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ICAN President Urges Nigerians to Embrace Made-In-Nigeria Products
By Obinna Chima
The President of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), Mrs. Onome Joy Adewuyi has called on Nigerians to embrace and patronize “Made in Nigeria” products post covid-19.
A statement quoted the ICAN President to have made the call during a parley with media executives in Lagos.
According to her, one of the great lessons from the covid-19 pandemic and the attendant lockdown was the ingenuity displayed by Nigerians by producing their own face masks, water/soap dispensers, sanitisers, personal protective equipment and ventilators.
“Necessity, they say, is the mother of invention. In unison, Nigerians arose. This points to the huge human capacity and creativity that exist in this country. The spirit of ‘we can do it’ must be embraced, propagated and seriously encouraged,” she added.
While calling on the government to latch in on this to drive national economic revival, she advised that the effort should be reinforced through more investment in tertiary institutions to fine tune these inventions.
Speaking further, Adewuyi said since the lockdown prevented many people and corporate entities from going about their value-creating activities, the hardest hit were SMEs, small and medium-sized practices (SMPs) and other players in the informal sector.
She, therefore, called on governments to focus on how to support these entities and people who contribute the most to national economic growth, adding that most of the SMEs and SMPs might have consumed their capital in order to survive.
“There is need for them to be given one-year interest free loans by development institutions so that they can revive their businesses. When they start to grow and prosper, they will pay back the loans while the government will reap taxes from them,” she added.
On steps to be taken to set Nigeria on the path of economic growth, the ICAN President explained that one of the banes of economic growth and development of Nigeria was over dependence on oil and poor infrastructure such as power supply, roads, rail, health, education facilities and potable water.
She further advised that diversification of the national source of foreign exchange must be done not only in words and plans but in real investment in infrastructure.
The ICAN boss said Nigeria must evolve a strategy for the export of intangible human expertise to drive its development. She also posited that the nation should create business hubs based on specialisation in different zones of the country.
“While agriculture is key and should be mechanised, except the nation adds value to its products before export, we would continue to be at the mercy of our trading partners. We need to process our agricultural products to add value and earn foreign exchange,” she added.