Nigeria Must Stop Importing What It Can Produce — Minister of State for Industry

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Nigeria Must Stop Importing What It Can Produce — Minister of State for Industry
Nigeria Must Stop Importing What It Can Produce — Minister of State for Industry

The Minister of State for Industry, Senator John Owan, has advised that Nigeria must stop importing what it can produce. He stated that Nigeria has a large population which can be channeled into productivity.

Nigeria Must Stop Importing What It Can Produce — Minister of State for Industry
Nigeria Must Stop Importing What It Can Produce — Minister of State for Industry

The Senator was a guest at the Redeemed Christian Church of God Lagos Province 35 Economic Summit on Saturday, during which he revealed that Nigeria-First policy will only succeed if there’s policy predictability, coordinated execution, and the strategic use of public procurement to stimulate local manufacturing.

“Nigeria does not need to import what we can. We can clothe ourselves. Yesterday, before leaving Abuja, I was in a meeting with the DG of the BPP. What was that meeting about? Mr President announced a Nigeria-First policy. Now, the challenge is to get it to work. What’s the best way to implement and to execute such a policy? The Ministry of Industry and Development is key”.

“Predictability is the foundation of competitiveness. Without it, businesses spend more resources coping with uncertainty than investing in growth”.

“Our reforms are not about chasing perfection. They are about building stability, fairness, and confidence because those are the real foundations of a functioning economy”.

“So, an engagement has begun between the Ministry, between our office and the Bureau of Public Procurement, which is concerned with about five or six sectors, including textile and apparel, including the automotive sector, including medical equipment, including furniture and all of that. Because what that Bureau wants to do is to see how to get this implemented by the kind of public procurement framework that is put in place. And I think that the opportunities are coming.”

“Bangladesh became a global market, organic leader, not because of that perfect infrastructure, but because it built predictability, level competitiveness, and focused value chains. I mean, Vietnam followed a similar model and now exports electronics, garments, and machinery to the world. I often give the example that a huge population as a country will only make sense if we can become a bit more inclusive.

“Imagine what it would be like to be self-sufficient in terms of our clothing. Imagine that we didn’t have to import everything that had to do with our clothing. I mean, I mentioned the example of the automotive sector, and I say that every day we have a very important council meeting. When we close, it’s like an international motor fair for Toyota. Yet, if you gave Toyota one or two years and say, ‘Toyota, unless you establish plants in our country, no government, department, or agency would buy Toyota.’ It would make sense, because the Nigerian market remains key to Toyota.”

“One manufacturer told me very clearly: ‘I don’t need everything to be perfect; I just need things to be predictable. That statement captures the essence of what businesses require to invest, expand, and create jobs”.

“A large population only makes sense if it is productive. Otherwise, it becomes pressure, not potential. We are aligning policy, procurement, and production. That is how we convert demography into demand, demand into production, and production into jobs.”

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