• Thursday, October 03, 2024
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Agric growth slows to 1.4% in Q2 on worsening insecurity

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Nigeria’s agric growth slowed to 1.4 percent in the second quarter of 2024 on worsening insecurity and rising production costs, according to data from the GDP report.

On a year-on-year basis, the sector grew by 1.41 percent in real terms from 1.50 percent, a decrease of 0.09 percent points from the corresponding period of 2023, while on a quarter-on-quarter basis, the sector recorded a growth rate of 0.18 percent.

“Insecurity is a national issue that has become a big problem for the industry. It has led many farmers to abandon their farms, leading to rising food inflation,” Muda Yusuf, chief executive officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, said in an April interview with BusinessDay.

Read also: Annual N3.5trn post-harvest loss swallows five-year agric budget

He said until Nigeria tackles its insecurity issues, its food sector will continue to be under pressure.

An expert in the sector who craved anonymity said, “At one point, agric growth is still very low. Nigeria has reached the level where the agric sector should grow above three percent.

The NBS report showed that the agric sector contributed 22.61 percent to overall GDP in real terms in the period under review, lower than its contribution in the second quarter of 2023 at 23.01 and higher than the first quarter of 2024 which stood at 21.07 percent.

Also, agriculture was the third highest contributor to non-oil growth in the period under review after financial institutions and information and communication.

“Farmers now engage private security agencies to secure their farmlands, their crops and even themselves,” Kola Aderibigbe, chairman of Agro-Allied Sector, Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry, said in an earlier interview.

“They have to secure their lives as well whenever they go to the farms, which are not viable for agriculture.”

A report by SBM Intelligence, an Africa-focused market and security intelligence consultancy, says over 1,356 farmers in northern Nigeria have lost their lives to banditry attacks between 2020 and 2024.

This report reflects how insecurity is not only affecting food production – a major driver of all-time high food inflation, but also scaring investors from putting their money in the sector.

Florunsho Olayemi, chief executive officer at Sammorf Agro-Consult Limited, said the cost of cultivating a hectare of farmland has tripled with surging input costs and so has labour as well as other factors relating to production.

“Farmers are now reducing their production area owing to the rising production costs and insecurity and it is causing surging food prices,” he said.

Read also: Nigeria needs tech-driven agric to tackle surging food prices  – Vendease’s COO 

In its four sub-sectors, crop production remained the largest driver accounting 87.48 percent (N9.8 trillion) of the overall nominal value of the sector in Q2 of 2024.

The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) recently said that over 31.8 million Nigerians are suffering from acute food insecurity, worsened by malnutrition among women and children across the country.

In its Cadre Harmonise report in collaboration with GIZ, the international agency pointed out that the surge in food commodity prices driven by the removal of gasoline subsidy, as well as security challenges, has further placed millions of Nigerians in a precarious situation.

The country has seen its worst food inflation on record at over 40 percent in 2024 on the back of low food production, inadequate farming population in food-producing states and high costs of farming inputs.

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