The President of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Dr. Akinwumi Adesina has called on the Nigerian government to help accelerate the country’s manufacturing sector through integration and a rapid progression up global and regional value chains where it has a comparative advantage. Dr. Adesina said low levels of industrial manufacturing are hampering economic growth and development in Nigeria and many other African countries.He said Nigeria must accelerate its manufacturing sector through integration and a rapid progression up global and regional value chains where it has a comparative advantage. Adesina was speaking at a lecture titled Overcoming Binding Constraints to Competitive Manufacturing for Intra-Regional Trade, which he delivered at the inaugural edition of the Adeola Odutola Lecture Series in Abuja. The series is organized by the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria.The African Development Bank head said: “The continent has abundant natural resources, oil, gas, minerals, metals, agricultural and forest products, and the blue economy. But tragically and ironically, Africa’s massive natural resources have not translated into wealth.”He added: “The low level of industrial manufacturing is at the core of the slow structural transformation of African economies,” and represented a race to the bottom characterized by rising poverty, export of jobs, volatile commodity prices, and import dependency.”
Adesina recommended several policies, including the setting up of industrial digital skills academies to reskill and retool workers for jobs of the future. He said deepening domestic capital markets would enable companies to access the equity financing they need to grow their businesses. He posited that there should also be massive investments in gas, hydropower resources and large-scale solar energy systems to ensure stable baseload power for industry.He called on the Nigerian government to actively address infrastructure bottlenecks, which he said were hindering the manufacturing sector.He also noted the existence of potentially catalyzing external factors like the Africa Continental Free Trade Area, which he said presented a huge opportunity for Nigeria to drive an export-driven industrial manufacturing pathway.
Kelechi Deca
Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry