting private sector players, who use the borders, was wrong.
He said,
The border closure had multiplier base. One is that the decision was taken without consultation, which we think is wrong decision. Government was actually about to review it before the pandemic came and it had to lock up.
You see, there is no perfect decision or policy or government. So when you are wrong just accept, because it is like being in a hole, in such a situation you don’t have to continue digging but to find a way to get out.
Kayode described the closure of land borders by government as a reactive decision that was not given a thorough consideration.
A professor of Economics at the Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, Sherrifdeen Tella, in an interview with one of our correspondents, said although the aim of border closure wasto increase local production, it had not been achieved.
According to him, border closure did not contribute to recession. He stated,
The recession that we are in is caused majorly by COVID-19 and the crash in the price of oil and the amount of the oil that was being purchased.
The Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mr Muda Yusuf, told The PUNCH that both losers and beneficiaries emerged from the closure of the border in the last 15 months.
He noted that poultry and rice farmers reported an improvement in sales arising from the border closure, while investors engaged in cross-border trade in the sub-region lamented the closure.
Yusuf said traders, manufacturers, freight forwarders and transporters, who operate across the land borders, were negatively affected.
A senior Lecturer, Lagos Business School, Bongi Adi, said he had yet to see the economic sense in border closure.
Adi said in an interview:
What we have seen is that the government opened that borders for some firms in Nigeria which means it is not based on economic gains. It was opened to serve some sort of political, self-serving, and parochial interests. This is simply because the government wanted to give access to their people or create some kind of preferential treatment.
Buhari to get presidential committee’s report on land borders reopening soon
But Ahmed said the nation’s land borders would be reopened soon.
Ahmed said the presidential committee set up on the matter had completed its job and would soon submit its report.
She said the committee would soon submit its report to the President, following which a formal pronouncement would be made on the matter.
The minister did not however disclose when the report would be submitted and how soon the land borders will be reopened.
She said,
Mr President has set up a committee that I chair, alongside the minister of foreign affairs and other ministers including interior and agencies such customs, immigration and other security services to review and advise him on the issue of border closure.
The committee has just completed its work and we will be submitting our report.
I have signed my copy; I gave everybody to sign between today (Wednesday) and tomorrow (Thursday) so that we submit the report to Mr President.
Recall that Ahmed had, at a roundtable discussion at the 26th Nigerian Economic Summit, given an assurance that the borders would be reopened
We have made an assessment. The President set up a committee and we have made an assessment and all the members of the committee agreed and are recommending to the President that it is time to reopen the borders.
‘FG won’t withdraw 2021 budget because of recession’
Ahmed also said the Federal Government was not planning to withdraw the 2021 Appropriation Bill from the National Assembly because of recession, as being proposed by some groups and individuals.
Rather, she explained that the government would be using the Economic Sustainability Plan to revive the economy.
While saying that the recession was expected, the minister said it was for that reason that the government designed the ESP
She said,
You will recall that the ESP was designed to be a 12 months plan, to act as a bridge between the ERGP and its successor plan. But also, it was designed specifically to help us quickly exit recession, which we had projected was going to happen.
So, the ESP implementation is really on course; it’s focused and also the implementation of the 2020 budget is really on course and is very focused.
We have been able to release a large volume of capital funding into ministries, departments and agencies, enabling a lot of public work going on simultaneously all over the country.
The minister assured civil servants that issues surrounding the delay in the payment of salaries of some of them had been resolved.
Justin Nwosu is the founder and publisher of Flavision. His core interest is in writing unbiased news about Nigeria in particular and Africa in general. He’s a strong adherent of investigative journalism, with a bent on exposing corruption, abuse of power and societal ills.