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Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Lotti(m): 10:18am On Sep 10, 2021
The President of the Dangote Group, Mr. Aliko Dangote, explains why he jettisoned the easy way of making money from buying and selling of commodities to venture into the much challenging business environment of manufacturing Nigeria. He also speaks on what the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement means to the group in a fire chat with an Economist, Dr. Doyin Salami, during the High-Level Roundtable Discussion on Industrialisation in Africa to heralds the 50th-anniversary celebration of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN). Dike Onwuamaeze brings the excerpt:

From your Pan Africa experience as an operator in 17 African countries, what is your thought about Africa developing a competitive manufacturing sector?

Thank you very much. To be really globally competitive we must produce very high-quality products and we have to produce them at the cheapest cost possible. Others have been there before us if you look at the Asian tigers but I know that it is never late because this can actually be done. But what I think we need to do is to concentrate first on meeting our own domestic demand, by producing high quality at the lowest price. If we do this we will be able to export to other countries and get their markets. That was what the Asian tigers did. They first concentrated on their domestic market and kept on improving on the quality and the cost of whatever that they were producing. Of course, initially, we might need government support to stabilise and be able to compete anywhere in the world. But I think that government has to remove most of the hurdles in terms of poor infrastructure and unfriendly regulations and improve our power and ports environment. When we decided that we want to make Nigeria self-sufficient in cement, what we did, knowing that people will challenge us in terms of quality, was to start by investing heavily in technology to make sure that whatever that we want to produce in terms of quality is possible so that if the foreign markets open up we will be able to compete both in terms of quality and pricing. So, we did these investments and that has also given us a lot of edge by as we are able to go to markets like Cameroun, that even though a competitor has been there for 50 years, we were able to take the market because of quality and price of our products. I think we need to do quite a lot in terms of pricing because if your pricing is not right there is nothing you can do because no one is going to buy your product. We have already built that case in our cement and that is the business case we want to build in our fertilizer, our oil and gas, and in all other products that we want to export to African countries.


You group has diverse interests across countries in the continent and the issue of protectionism is very rife in the continent. What is your advice to the managers of the AfCFTA to ensure that we achieve cross border collaboration that can engender meaningful competition across the continent?

My advice to everybody when you look at it from the AfCFTA’s perspective and the potentials that it has, is to speed up its implementation. What are the things that we need to do? They need to sit down and ask themselves how we implement this because there are still issues that they are still battling with and I believe that they need to address those issues. And we need to also dig down to know why previous regional agreements in Africa have not worked? If they are working we wouldn’t be at about 15 per cent intra-African trade with Africa. We need to look at those issues and ask why and what happened? Today it takes us two weeks to go to Ghana from Nigeria, which is something we are supposed to do in 10 to 12 hours. You invest in trucks to take cement to Ghana and it takes you two weeks and going to Lome in Togo, which is about 270 kilometers from Lagos, is taking us 10 days today as we speak.

If that is the case we are not going to be competitive. You are talking about gas? Our gas prices here are almost double than other normal areas. So, how can we be competitive? Government has to do quite a lot in terms of having the political will to remove all these bottlenecks at the borders. Why will they want to hold somebody going through the borders when they know that these goods have to pass under the signed agreement? There are quite a number of issues that we need to address. For example, today, if I want to go through the ports the government will charge me $10 per tonne even though I am exporting a very cheap product to the next country. So why should I pay $10 per tonne in terms of port charges? So, I think that there are quite a lot of areas we have to look at to make this thing competitive. The border crossing is the most important one for us. We must make sure that crossing our borders does not take time. It will not make sense at all if it is going to take time. People would rather ship from China straight into their markets. So, we need to be very, very, careful. Similarly, when you look at it today, every single border you go to has different charges. So, I think that governments need to focus on this by removing all these impediments and barriers and make sure that we have a very free flow for businesses. We will never be competitive if we do not do that. The whole idea for us is to improve and get this intra-African trade to be almost about 55 to 60 per cent. We actually need to work with the government to remove these bottlenecks, which will need a lot of political will by governments. Let me give you a typical example. A lot of countries signed in preparation for the AfCFTA take off to have one single Africa passport. I have gotten mine. A President in Africa that I will not like to mention invited me to come and see him and I went there but they did not recognise that passport. It was recognised in South Africa but not far away from South Africa, they said that I still need to have a visa to travel. So the movement of goods, services and people is still so very tough and for the AfCFTA to work we have to remove all these impediments and this needs a lot of political will.

How ready is the Dangote Group to be a participant in the AfCFTA?

