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Home Business News Business

Manufacturers will suffer shocks from the rising cost of diesel, foreign exchange illiquidity in Q2 – LCCI

Says job losses are also very likely due to constrained production and disrupted supply chains...

William Ukpe by William Ukpe
April 13, 2022
in Business
Manufacturers will suffer shocks from the rising cost of diesel, foreign exchange illiquidity in Q2 – LCCI
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The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has warned that going into the second quarter of 2022, the manufacturing sector will likely suffer some shocks from the rising cost of diesel, logistics, foreign exchange illiquidity and others due to the Russian-Ukraine war which has triggered supply chain issues in the energy and agriculture markets.

This was disclosed by LCCI’s President, Dr Michael Olawale-Cole, at the LCCI Quarterly press conference on the state of the Nigerian economy on Tuesday in Lagos.

The LCCI also warned about shrinking production of goods for Nigerian manufacturers as they try to adjust to the bottlenecks created by the conflict.

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What they are saying

The LCCI warned that if the war continues, Nigerian manufacturers would be hit by low productivity as access to raw materials declines and rising costs of diesel continues to impact operations.

Olawale-Cole said, “Job losses are also very likely due to constrained production and disrupted supply chains and all of these will likely depress growth potential in Q2 2022.

“Going into the second quarter of 2022, the manufacturing sector will likely suffer some shocks from the rising cost of diesel, logistics, foreign exchange illiquidity, domestic inflationary pressure, weakening purchasing power, poor public infrastructure and port-related challenges.

“These may continue to present as headwinds to the sector’s performance.

“Additionally, with the war in Ukraine aggravating disruptions to supply chains of raw materials like wheat, barley, soybeans, sunflower, and corn, the rising cost of production may not abate soon.”

He warned that Nigerians should expect headline inflation to remain elevated, citing supply chain disruptions caused by the Russia-Ukraine war, food supply shocks, FX policies, higher energy costs, FX illiquidity, heightened insecurity in major food-producing states, which would continue to mount pressure on consumer prices.

“We believe a broad-based harmonisation of fiscal and monetary policies toward addressing the identified structural constraints will significantly help moderate inflationary pressure in the short term.

“It has also become imperative now that Nigeria needs to have reserves for these critical commodities to meet sudden crashes in supply.

“We have always advocated the removal of fuel subsidies and that such rescued funds be diverted to subsidise the production of goods and services in the face of the rising cost of manufacturing.

“The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) should embark on easing the economy while keeping a tab on controlling rising prices.

“Credit to the private sector should increase and be targeted to support growth sectors and export-promoting sectors,” he added.

In case you missed it

Nairametrics reported earlier that Ayobami Omole, an Equity and Thematic Research Analyst at Tellimer Research stated that the high cost of diesel, partly caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and impacting negatively on the manufacturing sector in Nigeria is set to push Nigeria’s inflation for Q2 around the 16% rate.


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Tags: FeaturedLagos Chamber of Commerce and IndustryLCCI
William Ukpe

William Ukpe

For further inquiries about this article contact: Email: william.ukpe@nairametrics.com or outreach@nairametrics.com. Twitter: @_sirwilliam_ @nairametrics.

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