President Tinubu announced today Thursday July 4, 2024, multi-dimensional measures to stabilize the economy, enhance job creation, and foster economic security.
The measures under the Economic Stabilization Programme, will run concurrently with the National Construction and Household Support Programme announced last week to the National Economic Council.
The new measures announced today at the inauguration of the Presidential Economic Coordination Council (PECC), are as follows:
(1) Energy Security
The Energy Security Initiative, which includes power, oil and gas, aims to:
– Increase on-grid electricity to be delivered to homes and businesses from about 4.5 gigawatts to 6 gigawatts in six months;
– Increase oil production to 2 million barrels per day within the next 12 months; and
– Remove barriers to entry for investments into the sector to enhance competitiveness.
(2) Agriculture and Food Security
Under this plan, the aim is to:
– Increase staple crops grown by small-holder farmers from 127 million MT in 2023 to 135 million MT this year;
– Bolster production by partnering larger-scale commercial farmers;
– Support qualified farmers with satellite imagery for land use planning, crop rotation, and monitoring of agricultural expansion.
(3) Health and Social Welfare
In the health and social welfare sector, the federal government shall:
– Make essential medicines available at lower cost for 80-90 million Nigerians;
– Expand healthcare insurance coverage for 1 million vulnerable people via a Vulnerable Group Fund in collaboration with state governments;
– Redeploy 20,000 healthcare workers to provide services to 10-12 million patients in areas where they are most urgently needed;
– Power up 4,800 primary healthcare centres (PHCs), second tier, and third tier hospitals using renewable energy sources.
(4) Fiscal Measures
Some of the interventions to improve access to finance for the housing sector, MSMEs, and the manufacturing sector are:
– Youth-owned enterprises: Support for new and existing youth-owned enterprises across all 36 states of the Federation, creating 7,400 MSMEs within the next 6-12 months;
– MSME support: A six hundred and fifty billion naira (N650 billion) facility will provide lower-cost short-term facilities to youth-owned businesses, manufacturers and MSMEs across various industries; food processing, pharmaceutical, agriculture, and wholesale and retail trade. This financing will be based on their current and future receivables, company rating, and market demand for products;
– A Manufacturing Stabilization Fund will rejuvenate up to two hundred and fifty companies and deliver lower cost (9.0%-11.0%) long-term facilities to large, medium-scale, and light manufacturers that produce finished goods for domestic and export markets;
– Sub-national Matching Fund: A Grow Nigeria Development Fund consisting of a single-digit interest rate loan portfolio with the Bank of Industry and a matching fund agreement with sub-national governments to grow MSMEs;
– Expanding the Bank of Industry’s Rural Development Programme: A fund to support rural economies in developing 300 new MSMEs for each state, including the Federal Capital Territory (Abuja), resulting in 11,100 new rural-based MSMEs across the Federation;
– Mortgage Finance Acceleration Facility: A facility that delivers affordable housing for all segments impacted by the cost-of-living challenge. This will support the construction of an additional 25,000 housing units.
These fiscal measures will improve access to finance for MSMEs and, in the process, create 4.7 million direct and indirect jobs over a six to 12-month period.
The PECC has members from the government and the private sector.
Members from the Organized Private sector at today’s launch include: Alhaji Aliko Dangote; Mr. Tony Elumelu; Alhaji Abdul Samad Rabiu; Ms. Amina Maina, Wale Tinubu, Mr. Segun Ajayi-Kadir; Dr. Funke Opeke; Dr. Doyin Salami; Mr. Patrick Okigbo; Mr. Kola Adesina; Mr. Segun Agbaje; Mr. Chidi Ajaere; Mr. Abdulkadir Aliu; and Mr. Rasheed Sarumi.