The Presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi, on Monday reiterated his promise to move Nigeria from consumption to production if he is elected president in 2023.
The LP flagbearer has long believed that increasing production is the only way to ensure Nigeria’s economic stability, increase wealth, and improve the lives of millions of Nigerians who currently reside below the poverty line.
In a post on Monday, he broke down the concept of Consumption to Production, assuring that he and his team have a three-tracked plan aimed at achieving Goal 12 of the SDG, namely ensuring sustainable consumption and production patterns.
He said, “First, our focus will be on agriculture and production-centered growth for food security and export, with more emphasis on exporting finished products instead of commodities and raw materials.
“This relates mainly food and textiles. Nigeria has over 84 million hectares of arable land. And barely 40% of our arable land is cultivated today. Nigeria’s arable land is her new oil and gold.
“Second, pursuant to Goal 9 of the SDGs our administration will from its inception, continue to encourage investment in infrastructure – energy, transport, irrigation, and telecoms—to grow these and other sectors.
“We are eager to quickly close the infrastructure gap between now and 2030. We will expand the frontiers of financial inclusion to ensure that SMEs have greater access to credit to grow.
“We will work with financial institutions to improve their ability to identify credit worthy borrowers; and support inventory financing, which will help to unlock finance for SMEs dealing with high account receivables.
“We will enforce the legal framework protecting foreign investors and their indigenous partners. This is the only way to tamper monopoly and capital flight.
“Third, as a nation, Nigeria must look beyond oil. We therefore, intend to leapfrog Nigeria from oil to the Fourth Industrial Revolution by expanding physical infrastructure through market-driven reforms that will unleash growth-enabling entrepreneurship and market-creating innovations.
“To ensure sustainability and resilience, we will stop borrowing for consumption. All loans must be invested in regenerative projects. We shall pursue a drastic reduction in cost of governance and corruption; improve ease of doing business to attract Foreign Direct Investment to jumpstart industrialization and when borrowing is unavoidable, it will be strictly for production.”
He also emphasized the need for Nigeria to work toward operating within its existing resources and achieving a balanced national budget as cost-cutting measures going forward.
He said that the country would refine its remaining oil domestically.
He continued by saying that these steps, coupled with fixing Nigeria’s tax structure and stopping leaks like the subsidy system, could magically transform Nigeria from a consumer nation into a producer.