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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. (31714 Views)
No Going Back On Subsidy Removal - FG / 2015 Budget: Reps Query Illegal N222b On Subsidy / Fuel Subsidy 101 (2) (3) (4)
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Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by atlwireles: 4:14pm On May 27, 2015 |
Sweetguy25: |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 4:15pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: Thanks gohome, your posts are putting some lost glory back to nairaland. Those good old days when we had good intellectual joists. This was before it degenerated to tribal and political "roforofo" fights between Igbos and Yorubas and PDP vs APC. Having said that, i am a firm believer of cheap energy cost, this is because we have abundant energy in africa. As Fela says "energy for Africa... plenty plenty energy for Africa.... Energy for sun, energy for moon, energy for oil..." And i will add energy for Gas, energy for water (hydo), energy for ground (geothermal). We have abundant energy. What we lack is abundant manpower, visionaries, planners. We should not and never buy energy at the same price other continents and countries are buying it. I do not expect Gas to be same same price in Russia as it is in Germany. Russia is even supplying its former USSR countries at subsidized rate. As I said the problem we have is bad and visionless planner apart for them being corrupt. A good Energy planning can give us an energy mix that is less dependent on petrol and diesel. It is it an irony that year to year our rivers are over flooding and yet we lack hydo power? apart from lacking drinkable and agricultural water. It is a unpardonable that we consume 40 miillion litres of petrol per day, how many cars are actually in Nigeria? We should not be running our homes, industries and offices with diesel and petrol. We should not be transporting manufactured, imported products and even the same fuel with petrol. Every individual should should not be moving around in single cars, motorcycles or tricycles. We need to go back to the drawing board and plan a transport system befitting of a modern state. That is why i always accuse you of not looking at the big picture. Private investors cannot and would not build refineries unless government promises them "subsidized" crude. Refinery business is not a profitable business, if the crude is bought at international prices. The margins are extremely thin and the capital investments are extremely huge. If i have $2billion, i would rather leave the money in a bank and collect 4 - 5% annually or better still invest in a government bond, than invest it in a refinery. Now let me let you on a small secret, lots of refineries depend on black market (stolen) crude to make good profit. The Nigerian coast is a beehive of activities for stolen crude. There are foreign agents (lebanese and Europeans) waiting brief cases of dollars to pay for anyone who can get into international waters with stolen crude. These agent then go on and sell these stolen crude to refineries in Europe and the Americas. Why i am telling you this is to let you know that refinery business is not very profitable business. Government need to maintain the existing refineries and build new one as a social responsibility to Nigerians or in the alternative sign a MOE with investors willing to invest in refineries that they would sell crude to them at "subsidized rates" Countries use fuel (petrol) as a sort of micro economic tool. Western rich nations use it as a tax instrument to try and reduce social inequalities (poor people hardly buy petrol, it is the rich people that want the luxury of driving cars that buy petrol), while in not so rich countries where the poor needs to buy petrol petrol is made affordable to reduce social inequalities between the rich and poor. Nigeria falls into such a category. In a country where the minimum wage is N18,000 and this minimum wager would need to fuel his "okada", fuel his "i batter pass my neighbour" enter a petrol driven car or bus to work and buy kerosine to cook his beans, asking him to pay international price for fuel is unrealistic. 2 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by PassingShot(m): 4:17pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome:It's my pleasure. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 4:18pm On May 27, 2015 |
989900: You are the head of your house, and you have an annual budget of 100 naira. Rent in a dilapidated house is 20 Naira. School fees is 20 Naira. Transportation to work and school is 30 Naira. Fueling your generator is 30 Naira. Let say you want to start up a new business to increase your income and as such you need to save 20 Naira. You also need to move from your present apartment because the ceiling leaks water any time it rains, which will require you save an extra 10 Naira. You took a loan from the bank, and the monthly deduction is 10 Naira. You have relations that cannot run their family and they have come asking for money because the landlord is about to evict them from the house. In the middle of all these, Something happened and your annual budget is reduced to 50 Naira. Will you keep paying for fuel to light up your house while you cannot pay rent and your kids can not go to school? If you continue to pay for subsidy, your kids wont go to school, your medicare will be moribund. No roads, no bridges, no refinery. Your Country can not afford subsidy. You are borrowing money to pay salaries, you military is under funded, you do not have reserves, no infrastructure for food and fuel reserve. You wont last one day in any war. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by atlwireles: 4:19pm On May 27, 2015 |