Thank you. You know that long before the AfCFTA, we have always designed and planned to be an export-based company.

If we had relied on importing wheat to produce flour and pasta, that business would have folded because we are not going to be competitive relying on the international price of wheat. So, we are not touching anything that we cannot achieve through local backward integration to produce and export. This is what I keep telling people. At first, people thought that we (Dangote Group) were not interested in the AfCFTA. No! We are interested in the AfCFTA because we are going to be the major beneficiaries. Number one, if you look at it today, we have the largest fertilizer plant in Africa so we will supply fertilizer all over the continent. We are building the largest petrochemicals on the continent. We are also building 650,000 barrels per day petrol refinery. All these are not for the Nigerian market alone. They are actually for Sub-Saharan Africa because all the Sub-Saharan African countries are importing their petroleum products. When you look at it today, in cement we have created huge capacity in terms of exports. We already have two port terminals that have the capacity for eight million tonnes, one in Port Harcourt and another in Lagos for us to be able to export cement. Despite our gas prices, despite even the port charges we are still okay in terms of being competitive. So, if we start all our exports, we will be able to export more than $12 billion worth of goods, and that has actually put us as one of the highest in Africa, if not the number one.


Trading seemed an easier proposition. Why did you go into manufacturing giving all the difficulties that you have listed? Before I started manufacturing I do not have a single gray hair. But you have to check why other entrepreneurs before us that tried manufacturing were not really very successful? For manufacturing, you will need very stable government policies. You need to have electricity. These two things are the most important. And I am glad that today we have a good relationship between the government and the MAN. The government’s own is to listen as we tell them areas that are not implementable. Then back to your question on how I got into manufacturing. For me, it is better that I go into manufacturing than trading. Trading does not add value and is just a temporary thing because one can be trading today and tomorrow decides to shut down his shop. But manufacturing is where you will create massive jobs and also leave a legacy and the whole thing for me is to build something that I should leave as a legacy to future generations. At a time Nigeria was importing almost 90 per cent of the cement consumed in this country. But we took it upon us to make sure that we will make Nigeria self-sufficient and also export the excess that we have. For me, trading is really not the right way to go. I know, yes, that manufacturing is really difficult but we have to work together with the government to make it much easier so that we can add value. Somebody who is trading has a simple lifestyle: he sits in his office and order goods, they arrive and he sells without adding any value. But for manufacturing, you are creating value for yourself, for the society, for the country, and for everybody



https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2021/09/09/dangote-why-i-dumped-trading-for-manufacturing/

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Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Jerryherd: 10:25am On Sep 10, 2021
Dangote is secretly planning another industry takeover, soon we will all be at the mercy of his monopoly

The huge billions he is pumping into diary farming , importing cattle breeds from France and Brazil

35 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Bornsinner7: 6:25am On Sep 11, 2021
Ok
Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by id4sho(m): 6:25am On Sep 11, 2021
wink
Manufacturing is the main deal

13 Likes

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Hamzatgodfirst(m): 6:25am On Sep 11, 2021
Trading makes you think about manufacturing... You only think about manufacturing after making so much from trading

112 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Mayng01(m): 6:25am On Sep 11, 2021
Ole

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by oluwaseunamos33(m): 6:25am On Sep 11, 2021
Talk true, no be me give you the idea?

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by nony43(m): 6:26am On Sep 11, 2021
In as much that i have done business from the scratch for years and i can say buying and selling is not easy, Dangote should know that if not of FG the Dangote group would have fizzled out. Dangote containers doesn't stay more than three days in Apapa and it's cleared. He can't even survive in US that runs on a capitalist economy. Let's give everyone a level ground to run a Cement factory nobody will consider Dangote cement when we've got BUA, Unicem, Ibeto and other upcoming. Let him enjoy when Igbo man become president all man go do business by force.

54 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by RepoMan007: 6:27am On Sep 11, 2021
Commonsensical.

1 Like

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by DanielAlhassan(m): 6:27am On Sep 11, 2021
Dan gote is the problem of Nigeria

He sold to Nigeria in a high price
And sold to other Africa country in
A low price

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by thesicilian: 6:27am On Sep 11, 2021
This guy would easily have become the world's richest man by now if he was in another country.

17 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Leun: 6:27am On Sep 11, 2021
Who read this this morning?

You all are welcome.


For me, it is better that I go into manufacturing than trading. Trading does not add value and is just a temporary thing because one can be trading today and tomorrow decides to shut down his shop. But manufacturing is where you will create massive jobs and also leave a legacy and the whole thing for me is to build something that I should leave as a legacy to future generations.

