Tuesday, 18 December 2012

FG ready to ban packet sugar importation - Aganga




See it also at the sun

The Federal Government says it has concluded plans to ban importation of packaged sugar into the country with effect from next year. The minister of Trade and Investment, Mr. Olusegun Aganga, disclosed this in Abuja yesterday at the second Annual Seminar for Trade and Investment Correspondents and Business Editors.

The ban which takes effect from January 2013, is an outcome of the government’s policy framework as contained in the National Sugar Master plan aimed at assisting the country in attaining self sufficiency in sugar production. At the moment, he said Nigeria imports a large proportion of its sugar needs, which is mainly brown sugar, lamenting that the few number of sugar refineries in the country remained a major challenge to meeting the sugar needs of the country.

On efforts to reposition the industrial sector, the minister said the recently launched Industrial Revolution Master Plan, will strategically position and empower the nation’s manufacturing sector as the key driver of economic growth through job creation and increased contribution to Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Aganga said that as part of the industrial revolution agenda, the Ministry of Trade and Investment had started brainstorming with members of the Organized Private Sector (OPS) and the Ministry of Power to reduce the cost of doing business in Nigeria and ultimately increase the productivity of the manufacturing sector.

He said that the nation’s Industrial Revolution Plan would be based on areas  where the country had comparative and competitive advantage, adding that the government had embarked on far-reaching reforms aimed improving the business climate and making Nigeria the preferred investment hub in Africa and globally. He said: “Africa’s share of the global trade is only three per cent.

This is because Africa has been exporting raw materials rather that exporting finished products. For us as a country, manufacturing is very important because it solves three critical problems: it solves the problem of GDP growth, unemployment and balance of payment.

Also, manufacturing is critical for wealth creation. “If we are going to move from a poor nation to a rich country, industrialization holds the key because it has the potential for unlocking the wealth of our country. This is why we are kicking off an Industrial Revolution Plan for our country.”