The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said that it has recovered N503 billion, representing 52.39 percent, of loans under the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP).
The Acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, Dr. AbdulMumin Isa, made this known in a statement on Monday.
Isa said that the apex bank remained committed to its developmental mandate of stimulating access to finance for the real sector.
Recall that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in a recent report, had said only 24 percent of loans collected by farmers under the ABP had been repaid.
The IMF said the report was based on the information available at the time it was completed on Jan. 12.
According to the IMF, agricultural credit in the country has not significantly succeeded in increasing production due to the difficulty in targeting the correct recipients.
It said that although the CBN allowed farmers to pay in cash or give the CBN their produce of the same value, repayments had been very low.
According to Isa, the CBN has released N1.079 trillion under the program, out of which N960 billion is due for repayment.
He said that the ABP had supported about 4.57 million smallholder farmers who cultivated over 6.02 million hectares of 21 commodities across the country.
He listed the commodities as rice, wheat, cowpea, millet, maize, cotton, fish, soya bean, poultry, cassava, groundnut, ginger, sorghum, oil palm, cocoa, sesame, tomato, castor seed, yellow pepper, onions, and cattle/dairy.
Isa said that the ABP had contributed significantly to the increased national output of focal commodities, with maize and rice peaking at 12.2 and 9.0 million metric tonnes in 2021 and 2022 respectively.
He said the program had also helped to improve the national average yield per hectare of the commodities, with productivity per hectare almost doubling within the eight years of the program’s implementation.
According to the acting director, repayments under the ABP have been made through cash or produce by the beneficiaries.
He said that the outstanding due balance on loans was still under moratorium due to the COVID-19 forbearance granted to beneficiaries of the apex bank’s interventions in March 2020 and extended to Feb. 28, 2022.
“It is pertinent to note that the tenor of loans under the ABP is based on the commodity gestation period.
“For instance, loans granted to farmers cultivating some perennial crops could have up to seven-year tenor,” he said.
He said that CBN’s interventions, with the core objective of catalyzing the economy’s productive base, have continued to support investments in capital assets in sectors with high-growth and employment-elastic potential.
“The CBN remains committed to its developmental mandate of stimulating access to finance for the real sector, particularly agriculture, as it continues to support the Federal Government’s drive for food security and economic growth.
“Accordingly, the CBN continues to welcome applications from eligible Nigerian farmers and firms under the ABP, ” he said.