How Nigeria can get out of recession – Obasanjo
For the country to get out of recession, former President Olusegun 
Obasanjo has called for an increase in the volume of trade internally 
and externally and the establishment of a commodity exchange to ensure 
stability in the prices of agricultural produce.
 Obasanjo made the suggestion in 
Abeokuta, Ogun State, on Monday during the opening of the 8th National 
Council on Industry, Trade and Investment currently holding in the state
 capital.
Obasanjo made the suggestion in 
Abeokuta, Ogun State, on Monday during the opening of the 8th National 
Council on Industry, Trade and Investment currently holding in the state
 capital.
 Obasanjo made the suggestion in 
Abeokuta, Ogun State, on Monday during the opening of the 8th National 
Council on Industry, Trade and Investment currently holding in the state
 capital.
Obasanjo made the suggestion in 
Abeokuta, Ogun State, on Monday during the opening of the 8th National 
Council on Industry, Trade and Investment currently holding in the state
 capital.
He advised the government to also put in
 place an aggressive coastal shipping system to boost trans-African 
trade with other countries on the continent from the current 12 per cent
 to about 22 per cent.
He explained that there was a need to 
spend less on goods that the nation could do away with, earn more from 
the manufacturing sector and borrow to finance critical sectors of the 
economy.
The former President also advocated 
financial discipline with the necessary political will to implement the 
various policies and programmes of the government aimed at taking the 
country out of recession.
Obasanjo also kicked against the constituency projects by members of the National Assembly, saying this must stop.
In his address, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said that the current recession would be short-lived.
He said changes would come “once the 
Federal Government is able to resolve the issues concerning pipeline 
vandalism and focus on a sustainable diversification policy.”
Osinbajo said that the loss of about 60 
per cent of the gas for power generation and 60 per cent of revenue were
 largely responsible for the economic challenges currently facing the 
country.
He dismissed predictions that the 
recession would last till around the year 2020 and assured Nigerians 
that the Federal Government would not rest until the problem was 
resolved.
Osinbajo expressed optimism that despite
 the drop in electricity generation to less than 3,000 megawatts, 
Nigeria could still meet the 7,000MW target by 2017.
He said work on critical transmission stations would be completed by the first quarter of next year.
He explained that the Federal Government
 was currently working on eight to nine transmission stations across the
 country to achieve the 7,000MW generation capacity.
“The President Muhammadu Buhari-led 
Federal Government is equally working on increasing gas supplies to 
enable the Federal Government increase power supply throughout the 
country towards improving the energy needs of the country,” the vice 
president stated.
He lamented the menace of vandals, which
 he noted had caused the drop in gas supply to the power stations, 
adding that the Federal Government was already working on ways of ending
 the activities of vandals, which constituted an act of economic 
sabotage.
Osinbajo said the Federal Government was
 already encouraging a privately-owned refinery to refine 650,000 
barrels of crude oil per day to ease the problem of petroleum products’ 
supply across the country.
 
 
 
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