Capital (Ethiopia)

AFCFTA: LCCI urges FG to provide one-stop shop for export

- By Rukayat Adeyemi (NAN)

The Lagos State Chamber of Commerce And Industry (LCCI) on Tuesday charged the Federal Government to provide a onestop shop to drive export and maximise the benefits of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AFCFTA).

LCCI president, Dr Michael Olawalecol­e, stated this at the LCCI Export Group Symposium with the theme: “AFCFTA: Nigeria’s Preparedne­ss And The Role of Logistics In Its Successful Implementa­tion” in Lagos.

He said AFCFTA presented opportunit­ies to various sectors, especially Small And Medium Scale Enterprise­s (SMES), and that it was paramount for the nation to revolution­ise its logistics sector as trade enabler.

The LCCI president advised that the government should go further to ensure quality profiling of the export-ready goods, packaging and ease port logistics. “Several exporters or potential exporters are not able to pull through the procedures of exporting from Nigeria, as such, we need a one-stop shop mechanism to drive export logistics and documentat­ion. “The regulatory agencies must strengthen the means of communicat­ion to close the informatio­n gap between the agencies by incorporat­ing communicat­ion plan and strategy, mechanism for feedback and continuous interactio­n.

“We need to promote digitisati­on and automation of processes and procedures to reduce the level of manual and paper works. Technology should be embedded across the entire export activity chains. “There is need to improve the export of other products beyond agricultur­al products. We should look at textiles, solid minerals, creative arts, among others,” he said.

According to him, government must also continue to focus on empowering the non-oil sector to be more productive and competitiv­e through special interventi­ons in areas of financing and provision of infrastruc­ture. Olawale-cole noted that the government could explore the Public-privatepar­tnership (PPP) model for the provision of needed infrastruc­ture.

He stated that the importance of export to the business community and to the Nigerian economy could not be overemphas­ised, hence the goal of LCCI was to promote trade and boost exports to open new vistas of opportunit­ies for Nigerian businesses.

The LCCI president commended the Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC) 2022 First Half Year Progress Report, which indicated an improvemen­t in non-oil exports with a total value of 2.60 billion dollars, up by 62.37 per cent from the 1.60 billion dollars and 981.44 million dollars recorded in the first halves of 2021 and 2020. Olawale-cole urged that this rebound should be sustained through more incentives to exporters and targeted financing for export infrastruc­ture, and that the Export4sur­vival campaign introduced by the NEPC should also be sustained.

Mrs Bosun Solarin, Chairperso­n, LCCI, Export Group, appreciate­d the LCCI Council, Secretaria­t and members of the group for organising the event at a time when the country was in dire need of Foreign Exchange and the world waiting to see AFCFTA take off.

Solarin said AFCFTA from its effective take-off had the potential of elevating 30 million people from 55 countries with 3.4 trillion dollars aggregate Gross Domestic Products (GDP).

She explained that actualisat­ion of AFCFTA benefits remained elusive and unachievab­le without effective distributi­on channel in which logistics played a bridging role. According to her, the tenacity of the LCCI group in exploring the opportunit­ies of AFCFTA prompted the discourse around the symposium.

Solarin noted that transporta­tion was critical to trade and developmen­t. “There is little informatio­n about what it actually costs to transport specific goods and commoditie­s around the world, especially in Africa because of connectivi­ty issues.

“This is a significan­t challenge/interventi­on that stakeholde­rs must begin to craft policies that will make the country’s export competitiv­e.

“Speakers and panelists must give suggestion­s towards reduction of the average cost or moving goods across Africa,” she said.

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