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10 Reasons Not To Believe Everything You Are Told About The Falling Oil Prices - Politics - Nairaland

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10 Reasons Not To Believe Everything You Are Told About The Falling Oil Prices by Nobody: 11:26am On Nov 27, 2014
10 reasons not to believe everything you are told about the budget or falling oil prices

1. Why is the economy suddenly in a panic mode when year to date, crude oil has sold and still selling above the benchmark price for the 2014 budget of $77.50 per litre? We should be talking about excess or surplus for the year not shortfalls.

2. A key factor which has impacted the expected surplus is less than expected daily production of crude but the combined effect of lower than budget production and higher than expected price should still be a net surplus.

3. Given that oil price is falling there should be no need for fuel subsidy. If you remove fuel taxes in many countries the actual cost per litre will be less than N97 equivalent. For instance, in the US, a litre sells for around $1 with half of the price being fuel tax which means actual fuel cost is $0.50 (N83). At N97 per litre, it is actually the people that are subsidising government.

4. A related issue calls to question the sincerity of government on fuel subsidy similar to the way we were assured of constant electricity yet the budget for fuelling at the State house was increased.

5. Since government has reduced the crude oil benchmark for 2015 to $73 per litre, why is there still about N500b budget for fuel subsidy in 2015? If crude oil price is that low, then no subsidy is required. If fuel price goes up, then there will be excess crude windfall part of which can be used for subsidy. Logically, government should not budget for fuel subsidy as it will always take care of itself.

6. The exchange rate used for the proposed budget and Medium Term Expenditure Framework is N162. In view of the devaluation of Naira to an average of N168, government should have more Naira for the same dollar revenue and therefore less impact of falling oil price on expenditure.

7. By the way, why do we start our budget from a zero base every year? What happens to the unspent amounts from previous years due to budget under-performance?

8. Why do we not subject actual implementation of budget to value for money audit? The question is whether what “it is” is as good as “what could have been?”

9. What is the use of Security Votes and funds for Constituency Projects that are shrouded in secrecy?

10. Why does government borrow money from the public and pay huge sums to service the debt despite our external reserve? You might say it is to mop up excess liquidity and control inflation but ironically the excess liquidity is always created by government releasing monthly allocations which are then paid to banks when they could just have kept the money with the CBN.
Re: 10 Reasons Not To Believe Everything You Are Told About The Falling Oil Prices by waleadex(m): 10:47pm On Dec 16, 2014
Hmm...a lot of questions are yet to be answered.
Re: 10 Reasons Not To Believe Everything You Are Told About The Falling Oil Prices by RoyalPriesthuud(m): 5:01am On Dec 17, 2014
By not believing it, are u saying?
Lemme re-read gan-an....
Re: 10 Reasons Not To Believe Everything You Are Told About The Falling Oil Prices by ask4bk(m): 6:22am On Dec 17, 2014
Your first class no miss road at all.

But some of your claims here aren't facts. Just hearsays and conjectures
Re: 10 Reasons Not To Believe Everything You Are Told About The Falling Oil Prices by AreaFada2: 9:53am On Dec 17, 2014
(7) All unspent money officially should be returned to the treasury.

Usually contracts are not supposed to be awarded or approved in the 4th quarter of the year, except urgent ones or necessary ones like overheads.

So assuming unspent money has been returned to treasury or is held by CBN, the budget has to be done afresh.

But thing is here due to corruption, the same budget already awarded last year can be re-awarded and inflated under guise of improved/changed specifications, etc.

As for the subsidy, it's more complex than that. The only solution is for us to bite the bullet and allow subsidy to be completely removed. But on the ground that executive and legislative overheads should be drastically reduced.

Nigeria just cannot afford the level of recurrent expenditure and expect any meaningful improvement anytime soon.

Too little left for capital expenditure. Roads, universities, public housing, hospitals, power plants, airports, national parks, etc are all expensive to build and maintain.

We cannot pay full pump price only for politicians to use it to feed fat.

Now, all these subsidies, can't the same amounts repair our existing refineries and build 6 more, one in each geo-political zone?
Re: 10 Reasons Not To Believe Everything You Are Told About The Falling Oil Prices by Endougs(m): 12:34pm On Dec 17, 2014
Nice points there after all to bag a first class is no easy feat looking to be like you one day.

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