Business
Africa’s Inclusive Growth: Aganga Urges Focus On Housing, Agric, SMEs
The Minister of Trade and Investment, Dr Olusegun Aganga, has called for more focus on Agriculture and Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) to achieve inclusive growth in Africa.
Aganga made this call in an interview with The Tide source yesterday in Abuja.
He said that Small and Medium Scale businesses today accounted for 45 per cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and it was necessary that they should be encouraged to do more.
“There are some sectors we need to focus on, we are already focusing on them but we need to do more.
“The first is agriculture, a lot of our people are employed today in subsistent farming across the globe. There is value addition, which is about industrialisation and we need to add value to it.
“SMEs today account for 45 per cent of that new GDP you are talking about, so we have to make sure that we remove barriers to the development of that sector.
“We also have to focus on housing because housing has a multiplier effect on other areas. We are already focusing on them but we need to intensify our efforts, that is how jobs will be created, that is how you will have inclusive growth,” he said.
Aganga said most farmers in the country were subsistent farmers and to make agriculture more sustainable and inclusive in Nigeria, we should commercialise the sector.

L-R: Minister of Water Resources, Mrs Sarah Ochekpe, member, Benin/Owena River Basin Development Authority, Mr Victor Emuakhagbon and Chairman, Upper Benue River Basin Development Authority, Mr Clifford Ordia, at the retreat for boards and managements of River Basin Development Authorities in Abuja last Monday.
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Blue Economy: Minister Seeks Lifeline In Blue Bond Amid Budget Squeeze

Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy is seeking new funding to implement its ambitious 10-year policy, with officials acknowledging that public funding is insufficient for the scale of transformation envisioned.
Adegboyega Oyetola, said finance is the “lever that will attract long-term and progressive capital critical” and determine whether the ministry’s goals take off.
“Resources we currently receive from the national budget are grossly inadequate compared to the enormous responsibility before the ministry and sector,” he warned.
He described public funding not as charity but as “seed capital” that would unlock private investment adding that without it, Nigeria risks falling behind its neighbours while billions of naira continue to leak abroad through freight payments on foreign vessels.
He said “We have N24.6 trillion in pension assets, with 5 percent set aside for sustainability, including blue and green bonds,” he told stakeholders. “Each time green bonds have been issued, they have been oversubscribed. The money is there. The question is, how do you then get this money?”
The NGX reckons that once incorporated into the national budget, the Debt Management Office could issue the bonds, attracting both domestic pension funds and international investors.
Yet even as officials push for creative financing, Oloruntola stressed that the first step remains legislative.
“Even the most innovative financial tools and private investments require a solid public funding base to thrive.
It would be noted that with government funding inadequate, the ministry and capital market operators see bonds as alternative financing.
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