The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, on Wednesday said the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd), has requested the arrival of food items from vital stores as a component of endeavors to handle significant expense of food in the country.
Shehu unveiled this in an announcement named “How President Buhari is handling food swelling in the nation.”
He stated, “The President has recently endorsed the arrival of food items from the vital stores, including 30,000 tons of maize to creature takes care of makers to facilitate the significant expense of poultry creation.
“President Buhari’s organization has raised a portion of these issues with the different food maker affiliations included, especially those of rice and different grains.
With their cooperation, the high food prices should soon be a thing of the past.”
The presidential aide said Buhari had expressed the concern of his regime about the hike in food prices at a time when the economy is already mired in a slowdown occasioned by the global coronavirus situation.
He added, “The President assures Nigerians that the situation is transient. His administration has already begun looking and putting in place measures to ameliorate the situation”.
While providence has been kind to us with the rains and as such an expectation that a bumper harvest would lead to crashing of food prices and ease the burdens on the population, government’s concern is that the exploitative market behaviour by actors has significantly increased among traders in the past few years and may make any such relief a short lived one.
This year has, indeed, tested us in ways that globalization has never been tested since the turn of the century. These challenges have disrupted lives and supply chains all over the world, and Nigeria has not been spared”.
The effect has been deeply felt in the delays encountered in procurement of raw materials for local production of fertilizer (damaging standing crops before harvest) and the speculative activities by a number of rice processors who are ready to pay for paddy at any price to keep their mills running non-stop.
“But of all these problems, the most worrisome are the activities of ‘corrupt’ middlemen (with many of them discovered to be foreigners) and other food traders who serve as the link between farmers and consumers found to be systematically creating an artificial scarcity so that they can sell at higher prices.
In dealing with these problems, the administration has, in line with its ease of doing business mantra, avoided imposing stockholding restrictions, in order not to discourage investments in modern warehousing and cold storage.”
Shehu said in addition, investments in the agro-allied sector by the private sector would significantly increase domestic production of farming inputs especially fertilizer, further crash prices, create employment and ease the pressure on our foreign reserves.
One of these major investments, according to him, is the Dangote Fertilizer plant which he said was projected to come on stream by the fourth quarter of 2020.
Additionally, key government agencies and policymakers with the responsibility and visibility on market activities remain focused on removing structural impediments to the production and free movement of agricultural products.
President Buhari once again assures Nigerians of his dedication to bringing this issue to a swift end.
“Nigerians have already suffered grave economic losses owing to the covid-19 pandemic, and the Buhari administration will do all in its power to ensure that our people do not continue to suffer additionally from high food prices,” he added.