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Anchor borrower scheme lifts over 1m smallholder farmers – CBN

Motolani Oseni

The Anchor Borrowers Scheme of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), launched in November 2015, has lifted not less than 1,059,604 smallholder farmers.

The program was designed to build partnerships between smallholder farmers and reliable large-scale agro-processors, with a view to increasing agricultural output, while improving access to credit for farmers.

The CBN in a statement said, “The programme has helped to bolster agricultural production by removing obstacles faced by smallholder farmers.

We have also improved access to markets for farmers by facilitating greater partnership with agro-processors and industrial firms in the sourcing of raw materials.

“So far, the programme has supported more than 1,059,604 smallholder farmers across all the 36 states of Nigeria, in cultivating 16 different commodities over 1.114 million hectares of farmland. It has also supported the creation of over 2.5 million jobs across the agricultural value chain.”

Recently, while speaking on development finance intervention, the Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefiele, said that the bank increased its lending to the agricultural and industrial sectors, through targeted intervention schemes such as the Anchor Borrowers Programme, Commercial Agricultural Credit Scheme and the Real Sector Support Facility.

“In particular, we sought to improve the domestic supply of four commodities (rice, fish, sugar and wheat), which consume about N1.3tn annually in our nation’s import bill,” he said.

He said its targeted focus on the agricultural and industrial sectors were driven by the vast opportunities for growth in these sectors were given the country’s high population.

According to him, it was also instrumental in taking Nigeria out of the recession.

Emefiele said that in 2017, over 50 per cent of the contributions to GDP growth came from the agriculture and industrial sectors.

He said these sectors had the ability to absorb the growing labour pool of eligible workers in its effort to meet the household consumption needs of the Nigerian populace.

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