1.6% of Budget Not Enough for Agriculture Ministry

FG Targets New Agric-focused Bank

The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbeh, during an investors’ forum in Abeokuta, Ogun State said its allocation of 1.6 per cent of the approved budget for his ministry is not sufficient to drive the much needed diversification the country needs.

“The budget of Agriculture is 1.6 percent of our annual budget. How do we take care of agriculture and rural development at the same time.”

“The unfortunate thing about agriculture in this country is that it has over the years been the most abandoned, ignored and perhaps ridiculed of all sectors. We confined it to the peasants in the villages. Those nameless individuals whose children swear never to do what their fathers did.”

“We have to return to reality as oil and gas have served their purposes. That era is gone, and I hope it doesn’t return to the good old times because if it does, we have a knack to forget quickly what yesterday was like and what the future can be. So when this state invites us to talk on this topic, we are delighted because when people gather to analyze the problems, ask why they went wrong, decide on what to do and improve on it, it is a sign that they are thinking right.”

While addressing the issue of agriculture, the minister said “We should have invested oil revenues in agriculture like Malaysia did, but we didn’t. If you remember, there was a civil war in this country which lasted for three years. I remember that there were no oil and gas because there was a war. I remember that the war cost $1million per day for three years and we did not borrow a dime to finance it. What we did then was the reckless importation of luxuries which cannot be tolerated when a country was in crisis. No new cars came in for three years, no air conditioners, no television sets champagnes. We financed the war with proceeds from cocoa, cotton, groundnuts, palm produce among others, so Nigeria did not collapse.

“Today, that doesn’t sound very appealing. There is anger everywhere that we are not importing as we did before. People are insisting that rice must keep flowing from Thailand at the cost of $5 million a day, wheat, palm oil and tomato paste from China some of them with doubtful quality. In this process, the food import bill is a total of nearly $22 billion per annum. The luxury we can no longer be afforded because oil prices have fallen.”

In conclusion, the minister said that the biggest employer of labour, agriculture has contributed more to GDP. He also emphasized on agricultural development because according to him, we have no other choice.

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