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Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders - Politics - Nairaland

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Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by ijustdey: 12:14pm On Oct 13

Stakeholders in the oil sector have canvassed measures the federal government should implement to reduce the impact of the total removal of fuel subsidy on Nigerians.

In separate interactions with LEADERSHIP Sunday, the industry players lamented that Nigerians, especially those below the poverty level, are now forced to further readjust their deplorable lifestyle following the consistent shock thrown out by persistent upward adjustment in the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) also called petrol.


The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) had on Wednesday increased the pump price of petrol prompting other marketers to also adjust their pump prices.

The latest is the fourth time since President Bola Tinubu’s administration came into office in May last year.


The price is spiked by 15 per cent to N1,030 per litre in Abuja and N998 in Lagos as the NNPCL backed out as a middleman in the petroleum industry, setting the stage for direct price negotiations between marketers and the refinery.

The continuous increase in prices is attributed to market forces and financial constraints faced by the NNPCL.

In his reaction, the chief executive officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprises (CPPE), Dr Muda Yusuf, said the latest increase in the price of petrol is regrettably ill-timed and does not reckon with the prevailing difficult economic conditions.

He said social, economic and political considerations should be taken into account in policymaking and that commercial considerations should not completely override these considerations.

According to him, there is always a place for political economy in the interest of the vulnerable segments of society, adding that the Nigerian economy is not ripe for full-blown deregulation and market principles on all fronts.

In his opinion, the social cost of such policy choices is typically very high, adding that this is an economy with very fragile social safety nets.

“Over 100 million people are wallowing in various variants of poverty. There is also an issue of policy sequencing. The present administration has presented an Economic Stabilisation Bill to the National Assembly.

“The bill is expected to bring some relief to the citizens and businesses. It would have been better to allow the proposed mitigating measures to be activated and gain traction before coming up with the petrol price hike.

“What the economy needs at this time are measures to ease the current economic and social challenges; not policies that would aggravate them,”
he said.

Yusuf added that it is desirable at this time to urgently cut import duties and taxes by a minimum of 25 per cent on all industrial raw materials, passenger buses of 18 seaters and above and cars of 2000cc engine capacity and below.

“The customs duty exchange rate should be fixed at a maximum of N1,000 per dollar to reduce current prohibitive cost of imports,” he suggested.

He also added that relevant legislation should be amended to that effect without prejudice to the fiscal policy measures contained in the Economic Stabilisation Plan.

He advised that the government must be ready to trade off some revenue in the current situation and there is a need to seek to achieve the maximisation of welfare function for citizens and productivity function for businesses.

Yusuf postulated that government should not be too fixated on revenue maximisation.

In his view, the founder of Cowry Asset Management Limited, Mr Johnson Chukwu, said the adjustment is in line with the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) which is clear on removal of subsidy.

Chukwu said the deregulation of the downstream industry would see movement of prices in consistent manner which is determined by the price of crude oil.

He said whether crude is sold in Naira to local refineries, it would certainly reflect the global market value which will also reflect in the price of refined petroleum products.

Chukwu, however, said what government should do to cushion the effect on citizens is to invest in critical infrastructure across all sectors of the economy.

“The subsidy removal will freeze the burden on government,” he said, adding that it is the responsibility of the authorities to build a productive economy that would boost income of citizens as the cost of goods and services would continue to increase with the price adjustment.

He advised the government to deploy resources towards building infrastructure in road transportation, sea ports, energy and water transportation among others.

A top legal luminary who wouldn’t want to be named said, the government failed in the sudden removal of the subsidy without conducting a thorough study on issues that such action could throw up.

“There seems to be inadequate preparedness on the part of government to intervene in areas where the policy shift could create problems for citizens and that is why there is public outcry,” he said.


On the issue of subsidy, the legal expert said it not illegal as subsidy exists in most countries of the world. “What we are experiencing is corruption which has caused widespread economic problems for government in the implementation of the policy. People hide under the policy to steal money and divert resources, but if it was properly managed, the benefits would be clearly accounted for.”

He also traced similar lack of transparency in the management of public enterprises leading to the privatisation of key government entities. According to him, in the Scandinavian countries, the public sector thrives because there are checks and balances.

Last Monday, the NNPCL announced plans to end its exclusive purchase agreement with Dangote Refinery, a move which signaled the end of subsidy regime to also allow other marketers to have direct contact with the refinery for product purchases.

The current adjustment has seen petrol now being sold as much as N1,030 for a litre of petrol at NNPC filling stations with independent marketers selling at higher prices, some as much as N1,200.


Following President Tinubu’s statement that “subsidy is gone,” the petroleum industry was thrown into a frenzy which automatically caused an increase of petrol across the country.

The government had maintained that the continuous payment of over N400 billion monthly for subsidy was no longer feasible.

The NNPCL issued an official statement in May 2023 following the president’s statement raising fuel prices from N195 per litre to between N448 and N557 per litre across the country indicating a 185.64 per cent increment.

The second adjustment came later in June 2023 as prices of the product rose again from N557 to N617 indicating an increase of 10.77 per cent.


According to the NNPCL, the increment was due to market forces.

The increment continued in September 2024 as petrol stations again hiked pump prices by 45.38 per cent from N617 to N897 per litre.

The increment followed an announcement by the NNPCL that the company was facing severe financial constraints, including high debt to petrol suppliers.

A statement signed by the chief corporate communications officer, Olufemi Soneye said, “The financial strain has placed considerable pressure on the company and poses a threat to the sustainability of fuel supply.”

