Jonathan Eze
The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria
(MAN) has said the Composite Manufacturers’ CEO’s Confidence (MCCI)
index for the first quarter of 2019 stood at 51.3 per cent.
MAN President, Mr. Ahmed Mansur, who
disclosed this, explained that the newly created MCCI report revealed
that the manufacturing sector was struggling as operating conditions
remained
challenging.
The MAN president made the disclosure yesterday in Lagos, at the launch of the confidence index.
Mansur, who was represented by the
Managing Director of Flour Mills Nigeria, Mr. Paul Gbededo, said the
association would no doubt continue to promote a friendlier operating
system for the manufacturing sector in Nigeria, to remain global and
stay competitive.
According to him, the MCCI is an
integral part of the four-year transformation roadmap of the
association. This index is a strategic effort to proactively review the
impact of government policies on the manufacturing sector, with a view
to using the evidence-based feedback to advocate for a specific
direction of government policy formulation and implementation, he added.
Speaking further, he said the maiden
edition was a statistical indicator created to measure the pulse of the
manufacturing sector by sampling the perception of business operators,
using CEOs of MAN member-companies across 10 sectoral groups and 14
industrial zones as respondents.
”The index essentially gauges
manufacturers’ perception using a set of diffusion factors,
macroeconomic conditions and business operating environment indicators.
“The diffusion indicators include
business condition, employment condition (rate of employment),
production level, level of confidence on the performance of the
manufacturing sector and expectations for the next three months.
“Specifically, the general macroeconomic
indicators assessed include foreign exchange, lending rate, credit to
the manufacturing sector and capital expenditure of the government while
the business operating environment condition was measured by the
intensity of regulation, multiple taxes/levies, access to seaports,
local raw-materials sourcing and government patronage of Made in Nigeria
manufactured products,” he said.
He said the fact that operators were
struggling signified the minimal impact of regulatory reforms and
macroeconomic policies on the performance of the sector.
He further revealed that the MAN sectoral group and industrial zones on the MCCI for the quarter turned out to be a mixed bag.
While few sub-sectoral groups and zones
were measured above the 50 points benchmark, adding that majority
recorded 50 points and below.
Mansur, bemoaned the numerous challenges
confronting the sector. According to him, the outcomes showed that poor
electricity supply was ranked first, multiple taxation and
over-regulation were jointly ranked second; high-interest rate was
third; poor access to Nigerian ports and delay in clearance of
containers/cargoes and the attendant demurrage were also ranked fourth.
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