22 Likes

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Topzee109: 6:28am On Sep 11, 2021
OK
Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by paymentvoucher: 6:28am On Sep 11, 2021
Oga abegggiiii. undecided

We are tired of hearing all these stories joor. You better thank Nigerian Government that gave you the opportunity to show case your brand in a monopolistic way. undecided undecided

5 Likes

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by AmigoDeDon(m): 6:28am On Sep 11, 2021
Oil
Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by samsard(m): 6:28am On Sep 11, 2021
Jerryherd:
Dangote is secretly planning another industry takeover, soon we will all be at the mercy of his monopoly

The huge billions he is pumping into diary farming , importing cattle breeds from France and Paris
I'd rather have a Dangote monopoly than smaller businesses that do nothing but import finished goods.

43 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Zegemi(f): 6:29am On Sep 11, 2021
Thy
Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by soleexx(m): 6:29am On Sep 11, 2021
Do what you love


Remember

Don't let someone know how much they mean to you. Until it's too late

Be A Man!!

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Randal: 6:29am On Sep 11, 2021
You did well

1 Like

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by illicit(m): 6:29am On Sep 11, 2021
undecided
Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Nobody: 6:30am On Sep 11, 2021
In a sane business environment Dangote would not survive one day I say this with my full chest argue with your Papa

3 Likes

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by lalajnr(m): 6:30am On Sep 11, 2021
We don hear oga monopoly biased Nigeria


Your mate na dey USA they do rivalry with others for technology and you dey bribe government for this side

1 Like

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by greenie77: 6:30am On Sep 11, 2021
Jerryherd:
Dangote is secretly planning another industry takeover, soon we will all be at the mercy of his monopoly

The huge billions he is pumping into diary farming , importing cattle breeds from France and Paris

Paris is in France.

I am in for his investment in dairy farming, we need to have cows that produces up to 30 litres of milk daily not the less than 5 litres a day the Fulani cows are producing while causing havoc at the same time

That Kenya produces around 5.2billlion litres of fresh milk annually which is almost 15 milliom litres per day and ready to drink milk is cheap as they are the highest consumers of milk in Africa is not because of the likes of Dangote rather it is because milk production is so devolved that it is so very common to see diary cows in their homesteads.

27 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by TripleAkutigi: 6:31am On Sep 11, 2021
undecided who else read amm finish

2 Likes

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Millimann: 6:32am On Sep 11, 2021
If there is adequate mechanism for effectivecompetition, his stories and motivational quotes would make more sense.
Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by PENNYSWAP: 6:33am On Sep 11, 2021
Jerryherd:
Dangote is secretly planning another industry takeover, soon we will all be at the mercy of his monopoly

The huge billions he is pumping into diary farming , importing cattle breeds from France and Paris


Is it not better he hijacks that sector too , since every fool that makes money must build a hotel and real estate and filling station .... nothing else , there is huge money in agriculture but most foolish money bags don’t know

30 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Jubal01: 6:33am On Sep 11, 2021
For more dubios and exploitation purposes i guess.
Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Nobody: 6:34am On Sep 11, 2021
Jerryherd:
Dangote is secretly planning another industry takeover, soon we will all be at the mercy of his monopoly

The huge billions he is pumping into diary farming , importing cattle breeds from France and Brazil

So why can't other rich men do the same...and please don't tell me 'government'...because I am tired of that excuse.

Most Nigerian businessmen and women prefer to import stuff, and sell and run off. Many family owned businesses that were like Dangote before failed because the family members came and ran off with the money as soon as the founder died. (If you notice, Dangote isn't allowing his kids run things yet)

As for petrol....Dangote is able to build refinery because for now he has the money to take the risk. If we want more refineries, we have to remove fuel subsidy so that investors can come, build, refine, and sell fuel at a profit and recoup that profit. But you Nigerians don't want...so we run the risk of making Dangote a monopoly because we want cheap fuel...and even then, his refienry may lose money if we keep on subsidisng fuel below its production price.

17 Likes

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by benuejosh: 6:36am On Sep 11, 2021
Wether trading or Manufacturing, the ideal is to make money.

2 Likes

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by xpressionx(m): 6:37am On Sep 11, 2021
NIGERIANS SERVING IN THE NYSC SCHEME NORMALLY REFER TO THEMSELVES AS FEDERAL PIKIN,BUT THE REAL UNDISPUTED FEDERAL PIKIN IS DANGOTE.

DIRECTLY SPOON FED BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

IF DANGOTE WERE TO BE IN AMERICA,THE NUMBER OF HAVOCS HIS TRUCKS HAVE CAUSED IS ENOUGH TO DRY HIM UP THROUGH LITIGATIONS.

