The Subsidy Fallacy & Other StoriesHi guys,
I am a newbie here so if this has been treated before.oh well.
I went over some post on fuel price increase, subsidy removal and stuff. Its interesting that for ages now, the man on the street and in front of the newspaper and computer has been swallowing wholesale whatever the spin doctors dish out. Looking at the quality of spin, its shocking that people actually do not challenge some of the underlying assumptions but instead spend time defending/challenging the end result.
Do you really believe/think/know that there is a subsidy on fuel (petrol,diesel, kerosene) for domestic consumption in Nigeria?
Some background: I am a strong believer in private sector driven economy. I believe the govt. roles is to create an enabling environment and get out. Allow the private sector to run the system. I don't have sacred cows - medical care, education, transport should all be passed off to the private sector. Back to topic.Next time someone says there is a subsidy on Nigerian fuel, look carefully at the maths.
Remember some facts:
- Crude is produced in Nigeria.
- There is a cost for each barrel of crude produced in Nigeria (this cost has no linkage with the cost of crude in the international market which is a function of perceived supply and perceived demand).
- Crude for local consumption is not part of the OPEC quota.
So to talk meaningfully about a subsidy, we need to start with the local cost of crude.
Next step is refining cost (not the cost of refined products but how much it will cost to refine say a barrel of crude into petrol).
- Check the local refining cost.
- Check how much it will cost to pay a refinery offshore to refine x amount of crude into gasoline for you.
- Check transport cost to/fro.
Then you have a better picture for actual cost of refined products locally and offshore.
Most of this information is available in the public domain.
< comments about deregulation of refineries moved >