The Guardian (Nigeria)

Manufactur­ing records negative growth in Q1 as economic challenges linger

- By Tobi Awodipe

ALL manufactur­ing indicators recorded negative changes in the first quarter majorly due to the prolonged foreign exchange ( FX) crisis, escalated cost of energy, unstable import duty rate, high cost of borrowing and steady rise in inflation.

The indicators include production and distributi­on costs, capacity utilisatio­n, production and investment volumes, employment, sales as well as the cost of shipment.

This was disclosed by the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( MAN) CEO Confidence Index ( MCCI) report for the first quarter of the year released yesterday. The report, taken from 400 CEOS of MAN- member companies across the country, measures changes in the quarterly pulse of manufactur­ing activities concerning movement in the macroecono­mic and government policies.

The factors, the report said, grossly escalated the cost of manufactur­ing operations, distorted the manufactur­ing value chain, discourage­d investment­s, increased job losses and reduced sales volume.

Stressing the 230 per cent increase in electricit­y tariff, MAN said it is negatively affecting manufactur­ing, worsening the already highcost operating environmen­t and called for the immediate suspension of the tariff’s implementa­tion. Lamenting the effect of the macroecono­mic environmen­t on the sectoral groups, the report added that the food, beverages and tobacco, chemical and pharmaceut­icals, electrical and electronic­s and motor vehicle and miscellane­ous assembly sectoral groups were worst hit by the effects of the unstable macroecono­mic environmen­t on key performanc­e indicators.

Bauchi/ Benue/ Plateau ( 43.8); Kano ( 44); Rivers ( 44.3); Oyo/ Ondo/ Ekiti/ Osun ( 47.1); Cross- River/ Akwa Ibom ( 48) industrial zones recorded the lowest confidence in the economy with indices less than 50 points. Most of the operators within these zones were decimated by the volatility in the FX and custom duty rates and the surge in gas prices.

Manufactur­ers in Kwara/ Kogi, Imo/ Abia and Ikeja industrial zones also recorded waning business confidence due to FX instabilit­y, high cost of doing business, reduced patronage and tumultuous change in government policies.

The associatio­n urged the government to frontally address insecurity, improve electricit­y supply, promote fiscal sustainabi­lity and ensure policy consistenc­y.

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