CBN Policy: massive job cuts looms in manufacturing sector…Over 40, 000 Nigerians to lose jobs
The federal government’s drive to create jobs for millions of unemployed Nigerians may have taken a huge setbackfollowing the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) recent directive excludingsome essential raw materials from the list of items valid for forex in the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Markets. According to business analysts, this move will in no time lead to the lay-off of over 40, 000 Nigerians who work in the manufacturing sector.
It will be
recalled that The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) recently excluded some essential raw materialsfrom the
list of items valid for forex in the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Markets. According
to the Central Bank of Nigeria(CBN), the policy is intended to sustain the
stability of the foreign exchange market, “resuscitate local manufacturing” of
these items and change the structure of the economy.
Raising the
red flag to alert the government and the people on the looming danger as a
result of the policy, the president of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (LCCI), AlhajiRemi Bello, said most manufacturers might be forced to
shut down and move their operations to neighbouring countries for business
activities due to their inability to access foreign exchange for raw materials
and other critical inputs. This he believes would lead to massive job losses in
the manufacturing sector.
“There is pressure on manufacturers
to lay off their workforce before the end of the year. Most manufacturers
affected have been unable to produce lately due to lack of foreign exchange,
delays in the processing of Form ‘M’ to import raw materials in order to meet
demands and this has adversely led to loss of market share. With this
continuing, massive job loss is anticipated in no time from now.” He said.
For example, the manufacturing sector
using Crude Palm oil as raw material in their daily production of goods like
biscuits, noodles, cosmetics etc., will be affected as the locally produced and
supplied raw material cannot meet the required demand for production.
According
to IndexMundi, a data portal, the domestic palm oil produced totalled 930,000
MT in 2014 while the consumption of palm oil in Nigeria amounts to 2.0 million
MT per annum in exclusion of the manufacturing sector.
The official figures states that the shortage in oil palm
industry is estimated to be around 1,070,000 MT annually. This poses a very
precarious situation for the manufacturing sector that depends largely on CPO
as a major source of raw material. If this shortage is not filled with
importation of high quality food grade palm oil, the economy will lose further
investment in the manufacturing sector as companies would shot down and staff be laid-off.
Among the 41 items marked as ‘Not Fit
for Forex’ also include: Rice, Cement, Margarine, Meat and processed meat
products, Vegetables and processed vegetable products, Poultry chicken, eggs,
turkey, Private airplanes/jets, Indian incense, Tinned fish in
sauce(Geisha)/sardines, Cold rolled steel sheets, Galvanized steel sheets,
Roofing sheets, Wheelbarrows, Head pans, Metal boxes and containers,
Enamelware, Steel drums, Steel pipes, Wire rods(deformed and not deformed),
Iron rods and reinforcing bar, Wire mesh and Steel nails, Wood particle boards
and panels, Wood Fibre Boards and Panels, Plywood boards and panels, Wooden
doors, Toothpicks, Glass and Glassware, Kitchen utensils, Tableware,
Tiles-vitrified and ceramic, Textiles, Woven fabrics, Clothes, Plastic and
rubber products, polypropylene granules , cellophane wrappers, Security and razor wine,Soap and cosmetics,
Tomatoes/tomato pastes and Eurobond/foreign currency bond/ share purchases.
The resultant effect of this is an outrageous increase in the
cost of these items locally for consumers and ultimately inflation, which is
largely due to inability to access foreign exchange.
The LCCI
president further lamented that, for an economy that is largely driven by the
private investors, the government should source for alternative means rather
than resulting to a total exclusion of certain items from the foreign exchange
market.He however urged the FG to prevail on the CBN to review the policy in
the interest of the impending danger to the workforce, the private sector and
the economy at large.


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