Official data negates Buhari’s claims on agriculture

President Muhammadu Buhari Friday claimed that his regime’s policies on agriculture are paying off handsomely as many Nigerians now eat locally grown crops while many jobs are provided in the process.
Mr Buhari made this claim while hosting former Prime Minister of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, Ato Hailemariam Dessalegn Boshe, at the State House Abuja on Friday, his spokesperson Femi Adesina said in a statement.
“We needed to go back to the land, as petroleum could no longer sustain the country, particularly with fluctuating prices,” Mr Buhari said. “Today, we eat what we grow, and we have stopped importation of many food products. There’s no foreign exchange to even waste again.”
Contrary to Mr Buhari’s claim that Nigerians now only eat locally grown food, in October 2020, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) estimated that Nigeria spends $5 billion to import foods annually. $1.5 billion of the $5billion goes into importation of milk and other dairy products, Vanguard Newspaper reported.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) in May reported that about “9.2 million people countrywide face crisis or worse levels of food insecurity” as a result of lingering armed conflict, climate change and COVID-19 pandemic in Nigeria.
“This figure is expected to increase to over 12.8 million people, of whom 4.4 million are in the three northeastern states, during June–August 2021, unless resilience-focused and humanitarian actions are taken,” the FAO said.
Though available statistics suggest that unemployment has skyrocketed under the regime of Mr Buhari, he further said that agriculture has generated more employment and has become more attractive to Nigerians who now leave their white collar jobs to farm.
“Agriculture has also helped us to generate employment. We have embraced technology, and some people are even leaving the offices to go back to the land. And they are not regretting it. That is the feedback we get,” Mr Buhari said.
However, Nigeria’s unemployment rate hit a record of 33.3 per cent in the last quarter of 2020, according to a report by the National Bureau of Statistics released in March, the estimated number of persons within the working-age population, during the period under review was 122,049,400 Nigerians.
Also in June, the World Bank said about seven million Nigerians dropped below the poverty line due to an increase in inflation in the country in 2020.
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