TAMPAN urges FG to leverage Nigeria’s creative industry for economic progress

22

The Theatre Arts and Motion Pictures Association of Nigeria (TAMPAN) president, Bolaji Amusan, has called on the federal government to take advantage of the creative sector’s potential to increase the nation’s GDP.

Amusan stated during a press conference in Abeokuta on Friday that N154 billion of Nigeria’s 2023 GDP came from music and film records.

The purpose of the occasion was to get ready for TAMPAN’s national conference in 2025, which is set for February 19–22.

According to Amusan, the government has not been able to fully utilise the industry’s significant potential for revenue generation.

He called on the government to support the industry while highlighting how countries like London and India prioritise the growth of their creative industries.

He further urged the government to invest in film villages and production equipment to alleviate the challenges faced by creatives.

“If you go to London, India, and America, I can call them grandfathers in film production and creative industry,” he said.

“Most of these people perform arts free, and the government focuses so well on the development of the creative industry.

“The only way we can do that is to get that uninhibited support from the government.

“In Nigeria, let’s take Ogun State and Lagos State, for example. We have less than two to three film villages.

“If the government invested heavily in film villages and the equipment used to produce films, it will reduce the stress and hardship being faced by the creative people.”

Amusan further emphasised that maximising the creative industry’s potential could also create more job opportunities.

“The creative sector currently employs about 4.2 million people in Nigeria,” he added.

“It has, however, been projected that the creative sector could create an additional 2.7 million jobs within the next four to five years if its potential is properly harnessed.”