Business
Confab Committee Okays Retention Of Subsidy For Agric Products
The National Conference
Standing Committee on Agriculture last Wednesday, adopted a resolution urging the Federal Government to continue to provide subsidy to Nigerian farmers to make agriculture attractive.
Chairman of the committee, Alhaji Umaru Hadeija, expressed concern that western countries, who rank highest in subsidising their farmers, discourage developing countries from doing the same.
“The Western world which is known for subsidising agriculture by buying excess foodstuff from farmers and storing them do not want developing countries to give subsidy to their farmers.
“The country that gives the biggest subsidy to its farmers is the U.S. that is why it sells the cheapest foods.
“Agriculture is always uncompetitive; it cannot compete with industries but there is no way you can survive without it.
“Subsidising agriculture is the best way to go for Nigeria,” Hadejia said.
Earlier in her contribution, a member of the committee Chief Temitope Ajayi urged the federal government to give subsidy to nomads to reduce the perennial clash between them and farmers.
“Nomads should be given subsidy to build ranches in order to reduce the recurrent farmers/nomads clashes that have claimed many lives,” she said.
In their contributions, other members of the committee faulted the alleged corruption in the management of the subsidy regime.
Mr Hassan Anka said that if the price of fertilisers were not subsidised, the government should provide credit facilities and opportunities for farmers to engage in dry season farming.
Mr Terseer Tsumba stressed the need for subsidy regime to be managed in such a way that only genuine farmers would benefit from it.
In his contribution, Prof. Abdulganiyu Olayinka, while supporting the retention of the subsidy regime, recommended the review of its management by bureaucrats and politicians.
Mosunmola Umoru, said lack of subsidy had made Nigerian farmers unable to compete with their foreign counterparts whose products were cheaper in Nigeria.
“A case in point is chicken. We retail chicken in the open market today for between N750 and N850. Imported chicken gets into Nigeria at about N550, shipping inclusive.
“If an importer sells chicken at N550, local producers can’t compete at N600; we sell at N750. So it is very critical that we look at subsidising inputs for farmers,” he said.
Umoru, who expressed dismay at the high lending rates for Nigerian farmers, urged the government to review its incentive programmes and make credit facilities available to farmers at single-digit interest rate.
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