Nigeria has 'No Money' to Import Food

Nigeria’s
President Muhammadu Buhari has said that Nigerian farmers must produce enough for
the country to eat, saying that the country has "no money to import"
food.
The comments
follow concerns around food insecurity during the coronavirus pandemic and
rising food prices in Africa’s most populous nation.
According to
the UN’s Food and Agriculture Programme, even before the Covid-19 crisis,
farmers had not been able to satisfy demand for Nigeria’s population of some
200 million.
Although the
agricultural sector remains a major employer, it has suffered years of neglect
as the country’s economy focused heavily on oil revenue.
Nigeria has
been trying to boost domestic rice production for some time,
cracking down on
smuggled imports from Thailand by closing the country’s land borders last year.
Prior to the
ban, Nigeria used to import over a million tonnes of rice from Thailand
annually.
Now it only
allows foreign rice through its ports - and imposes high import taxes.
Food prices
have risen in Nigeria since the onset of coronavirus and government revenues
have been hit badly by the fall in global oil prices.
The
International Monetary Fund predicts that Africa's biggest economy will
contract by 1.5% points in 2020.
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