Tinubu Acknowledges Economic Growth Has Not Yet Created Sufficient Jobs

President Bola Tinubu, on Mon­day, acknowledged that the eco­nomic growth and gains recorded by his administration has not yet fully translated into enough jobs for Nigerians.

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Tinubu, represented by Vice President Kashim Shettima, stat­ed this in Abuja at the opening ceremony of the 31st Nigerian Economic Summit (NES#31) organised by the Nigerian Eco­nomic Summit Group (NESG) in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Budget and Econom­ic Planning.

He assured that his admin­istration was working assidu­ously to close the job creation gap, adding that agriculture and solid mineral sectors have been given priorities to create jobs and strengthen the economy.

According to him, “I admit that this growth has not yet fully translated into enough jobs for our people, but we are closing that gap.

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“We are giving priority to agriculture and solid minerals, two sectors with great potential to create jobs and strengthen our economy.

“To move faster, we have en­tered into partnerships with oth­er countries to bring in modern farming equipment, train our farmers, and expand extension services across the nation.

“Agriculture is the bedrock of our economy, and for us to have enhanced agricultural output, we have to embrace technology. Improved seed is absolutely es­sential.

“Extension services is an ingredient for successful agri­cultural intervention, and most importantly, better agricultural practices. And we are poised to see that.”

The president, who acknowl­edged the contribution of the Ministry of Solid Minerals Development to the Federation Account, said it has improved re­markably with the sector generat­ing $12.58 billion in 2024 through mineral title applications and related keys.

“This is a sign of the sector’s awakening and the result of delib­erate reforms aimed at unlocking its full potential.

“As a people-orientated gov­ernment, our priority remains re­storing hope to the unemployed, the poor, the excluded, and the vulnerable,” he said.

Tinubu announced that Ni­geria is currently producing an average of 1.8 million barrels of oil per day, adding that the ad­ministration is working towards achieving two million barrels per day by the end of the 2025 fiscal year.

He underscored the need to protect the interests of both local and foreign investors, citing the recent imbroglio between Dan­gote Refinery and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PEN­GASSAN).

He said: “Aliko Dangote, he’s not an individual, he’s an insti­tution, and he’s a leading light in Nigeria’s economic parliament.

“And how we treat this gentle­man will determine how outsid­ers will judge us.

“If he had invested $10 billion in Microsoft, in Amazon, in Goo­gle, probably he might be worth $70 to $80 billion by now.

“But he opted to invest in his country, and we owe it to future generations to jealously protect, promote, preserve, and protect the interests of this great Nigeria.

“I wish to call for caution, ret­rospection, and a deeper sense of patriotism from both the labour and the organised private sector in defining and improving the relationship between labour and industry in the interest of main­taining our steadily improving economic fortunes. It’s not about holding the whole nation to ran­som because of a minor labour dispute.

“Nigeria is greater than PEN­GASAN. Nigeria is greater than each and every one of us. I’m not coming to you as a partisan. I am coming to you as a patriot in search of solutions to our nation­al challenges.”

The president, who reeled out the achievements of the reforms of his administration, reiterated that the present administration has stabilised the macroeconom­ic environment.

He said: “Wherever you stand, there is a resounding consensus that our reforms have stabilised our macroeconomic environ­ment, with our economy ex­panding to $372.8 billion in 2024, up from $309.5 billion in 2023.

“Our total revenue collection also rose from N19.9 trillion in 2023 to N25.2 trillion in 2024.

“And as of August, it has reached N27.8 trillion, surpass­ing the revenue target of N18.32 trillion.

“These triumphs and projec­tions are guided by the promise we have made to the nation, to grow Nigeria’s debt service to revenue ratio from 97% while we make it to a sustainable level.

“Aside from the good news that this ratio has now reduced to less than 50%, I am proud to share that this performance in our early days in office inspired Fitch to up­grade Nigeria’s sovereign rating to B with a stable outlook.

“A number which surpasses projections from multilateral agencies and local think tanks.

“Non-oil revenues increased by 411% year-on-year in the same month, while the tax-to-GDP ra­tio now nudges towards 13.5%, up from barely 70% a few years ago.

“Our debt-to-GDP ratio now stands at 38.8%, far below the lim­its set by the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 60%, and those of ECOW­AS and World Bank is 70%.”

Tinubu called on states to align with the Renewed Hope Agenda in the collective pursuit of a future where every Nigerian can thrive.

“We’ll stabilise, we’ll indus­trialise, we’ll humanise our economy, we’ll stabilise prices and currency, and we will indus­trialise through power, logistics, and technology.

“We’ll humanise governance so that every citizen feels respect­ed and served,” he said.

Earlier, Chairman of NESG, Mr. Olaniyi Yusuf, noted that the Federal Government has taken courageous steps such as the removal of fuel subsidies, the unification of foreign exchange markets, and tax reform.

Yusuf, however, pointed out that millions of Nigerians are carrying the weight of these reforms.

He revealed that NESG in its last two Macroeconomic Outlook Reports has developed a roadmap to economic transformation built on three phases — stabilisation, consolidation, and acceleration.

“Today, we can say the stabi­lisation phase is materialising, albeit painfully and with fragility.

“But stabilisation, as neces­sary as it is, is not the destination and so cannot be the end of our journey. If we stop here, we risk losing the progress that has been so courageously won.

“The challenge before us is to move decisively into the consoli­dation phase, embedding reforms in ways that drive jobs, growth, and inclusion, while simultane­ously laying the foundations for long-term transformation that secures prosperity for every Ni­gerian.

“If stabilisation has given us breathing space, consolidation must give us direction — turning fragile recovery into resilient, in­clusive growth. To consolidate, we must be deliberate,” he said.

Yusuf further stressed the need for government to drive industrialisation and enterprise growth; invest in infrastructure for competitiveness; unlock in­vestments;

ensure fiscal sustainability; advance inclusion; strengthen institutions and address security as an enabler of reform.

Moving the economy from consolidation to acceleration, he noted that “there must be struc­tural transformation, human cap­ital must be our catalyst, global competitiveness and resilience, security is the foundation for transformation.”

He noted that as Nigeria con­siders both consolidation and ac­celeration of the economy, that it must be guided by industrialisa­tion, infrastructure, investments, inclusion and institutions.