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[ANALYSIS] Buhari Fails First Reform Test By Keeping Fuel Subsidies In Place - Politics - Nairaland

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[ANALYSIS] Buhari Fails First Reform Test By Keeping Fuel Subsidies In Place by segello: 4:13pm On Jul 15, 2015
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari never came across as being reformed minded (as a matter of fact he didn’t come across as having much of an economic policy), during the campaign period, however most analysts and investors had hoped that the ACN wing of the party (APC) fielding reformists such as Kayode Fayemi (Ex Governor of Ekiti state) and Babatunde Fashola (Ex Governor of Lagos) would take charge of economic policy formulation.

Good luck with that!!

Buhari just dashed all hopes of enacting what would have been a simple reform policy- ending Nigeria’s corrupt and structurally inefficient fuel subsidy payments.

He was quoted by Garba Shehu, the president’s Senior Special Assistant, Media and Publicity, as saying,

“I have received much literature on the need to remove subsidies, but much of it has no depth.”

This was after Buhari received a briefing from the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and other agencies in the oil sector.

Since the President has not yet heard any forceful or convincing reasons for removing subsidies on fossil fuels (like Petrol and Kerosene), i will try to make new arguments here.

Remove subsidies, eliminate corruption

Removing the vexing fuel subsidies imposed on Nigeria by the military would help to eliminate corruption in that sphere and ensure fiscal transparency.

The Subsidies are regressive by nature

The current fuel subsidy regime in Nigeria is regressive by nature as those who consume most fuel benefit the most, and so it disproportionately benefits the rich.

This means if i have 3 SUVs that are gas guzzlers i am paying just the same as some poor villager (probably less since you can’t find petrol or kerosene at subsidised prices outside major cities).

Ending subsidies frees up capital for Infrastructure, Health and Education

One of the reasons why Nigeria appears poorly in most global indices (infant mortality, poverty, literacy etc), is that the government has abandoned what should be its traditional role of social services and entered into all kinds of illogical operations like paying fuel subsidies that disproportionally benefit the rich.

Ending the subsidies right now can free up billions of dollars for government to spend on infrastructure, healthcare and Education that is badly needed all over Nigeria , but most especially in the North.

The Federal Government owes about N204 billion ($1 billion) in subsidy arrears according to documents seen Naira metrics.

Oil prices are lower, now is the right time

When oil prices were hovering around $100 per barrel the subsidies could be termed as expensive, however with current realities of the oil market, keeping them amounts to economic Hari – Kari (suicide).

They (subsidies) accounted for an average of 2.5 percent of Nigeria’s gross domestic product (GDP) each year between 2006 and 2012 according to the IMF.


The government set aside N914 billion ($4.6 billion) for it in 2014.

Buhari would be following in the footsteps of Indonesia’s new President who took advantage of low oil prices to end subsidies.

Attract investments to your midstream oil sector

South Africa and Singapore are not known to be major oil producers, but they have managed to attract billions of dollars into oil refining by foreign and domestic investors.

In fact South Africa has Sub Saharan Africa’s largest refining hub with major refineries owned by Chevron, Shell, BP and Petronas of Malaysia.

It should be noted that most investors would not pump billions of dollars into building a refinery after which they are unable to sell at prices above their cost of production.

It should be noted that there are no price caps on petroleum prices in South Africa.

Price caps frankly don’t work

I would suggest the President’s advisers point out one area in Nigeria’s national life where price caps or subsidies based on price control have worked.

Whether it is Fertilizer subsidies, attempted price controls on essential commodities, or even trying to subsidise the naira/dollar exchange rates.

All these mechanisms eventually collapse because they are based off faulty economic premise.

If President Buhari wants to help the poor, he should build schools, healthcare facilities and rural roads for them. He can also identify the most vulnerable among them and pay a one time or time capped (2 years), in form of welfare.

Our demand for oil will make subsidies eat up our entire budget

Nigeria’s huge appetite for energy and growing economy will lead to a time soon when refined products and crude used domestically will outstrip what we send overseas.

When that happens, it will be impossible to fund the fuel subsidies as the cost will be astronomic for the FG and states to bear.
more on....http://nairametrics.com/analysis-buhari-fails-first-reform-test-by-keeping-fuel-subsidies-in-place/

1 Like

Re: [ANALYSIS] Buhari Fails First Reform Test By Keeping Fuel Subsidies In Place by Rexceedo: 4:15pm On Jul 15, 2015
when a dullard rules a country expect.,
Re: [ANALYSIS] Buhari Fails First Reform Test By Keeping Fuel Subsidies In Place by seedgreen(m): 4:15pm On Jul 15, 2015
Following
Re: [ANALYSIS] Buhari Fails First Reform Test By Keeping Fuel Subsidies In Place by Zaikon(m): 4:19pm On Jul 15, 2015
A
Re: [ANALYSIS] Buhari Fails First Reform Test By Keeping Fuel Subsidies In Place by merry02(m): 4:27pm On Jul 15, 2015
undecided
Re: [ANALYSIS] Buhari Fails First Reform Test By Keeping Fuel Subsidies In Place by RockMaxi: 4:34pm On Jul 15, 2015
Rexceedo:
when a dullard rules a country expect.,

So you expect the man you called a dullard to repeat the same mistake made by the previous administration abi? angry The Subsidy regime is shrouded in secrecy and it has destroyed a lot of facilities.

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