frehage: Please explain this statement? |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by adanny01(m): 4:21pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: Thats the problem when you think i use petrol on generator only. Is it not the same government who coudnt maintain refineries, build new ones, build hospitals, schools, poorly manage the subsidy regime? I should make sacrifices for them to continue their fraud and mismanagement? A government has to earn the peoples trust before the people will make sacrifices for the government. The only way for me to trust a government is when they build new refineries and maintain the old ones. Before then, they should carry their cross since the mismanged their own share of the petroleum bounty and now they want my own (Subsidy). 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by atlwireles: 4:25pm On May 27, 2015 |
Until Nigerians realise crude oil and its products are commodities, not a social welfare reengineering tool, our problems in this sector will not dissipate. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 4:26pm On May 27, 2015 |
adanny01: You are not making any sacrifice for them. They are stealing from you blind with the subsidy. If you can trust them with 4 trillion annual budget, then why not trust them with 1, 2 300 billion. You can not maintain a 170 million people with 4 Trillion Naira. You just cannot. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by mbulela: 4:33pm On May 27, 2015 |
TheGoodJoe:This is the crux of the matter. As much as I stil lthink we should remove it, this argument is what makes its removal contentious. We have been fooled enough times, even CHANGE will not make me optimistic enough that the money will be used judicously. On the other hand, the country is broke and cannot afford to pay the subsidy. Forget all this posturing, Nigeria as a country is flat broke. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by 989900: 4:36pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: Naturally, I will assume that you do not know more than both Prof. Tam D. West and Dr. Izielen Agbon, who've been active for decades in the industry in Nigeria, and some other countries. However, who knows, you might. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 4:36pm On May 27, 2015 |
atlwireles: Believe me, crude oil and its products is a social engineering tool. Countries go to war to control oil fields. There are usually social upheavals in most third world countries that attempts to increase fuel prices. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by mbulela: 4:38pm On May 27, 2015 |
adanny01: See the twin problem; You want them to build refineries before removing subsidy? The country is too broke to afford to build one refinery while paying the subsidy (most of it are outright stolen funds). As i have said elsewhere, the country has never been as broke as it is at present. On the other side, it will take years to buid a refinery. Doubt it can be done in 6 months. So how do you wish to continue? 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by 989900: 4:43pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: I've seen the above floating around. Naturally, lighting the house would be the last on the list. However, can I tell my wife and kids I can't pay the rent, nor school fees, but go binge drinking and patronizing prostitues every night? OTOH (though of less consideration in this case), fueling the 'Gen', might be paramount if it guarantees our security/safety, or if it powers anything at the office/home that will bring income to pay those rents/fees/debts. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by atlwireles: 4:45pm On May 27, 2015 |
wirinet: Upheavals in countries, where government pretends to be father Christmas. Countries go to war for access and security of their energy demand. Nigeria is not in any of those positions. If Nigeria were a non oil producing Nation, we will have working refineries and PMS will be available in abundance, because there will be no freebie to offer. 2 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by 989900: 4:48pm On May 27, 2015 |
mbulela: We can't afford N99B to fix all the refineries, but Diezani can spend N10b on flights? And we can afford to pay trillions on subsidy? At 90%+ functionality, our refineries should be churning out between 22-33 million litres of PMS/day; which should be enough . . . depending on who you believe. P.S. Well according to them, the TAM has started since last October. The multi-billion dollar questions: How much have our refineries been producing? No trustworthy data to rely on. How much are we consuming? No trustworthy data to rely on. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by ttmacoy: 4:48pm On May 27, 2015 |
