Finance Manufacturing

Manufacturing sector intervention fund now N803bn –CBN

Manufacturing sector’s intervention funds disbursed by the Central Bank rose to N803bn as of February.

 Figures obtained from the CBN reports on the Monetary Policy Committee revealed this on Tuesday.

 “Under the N1tn manufacturing intervention stimulus, the total of N803.36bn has been disbursed to 228 projects across various sectors in agro-allied, mining, steel production and packaging industries, among others,” it stated.

 In May 2020, the CBN introduced guidelines for the implementation of the COVID-19intervention facility for the manufacturing sector. 

It stated that the intervention facility was to support the Federal Government’s palliative measures to support beleaguered manufacturing enterprises in priority economic activities. 

The guideline stated that it also focused on boosting local manufacturing capacity and support mass employment, wealth creation and foreign reserve accretion.

 Part of the objectives was to improve access to affordable credit by domestic manufacturing enterprises across critical sectors of the economy; and close financing gap necessary for the replacement of machinery and equipment to enhance local production.  

t also sought to refinance existing facilities of manufacturing enterprises in priority sectors of the economy; and facilitate the procurement of state-of-the-art machinery and equipment, as well as automated manufacturing models that would fast-track domestic production and economic rejuvenation.

 The guideline said it supported increased patronage of made in Nigeria products, industry resilience, employment creation and retention and accretion to foreign reserves. 

Eligible manufacturing enterprises must be an entity registered in Nigeria under the Companies and Allied Matters Act of 1990 and engaged in specific areas.

 The areas are cement basic metal, steel and iron rods; textile, apparel and footwear; electrical and electronics, including computer; renewable energy products; light manufacturing in general including fast moving consumer goods, basic non-durable household goods and other consumables, except cigarettes and tobacco.

 It also includes food, drinks and beverages; agro-processing; chemical and pharmaceutical products; pulp, paper and paper products; plastic and rubber products; wood and wood products; and any other manufacturing activities as may be prescribed by the CBN.

 The CBN allowed manufacturing enterprises that had accessed any of its existing intervention programmes and schemes to be  eligible to apply under the facility, provided their existing credit facility was performing.

Related posts

International Breweries improves revenue by 20% to N218bn in 2022

Editor

N150bn worth of bonds up for subscription June 17- DMO

Naira gains, exchanges for 490/$

Our Reporter

Lagos Tops as Foreign Capital Importation Increases to $1.73bn in Q3

Our Reporter

States to have statistics bureau by June 2022 – Harry, Statistician-General of the Federation

Our Reporter

China’s GDP to grow around 5.1% in 2022 – Analyst

Meletus EZE