Farmland |
That
the Federal and States’ Governments spent a paltry 1.8% of the N44trn
budgetary allocation translating to N810.4bn on agriculture in three years is,
to say the least, very callous. It shows that Nigeria as a country is not
serious with food productivity and commercialization of the sector to creating
wealth and job for the teeming youths.
It
shows the Government’s inconsistence in diversifying the economy and moving
away from being a mono-product economy is a charade as the same government has
been reluctant to spending on Agriculture even as budgeted monies were not timely
released to meet the needs nature of the sector, most time money are released
when the need for them may not be effective.
With the stance
of the Government to use non-oil sector of Agriculture to checkmate billions of
dollar spent on foods import, we are left in the doubt whether Nigeria can ever
meet the African Union (AU) Maputa declaration on Comprehensive Africa
Agriculture Development Programme (CAAP) which demands all members to allocate
at least 10% of its total budget to the sector for growth.
It is worrisome
as media report revealed that only 1.8 percent of the total expenditure was
voted for agriculture despite the governments’ trumpeted commitment to the
sector. Both the Federal and states governments have expended just 2% of N17.5
cumulative spending in 2018 which is slightly higher than that of 2017 of 1.8%
with total budget of N13.5.
With
a population of about 180 million which is growing at a rate of 2.5% per annum,
and a shrinking farming land there is urgent need to make food productivity to
outpace population growth or else there is trouble ahead. It is even shameful
that this is coming more than a decade after the 2003 AU-Maputo CAADP that
urged African countries to allocate at least 10 percent of their annual budget
to achieving at least six percent annual growth in agricultural GDP.
The
Daily Trust reported that some of the (other) signatories to the Maputo
Declaration (like Nigeria) have since started implementation of the agreement.
They include Burkina Faso (18 percent), Niger and Mali (15 percent), Malawi
(13.8 percent), Ethiopia (11.9 percent),
Senegal (10.8 percent) and Zambia (11.5 percent). If Nigeria, which prides
herself as giant of Africa cannot do more than them, then we are as good as a
shame.
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