One word corruption. Also the difference between the subsidy you mention in China and subsidy for oil is the Chinese subsidy is to stimulate economic growth and development through manufacturing while for Nigeria it's for paying for oil for cars and generators. We are using billions and trillions to find recurring expenses which does not bring about capital development. Kx: |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by frehage: 4:50pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: How is that so? Do you care to explain what informed this your position. Remember Nigeria is an oil producing country? There are inherent benefits in being a producer of something that you just cannot deny a people from enjoying. Why do you think most foodstuffs are far cheaper in states like Benue than in Lagos, Rivers, etc. Why do you think serious countries build their economies around sectors they have comparative advantage? As regards subsidy, PMB has already trashed that out. He said there is nothing like subsidy. He said our local installed refining capacity of about 450000 b/d(and fresh capacity will be added) is enough to cover our current needs. And where the local output is inadequate, as is currently the case, due to the poor state of our refineries, the crude equivalent of our petroleum products needs will be taken abroad for refining, and the cost of refining and transportation offset with crude( that is, for the period the refineries will be shut down for TAM). What else is there to talk about? I don't think this should stop private refineries from springing up. The export market is there for those that strictly want to sell at $1.1/liter. PMB's plan should adequately cover our local refining and consumption needs. I hope he fulfils it. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by mandarin: 4:54pm On May 27, 2015 |
I have read some replies, quite informative, thank you all. I will however want to draw attentions to other critical issues that must be addressed before I can support any subsidy removal. There are factors that determine prices of imported fuel, one critical factor is the exchange rate. Arriving at what the exchange rate will be against say the dollar itself is a complex web of interdependent variables. Discount rates, imports-exports values and consumer behaviour are all factors that affect the threadline. Let's get out of the jargons and consider how much Nigeria exports in simple economic terms. The major export is oil and gas but its highly volatile that is, subject to price changes which are influenced by international politics like various events in the Arabs world, instabilities across the world and the oi cartel led by Saudi Arabia with much smaller population and plenty of oil. These intricacies determine how much the price of oil which form over 80% of Nigeria's exports earnings and when the price fall, the value of Nigeria exports will fall. Just like it, Nigeria imports a whole lots because we don't produce that much and have tastes for imported products including tootpicks and if the country's imports value exceeds is exports in simple economics, there will be negative net trade value or deficit. I don't want to bore you with impacts of external/foreign reserves but from the above, if Nigeria will be able to meet its domestic demands of goods so that there wont be shortages to avoid prices of goods going up(politicians don't get good ratings and they lose their popularity when this happens) Nigeria will have to raise the number of Naira that will be needed to buy the dollar in order to offset its deficit. I said a lot of things are involved but just to take a few of what lay people like me must know. My argument is this, if oil is fully deregulated( meaning that we accept that we cannot in a medium term fix existing refineries or build new ones to produce locally) and oil price falls further say to $40, it means our exports value will decrease not because we export less but because the unit value of what we export has reduced. This means that what the Jonathan government (and of course states) has borrowed from international organizations will appreciate against the naira as we will need to devalue the naira more to be able to balance our trade while alot of our budget will be spent on repayment of those loans.If the price of oil wshould appreciate or go up it also means that while government will make more money and have lots of it to spend, the cost of imported petrol will rise meaning that you and I will pay more from incomes that are not appreciating at the same rate(its not good for the poor masses and salary earners) I don't know if I have tried to simply it. Can I talk of the foreign reserve, hmmm nope don't let us go there although its a critical part but the fact is NIGERIA DON'T HAVE IT IN GOOD SUM NOW CAN WE DEFEND KEEING SUSIDY? My answer is yes in the short and medium term till we are able to tackle local refining LETS SAY IN ANOTHER TWO YEARS, ITS NOT A BAD IDEA IF WELL MANAGED. But when? its the will of the coming government to exercise justice on poor Nigerians. You cannot build wealth when you spend more on services that do not add value. What do I mean? The poor will be affected more and be made poorer and all Nigerians will have to spend more on fueling their vehicles, transportation cost and prices of goods and services will go up. Labour unions will want salary increments and we are back to square one because government recurrent expenditure will go higher. But you can say loopholes are too much in cost of governance? Yes, if such loopholes are covered and the amount budgeted by parliamentarians and government ministries and parastatals are reduced government will have more money freed for capital projects. So subsidy is about corruption (THIS CORRUPTION INCLUDE CREATING CARTELS AND PRICE FIXING AMONG IMPORERS- NIGERIAN DON'T RESPOND TO MARKET FORCES THAT MUCH)and if government can handle that as well as reduce its discount rates(forget bond performance),raise more products