Activities
of the Nigeria Incentive Risk-based Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL) in the
agricultural value chains have of recent, become a thing of concern as the
organization has deviated from its core mandates and has been meddling in
financial and agronomics activities that are outright contradictions to its
core mandate as an institution established to ensure access to funds by farmers
and others in the value chain by de-risking the process.
NIRSAL is an
initiative of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), The Bankers committee (BC) and
Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) incorporated as Public
Limited Liability Company (PLC) and licensed as a non-bank financial
Institution tasked with primary mandate of facilitating the flow of credit to agribusiness
value chain players and collaborating with stakeholders to fix broken
agricultural value chain in Nigeria.
The current play
outs from this organization is revealing total deviation from its mandate as
cases of inputs’ procurement and mis-prescription countering researchers and
scientists’ recommendations of best agronomics to farmers were being reported
and observed, with wheat farmers as cases in point where poor performance of
production was reported.
Also noted is the direct involvement in
financial matters rather than allowing the real financial institutions to play
their roles, to the extent that NIRSAL now plans to establish its own
microfinance bank!
During the
GESS 2012 the inputs and agro dealers were given NIRSAL support to get loans
but what happened later was that its officials dabbled into procurement and
disbursement of inputs. We have even heard of the organisation sending staffs
on spurious training programmes abroad thereby spending resources that would
have been better channelled to other more priority purposes for the scientists
in agronomics or for bankers towards better strategy to lending to farmers
rather than NIRSAL doing it by itself without impact on end users.
In our own
view, this organization should have embarked on training activities to financial and
insurance institutions towards having better agricultural desks to ensuring better access of funds to the stakeholders in
all the value chains of the sector rather than being an actual actor, a move that has been earning them discredit so
far.
We have no
doubt on the importance and great impact this organization can positively
impact on financial situation for agricultural sector in Nigeria through easy
access to funding to all the players in the sector, but its house must be put
in order to reflect the mandate of the organization without interfering
in other sectors’ mandates.
Come to
think of it, how many of the farmers’ groups or any other stakeholders at the
value chains have accessed fund from any commercial and micro finance
institutions through de-risk mandate of the organization in the last four years.
This is what should be of more great concern to NIRSAL as evidence of measurement
and credibility to its mandate.
Many
farmers’ organization have severally criticised the tossing-up- and -down they
experience in the hands of NIRSAL in the name of giving loan that never come to
pass.
The recent
very low performance in the wheat production really called for concern and the
need for appropriate quarters to let NIRSAL know their mandate boundary by
leaving the work of researchers and financial institution to them while they
should continue intensifying the derisking of agricultural sector to an
enviable state for the players to have access to loan facility in any of the
micro and commercial banks.
This wakeup
call must be seen in the light of better repositioning of the agricultural
sector to meeting the drive of the FG towards making agriculture an enviable
profession that will have easy access to loan facility for more wealth and jobs
creation to all and sundry in the country.
This is a courageous editorial and is an agenda for the incoming Hon Minister to straighten out.Nirsal is not alone but CBN is included even though the former is an offshoot of the latter
ReplyDeleteThis submission is highly welcomed .My own observations is even on the implications of anchor borrowers program whereby the farmers are tasked to shop for the anchor themselves Me think the industrial users and the farmers are to be linked together by Central Bank ?
ReplyDeleteThe recent operational hicup that is being experienced by applicants in the NASME loan in CBN could be avoided if the exercise is decentralized The program is believed to be encompassing I:e both agric, processing and manufacturing The slow pace of administration may defeat the purpose...Kolapo A Raji
ReplyDeleteI support the microfinance plan because commercial banks are sabotaging the effort of NIRSAL
ReplyDeleteWe have seen over the years that the mandate of bank of Agriculture BOA have been derailed by many organisations with impunity. In fact BOA have been left to scavenge for funds in the last 19 years for its operations. Federal government has starved the bank of funds having been excluded in the national budget. We hope the incoming Minister of.Agriculture shall consider the issue funding the Bank of Agriculture as appropriate.
ReplyDelete