Also, following the decision of the NNPCL to quit its middleman role between marketers and the Dangote Refinery, the NNPCL and other marketers adjusted pump prices at their stations to reflect the actual cost of petrol at the refinery.

Various NNCPL outlets nationwide adjusted their pump prices increasing the cost by 15 per cent to N1,030 per litre while other marketers across the country have also adjusted their prices to reflect the current market realities.

As the NNPC exits the market the middleman-role, the implication is that the national oil company will stop taking care of the price gap between the refinery’s price and the selling price to retailers.

The NNPCL had claimed in September that it purchased petrol at N898.78 per litre from the Dangote Refinery while it sold to marketers at the rate of N765.99 per litre.

With this arrangement, the NNPC bore the burden of paying off almost N133 for each litre of petrol purchased.

Industry operators have projected prices in the Northeast to range between N1,060 and N1,070 while in the South-South, prices are between N1,055 and N1,075 per litre for the product.

The increment will see customers in Lagos pay N998 per litre, Abuja pump price is N1,030 per litre and other Southwest states will pay N1,025 per litre of PMS while customers in the Southeast will pay N1,045 per litre

https://leadership.ng/fuel-price-increase-how-fg-can-lessen-burden-on-nigerians-stakeholders/

2 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Predigree(m): 8:40pm On Oct 13
Hopefully he listens and adjusts accordingly

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by IMASTEX: 8:41pm On Oct 13
Which Fg? The one that has only satisfied his longtime ambition of answering the title "Mr. President".

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by kaymart: 8:42pm On Oct 13
Govt since inception of Nigeria kept retrogressing. Sniffing out life of people.

1 Like

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by AFULA(m): 8:42pm On Oct 13
smiley
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by wunaESQ(m): 8:42pm On Oct 13
All this long talk no be am.... Na just for the president to say "SUBSIDY IS BACK" lol
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by helinues: 8:43pm On Oct 13
Noted
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by gabmanuel(m): 8:43pm On Oct 13
Playing music (Bartender) by TPain and Akon... Bartender.


When we don't refine our oil;
Yaradua==>65naira
Jonathan==>97naira
Buhari====>200naira
Tinubu====>600naira(reason is because of the transport to and from to Malta, and refining fee)

We started started refining:
Tinubu===1200naira (reason: president and his wife say they don't have a hand in the hardship and increment in price)


The simplest mathematics there is that the president thinks the oil is his personal business business, and that Nigerians should not put eye for him. Now we have removed our eyes, but allow us to breathe.


Forget all these NNPCL saga, if Tinubu really wants the country to be good, he will trash NNPCL and their corruption sharperly, and bring fuel down to below the price he met it, but it seems impossible for him because he's the highest beneficiary of the whole thing.

8 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by efighter: 8:44pm On Oct 13
Okay, but T-Pain is currently on the beat and he will run the country the way he likes. When you become the President in the year 9999, you can implement your own good policies.

9 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by ArigatothankU: 8:44pm On Oct 13
helinues:
Noted

Tomorrow a Monday

How far

Hustle or no hustle?

3 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Confirm4real(m): 8:47pm On Oct 13
Emilokan till 2031 we dey gidigba cheesy




T-pain is on vacation stakeholders hope you're all aware...

2 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Chukwudi4naija(m): 8:50pm On Oct 13
What is the essence of removing subsidy only to spend more on ameliorating the effects of the removal? The costs of the removal have outweighed the benefits.
Why maintain a policy that will cause the death of the majority in the long run?

1 Like

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by jaxxy(m): 8:51pm On Oct 13
Dangote is yet to say how much his fuel cost but everybody is increasing price based on phantom markets forces and Dangote in all this is quiet.

2 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by LibertyRep: 8:52pm On Oct 13
Like he would listen

1 Like

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Kamalex2: 8:53pm On Oct 13
Only Almighty Allah can help us with what we put ourselves in to grin

1 Like

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Omalicious1: 9:08pm On Oct 13
ijustdey:



https://leadership.ng/fuel-price-increase-how-fg-can-lessen-burden-on-nigerians-stakeholders/


I just hope they wouldn't use the war in Lebanon as an excuse. Well, if FG reduces the price then subsidy is being paid, somehow somewhere. Then I ask, how far with our refineries?

2 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Shadomaan7: 9:08pm On Oct 13
The stakeholders should also advise the marketers on how to reduce the price of fuel

6 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by NuhuAjang71(m): 9:17pm On Oct 13
T-Pain no get ears to listen to you people.

1 Like

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Vawulence120: 9:31pm On Oct 13
We are going to suffer is together, until we get sense, 2027 if we no act, suffer continue

2 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Vawulence120: 9:36pm On Oct 13
We are going to suffer is together, until we get sense, 2027 if we no act, suffer continue grin

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by MaziObinnaokija: 9:57pm On Oct 13
sad
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by trutharena: 10:06pm On Oct 13
The government is doing the right thing by allowing market forces to determine the price of fuel.

7 Likes

Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by EdiskyHarry: 10:38pm On Oct 13
If you believe that tinubu came to make Nigeria a better place then you are mad
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by TGreatGatsby: 8:01am
Where the bus wey dey carry us commot for T-pain Junction.
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by James77po: 8:04am
jaxxy:
Dangote is yet to say how much his fuel cost but everybody is increasing price based on phantom markets forces and Dangote in all this is quiet.

it's so sad
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by Salewa97: 8:42am
Toh

The stakeholders should also be ready to stake their money for the government
Re: Fuel Price Increase: How FG Can Lessen Burden On Nigerians – Stakeholders by vanvickie(m): 10:37am

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