Of Groundnut and Crude Oil

In the year 2013 , Indonesia made $19b from exporting palm oil, this is more than the entire 2014 budgets of the South East, South South and Ondo (crude oil states) combined

 (South South N1,981t, South East N619b, Ondo N162b)
 How is this even possible?
 In 1832, 75% of the global palm oil export came from Nigeria. Between 1961 and 1965 world oil palm production was 1.5 million tons, with Nigeria accounting for 43% of that production. Today, Nigeria, ranks behind Malaysia and Indonesia accounting for only 7% of world palm oil production. It’s important to add that Malaysia and Indonesia are also oil producing nations, yes they have crude oil.

By 1960, Nigeria was the world largest exporter of shelled groundnuts, with a 40% global market share, today we have 0% market share.Groundnuts were special to Nigeria, between 1956 and 1967, Groundnuts was one of Nigeria most valuable export crop, and there were groundnut pyramids in Kano, now all gone. To be specific, groundnut exports fell from 502,000 tons in 1961 to 291.000 tons in 1970 to zero by 1980….

So why did ground nut pyramid disappear from Nigeria? Sure there was Aflatoxin contamination that affected the groundnut exports. So why the Northern region could not just fumigate and fix the contamination? Why did it just allow exports cease?

Why has agriculture collapsed? Well everyone says crude oil, but it’s not just crude oil it’s the way we have structured our fiscal federalism. I explain.
Below is the progression of fiscal allocation formula.

1953 Sir Louis Chick: The penultimate revenue allocation formula for Nigeria was done by Sir Louis Chick. His formula was presented and unanimously agreed at the 1953 constitutional conference in London. It was basic, it read “all mining taxes will be collected federally, distributed based on derivation, same for income taxes”. To be clear, it was income tax, mining rent & royalty to be collected and shared 100% to states based on derivation. Federal government got 0%. The minerals at this time was Tin, Columbite and Coal.

Export duties was 50% to state of origin of export, 50% to federal government….

1958 Raisman; Commissioner Raisman amended Sir Chick formula. He slashed the 100% derivation to states to 50%…thus Mining rights was now 50% to state of origin by derivation. Of the other 50%…20% was given to the Federal Government and 30% was again pooled into the “Distributable Pool” and shared by all four regions again, in this formula…North 40%, East 31%, West 24%, and Southern Cameroon 5%.

Export duties was 100% to state of origin

1963 constitution….this followed the 1958 Raisman allocation, in summary it remained, mining rights for oil producing regions 67.4%, Federal Government 20%, non-oil regions 12.6%

Export duties maintained at 100% of state of origin

1970 Decree no 13, the Military steps in. the states lose fiscal autonomy, maintain derivation. The Distributable pool was gone, the Oil producing states lost 5% of their derivation percentage. The new formula was now…mining rights for oil producing states, 45%, Federal Government 55%

1975, Decree 6: the military further reduced derivation to 20%, thus mining rights to oil producing states….20%, Federal Government 80%

1977, Aboyade Commission. The Military created the Federation Account. Derivation abolished. Thus mineral rights to oil producing states 0%, Federal Government 100%.

Export duties now 0% to state of origin

Thus in 13 years, Nigeria went from state share of mineral rights at 67% to 0%, and took states share of export proceeds from 100% to 0%

There remains NO incentive for State Government to encourage agriculture. States own the land, Where the land is commercially farmed, the companies pay incomes taxes to the FGN, when the cash crops are exported,  export duty is paid to the FGN. The states were left with nothing  ( The States receive a share of these taxes via Consolidated Revenue Fund, but not according to derivation). It’s during this period when the Sates lost the rigt of fiscal federalism that commercial agriculture crashed in Nigeria.

When the Federal Government took the crude oil and non oil export proceeds revenues what did they do with it? The FGN shared it back to the States and Local Government according to a formula. States got on average 32%, Federal 47%, LGAs 15% (*note there are statutory transfers to Ecology, Agric development etc )

Export taxes remains 0% to States as derivation, Company income taxes remain 0% accrued to states as derivation…..This means states do not retain as revenue to their budgets the export duties on cash crops produced in their States.

But that is not the whole story….

That 31% the FGN shares to states, is it shared equally? NO how is it shared? That’s called the horizontal revenue allocation formula. The key sharing heads are

1. Equality 45%,

2. Population 25%, 3.

3. Land mass 5%…Lets pause here

What this means is that just being a State in the Federation with a high population guarantees any State 65% of the allocation to States from the Federation purse ….

The FGN took the mineral and non-oil export earning to an central account, retained 47% of that account, then returned 51% to the States and LGAs but determined it will be shared out based on“equality” and “population”… npt derivation, ie where the income was generated.

 Thus all States now focused on their population figure, not agriculture. Any attempt by the National Population Commission to discuss population shifts is met with stiff resistance and with good reason too, population and “equality” not exports or derivation determine how states receive revenues from the 51% allocation. That why a state can violate the constitution and conduct her own census…it’s that serious.

Palm Oil for instance can be farmed in 24 states in Nigeria including Southern Kaduna specifically in Abia, AkwaIbom, Cross River, Rivers, Bayelsa, Imo, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu, Delta, Edo, Ondo, Ogun, Osun, Oyo, Ekiti, Benue Kwara, Kogi, Nassarawa, Plateau, Taraba, Adamawa and Kaduna…….but why bother planting palm oil? It’s much easier to lobby the National Population Commission for a high population count.

 As States in Nigeria started to receive a greater percentage of their income from the federal government, they stopped farming. And you can’t blame them. If groundnuts export revenues still went to Kano State 100% via derivation, there would still be groundnut pyramids in Kano today, but Kano lost the export proceeds funds to FAAC, thus no incentive to plant groundnuts.

Same for Abia State, as they lost the oil palm export proceeds to FAAC, they then put their eyes squarely on “Abuja”

 Is there a suggesting that we unhook states from crude oil funded FAAC and push them to farming? By giving them 100% of their export proceeds from their agriculture cash crops? YES

To fix agriculture we must fix the incentive process. If States retained even 13% derivation on income taxes and export duties on agricultural produce, they would see the incentive to attract companies to come to their States and push non oil exports. If we had left the derivation to states at 100%, then every state today would be viable.

The problem with agriculture in Nigeria is not crude oil, but our faulty fiscal federalism (FAAC)….

So what should Nigeria do?

We reward what you want to improve, if you want safer drivers you reward drivers with zero car scratches. Return back to the States the fiscal principle of derivation on agricultural exports. That will mean states can see a direct relationship between farming and IGR and this will spur investment in agriculture. Governors will seek out agriculture investors the same way and vigor they seek out Shoprite Malls.

Derivation on agriculture is also fair. All states have land, all states can farm, agriculture is still a major contributor to our GDP growth, and it still employs millions of Nigerians in every state. A fiscal amendment to give states 100% export earning can have two massive impacts

In the short term, it makes agriculture attractive in the long term it makes all states fiscally viable.

So agree to  increase derivation on agricultural exports from state of origin back to 100%.

It’s our problem, we can fix it.