Inside
Innoson Motor Manufacturing Plant Nnewi Nigeria - World's First Black-Owned Car
Manufacturer
|
At a factory in southeast
Nigeria, dozens of new white buses stand at the end of the production line,
apparently ready to take on some of Africa's toughest roads.
Reuters
report continues:
Unfortunately
for Nigeria's main domestic vehicle assembly firm they are going nowhere for
now.
In
an economy starved of dollars because of the slump in oil prices, Innoson
Vehicle Manufacturing (IVM) cannot buy imported components, leaving the buses
without engines - a metaphor for the problems afflicting Africa's most populous
nation.
GDP
figures on Wednesday confirmed that the continent's biggest economy slid into
its first recession in 25 years in the second quarter, shrinking by 2.06% after
a 0.36% contraction in the first three months of the year.
The
poor state of the manufacturing sector in particular is a blow to President
Muhammadu Buhari, who has been pushing hard to wean Nigeria off its dependence
on crude oil sales, which make up 70% of government revenues.
At
IVM, whose products are intended to show Nigeria can export more than oil,
workers have already been sent home because of a lack of parts from Japan,
China and Germany, which account for much of the content of the vehicles they
produce.
Production
had stopped "as we are waiting for the imported items for which there is a
forex issue," chairman Innocent Chukwuma said at the firm's plant at
Nnewi, in southern Nigeria.
Launched
in 2010, IVM last year raised its annual production target for 2016 from 4,000
to 6,000 vehicles due to a "Made in Nigeria" campaign that generated
strong sales to the police, state agencies and churches.
Those
ambitions are now looking shaky if promises of government assistance fail to materialize,
Chukwuma said.
"I
believe they are doing something but if they can't do anything we'll lay off
some workers," Chukwuma said.
"JAPAN OF
AFRICA"
Nigeria's
foreign currency reserves were more than US$31 billion a year ago but dropped
to below US$26 billion this month as the central bank stepped up its dollar
sales to try to address the widespread foreign exchange shortage.
A
40% devaluation of the naira in June was meant to resolve that shortage by
encouraging delayed inward investment and opening up the currency market.
But
trade on the official market remains thin, with many of the available dollars
finding their way to the black market, where they are sold at a premium of 40%.
For
a country that imports everything from machines to milk the impact is huge.
In
the southeastern city of Aba - known as the "Japan of Africa" until
the 1970s - more than 2,000 shoemakers have shut because they cannot pay for
imported glue or synthetic leather, whose prices has surged due to the black
market dollar rate.
"We
are just managing," said Uche Okeke, who used to make 1,000 pairs of
women's shoes a month before the price of glue quadrupled, forcing him to
nearly halve production and lay off half his staff.
With
the inflated input costs, consumers in neighbouring Cameroon, who used to buy
most of Aba's shoes, are now opting for cheaper Chinese footwear.
Until
recently, three trucks laden with shoes and bags left the city for Cameroon
every week. Now it is one every fortnight, traders at the city's almost
deserted motor park said.
POTHOLES
Government
officials point to a sizeable investment this year by U.S. drinks giant Coca
Cola in local juice and dairy firm Chi Ltd as evidence of a turnaround in
Nigeria's fortunes, but business people say promises of government support fail
to materialize.
Finance
Minister Kemi Adeosun said earlier this month that exporters should get tax
breaks, another item in a list of proposals that have yet to make it into law.
A
government source said last week that Buhari wanted parliament to grant him
extra powers to speed up plans such as easing visa restrictions for potential
investors.
The
government under Buhari has spent ₦400 billion (US$1.2 billion) on building
roads or improving the power supply but that has had little impact in a country
of 190 million that has suffered decades of mismanagement.
The
main roads around Aba - whose shoes are said to have rivalled even Italian footwear
in the decade after independence - are littered with pot-holes and in some
parts are little more than dirt tracks.
"We
are tired of hearing about support from the Federal Government. We read about
it in the newspapers, hear it on television and radio. But it's just
talk," said Goodluck Nmeri, head of the 6,000-strong shoemakers'
association in Aba.
(US$1 = ₦330)
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