The Central Bank of Nigeria has
announced that it has provided a total sum of $660m to the manufacturing
sector in the last one month.
The amount, the apex bank said, was made
available to the manufacturers through the interbank market to source
for raw materials and spare parts to boost production capacity.
The Acting Director, Corporate
Communications Department, CBN, Mr. Isaac Okoroafor, confirmed the
development to our correspondent on Monday.
Okoroafor said the move by the apex bank
was in line with its earlier promise to ease the foreign exchange
pressure on the manufacturing and agricultural sectors.
The provision, he stated, was achieved through forward sales under the new flexible foreign exchange regime.
“Manufacturing industries in Nigeria
have been given access to foreign exchange valued at over $660m in the
interbank market to source for raw materials and spare parts for their
industries courtesy of the interbank forex market,” Okorafor said.
He explained that the CBN was committed
to ensuring that manufacturers of goods for which Nigeria did not enjoy
comparative advantage were able to get letters of credit to import the
required materials for their business.
He stated that since the CBN introduced
restrictions on the sourcing of forex for 41 items from the interbank
market, the endeavour had yielded positive results.
Okoroafor urged manufacturers to take
advantage of the policy, which he noted was part of efforts by the CBN
to ensure that Nigeria reclaimed its status as a major producer through
backward integration.
This, according to him, will assist the
nation in conserving billions of naira in foreign exchange spent on
import bills annually.
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