THE OTHER BUSINESS PEOPLE ARE GETTING DOLLARS ARE VERY HIGH RATES,IF YOU KNOW THE AMOUNT AT WHICH DANGOTE GETS DOLLARS FROM THE CBN YOU WILL CRY.


NOW HE WILL WANT TO GIVE US MOTIVATIONAL SPEECH
grin


BTW SOMEONE WAS ASKING WHETHER DANGOTE DOES BUREAU DE CHANGE BEHIND CLOSED DOORS FOR GETTING DOLLARS FAR LESS THE RATE FROM WHAT OTHER NIGERIANS GET.

1 Like

Re: Why I Dumped Trading For Manufacturing - Dangote by Seniorwriter(m): 6:38am On Sep 11, 2021
The richest man in Africa who is a citizen of a country that is a poverty capital of the world!..pure IRONY OF BOTH STATUS!....no thanks to bad and nepotistic leaders that are also clueless!

lalajnr:
We don hear oga monopoly biased Nigeria


Your mate na dey USA they do rivalry with others for technology and you dey bribe government for this side

Modrov:


So why can't other rich men do the same...and please don't tell me 'government'...because I am tired of that excuse.

Most Nigerian businessmen and women prefer to import stuff, and sell and run off. Many family owned businesses that were like Dangote before failed because the family members came and ran off with the money as soon as the founder died. (If you notice, Dangote isn't allowing his kids run things yet)

As for petrol....Dangote is able to build refinery because for now he has the money to take the risk. If we want more refineries, we have to remove fuel subsidy so that investors can come, build, refine, and sell fuel at a profit and recoup that profit. But you Nigerians don't want...so we run the risk of making Dangote a monopoly because we want cheap fuel...and even then, his refienry may lose money if we keep on subsidisng fuel below its production price.
Stop showing your ignorant self on a public space as NL....Dangote is not building the refinery with only his capital/monies.

greenie77:


Paris is in France.

I am in for his investment in dairy farming, we need to have cows that produces up to 30 litres of milk daily not the less than 5 litres a day the Fulani cows are producing while causing havoc at the same time
Pinned
AlphaAlex:
In a sane business environment Dangote would not survive one day I say this with my full chest argue with your Papa

paymentvoucher:
Oga abegggiiii. undecided

We are tired of hearing all these stories joor. You better thank Nigerian Government that gave you the opportunity to show case your brand in a monopolistic way. undecided undecided

nony43:
In as much that i have done business from the scratch for years and i can say buying and selling is not easy, Dangote should know that if not of FG the Dangote group would have fizzled out. Dangote containers doesn't stay more than three days in Apapa and it's cleared. He can't even survive in US that runs on a capitalist economy. Let's give everyone a level ground to run a Cement factory nobody will consider Dangote cement when we've got BUA, Unicem, Ibeto and other upcoming. Let him enjoy when Igbo man become president all man go do business by force.
Aptly put Dangote's business boom is due to Nigerian Corrupt leadership and nepotism + the ever growing population.
Yet same useless & clueless leaders makes policies and taxation processes very unattractive for investors....FG are more interested in money borrowings!

Cantonese:


"We need young visionary leaders...". Was Dangote born an old man? He started young, worked hard, took his chances and today he enjoys the benefits. If his business boom was due to "clueless and nepotistic" leaders, then what can you say about his investments in other countries?

The problem with our youths these days is the desire to get wealthy by the fastest means possible. It's either yahoo or drugs/rituals/prostitution or any other form of crookedness.

Reading through this interview you'll see a man who had a vision about the future. He identified the loopholes and leveraging on what he had, he started from somewhere. The rest they say is history.

When youths talk about mentorship, they look up to such successful people as their models and desire to get close to that level. Dangote has first class students and professors working for him. Does that not show that he knows what he wants and does.

I believe that inspite of the difficulties in the land, there are many loopholes to get to the ladder of success. Manufacturing gives massive opportunities for success in life.

Lastly if you start today, you have the bank of Industry to help you out if you are stranded.
SMH @you stop showing your ignorance on a public space......Dangote is able to invest in other countries after getting the push in Nigeria by the despotic nepotistic past & present leaders.
Try to read to comprehend points made not quoting peeps for quoting sakes.....my point is he shouldn't play down trading ....he could have referred to it as a transition process rather than make it look like how he describes it....all he has achieved would be impossible without the FG & Trading opportunities they gave him(DANGOTE).

Be guided.


WE NEED YOUNG VISIONARY LEADERS IN NIGERIA COME 2023!


@SENIORWRITER

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