to shore up its exports values, we can have a firmer naira( I suggest the incoming president should consider a dollar at around 140 naira or less), we can have prices of petrol at much less than it is now may be at around =N60 a litre and that will be a good news to Nigerians There are a lot of things to be done but you know what, some people have fed fat on Nigerians. I think governent should look at the direction of making lives better not worse and for Saraki and co clamouring for susidy removal, the question to them is, if oil price should go up to $90 a barrel how much will a liter of petrol cost but i trust the transparency of Buhari, it wont ever be this worse. I advice Mr President to investigate this scam and do what will favor poor Nigerians, how many wealthy Nigerians gave him the 1.9million votes in Kano Lastly, come to think of it, one of the reasons the cost of services is so high is the cost of diesel. Our factories, financial institutions and even government offices power diesel generator. what can be done in the short and medium term, bring down the price of diesel. With such poor electricity in Nigeria, any loving government will make diesel sell cheap say =N=50 a liter so that cost of production in Nigeria, which at the moment is about 60% spent on energy will drop ,by at least a third. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 4:55pm On May 27, 2015 |
wirinet: Thank you. You have been brilliant so far wirinet:True. We have energy, but we need to harness it. We are at the mercy of those who can. We need to teach our kids technical education. China has broken free. We have too. Your Raw material is worthless if you dont have the technology wirinet: Others countries make policies to limit PMS usage. In the UK, you are taxed heavily for car insurance. PMS and Diesel prices are also taxed to discourage people from owning cars. We need to start paying subsidy to the real sector and not PMS imported. Support subsidy in agriculture, manufacturing. These are what create Jobs. expensive PMS will drive public investment in diesel, electric or coal mass transit, dont you think? wirinet: The big picture is what advanced nations saw. They dont subsidize crude for their refineries. The good thing here is that we have volume. 40 million litres from Apapa port finishes every single day. The market is there. Do you know chad has a refinery? Do you know, Uganda one of the world's poorest country are in the process of building a 60K capacity refinery at a cost of 2.5 billion dollars? ( http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-10-08/uganda-seeks-investor-to-build-2-5-billion-oil-refinery) Dangote is currently building a 650,000 capacity refinery. The entire venture would cost $9bn, with $3bn in equity from Dangote Industries and $6bn to be raised in loan capital. Though not enough will go along way to drive other investors? [/quote] wirinet: like I said, it is better to subsidize the real sector that imported PMS. I kind of agree with you on this wirinet: How come other poor countries like Togo, Chad, Niger, Kenya, SA, Eritea, Pay the international market price for crude? Most Expensive Places to Buy Petrol in the World 1 Eritrea $2.54 2 Turkey 2.52 3 Netherlands 2.13 4 Norway 2.12 5 Greece 2.05 6 Denmark 2.00 7 France 1.98 8 Finland 1.94 9 Hong Kong SAR, China 1.92 10 Monaco 1.92 11 United Kingdom 1.92 12 Germany 1.90 13 Belgium 1.87 14 Italy 1.87 15 Sweden 1.87 16 Israel 1.85 17 Portugal 1.85 18 Cape Verde 1.84 19 Ireland 1.78 20 Czech Republic 1.75 21 Cuba 1.72 22 Central African Republic 1.71 23 Iceland 1.71 24 Malawi 1.71 25 West Bank and Gaza 1.71 26 French Polynesia 1.70 27 Slovak Republic 1.70 28 Cote d’Ivoire 1.68 29 Hungary 1.67 30 Slovenia 1.67 31 Liechtenstein 1.66 32 Switzerland 1.66 33 Zambia 1.66 34 Austria 1.63 35 Djibouti 1.63 36 Kosovo 1.63 37 Malta 1.63 38 Rwanda 1.63 39 Montenegro 1.62 40 Japan 1.60 41 Croatia 1.59 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 5:07pm On May 27, 2015 |
Let the marketers eat fat on the loopholes, as long as I am buying petrol at the subsidized rate. It is better for me to buy petrol at N220 a litre and corrupt officials feed fat on the loopholes. Empredboy: |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 5:08pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: Very poor analogy. Why? Because power is critical in modern society. Now lets go back to your example. In the example you provided the family cannot survive on N100, they would have to augment their salary in order to meet the basic requirements of a modern family. Let me use my Family as an example. My children get back from school and lesson around 5PM, they eat and shower, most times my wife would have to switch on the generator to pump water into the overhead tank from the borehole. They take a 30mins rest and start doing their home work, by then it is almost 7 and getting dark. So by 7.30pm the generator would have to be switched on to enable them do their home work. By 8.30 they go to bed, but the weather is usually too hot for them to sleep, so we have to leave the generator on until about 12 midnight to enable them to sleep deep before switching of the generator. Even at that my two youngest children breaks out in heat rashes often and i would have to buy various remedies to help relief the itching. So whether i like it or not, i spend 500 everyday on fuel just to run my gen for 5 hours everyday. Now, if you do not provide these basic energy needs for your children, you might end up having disfunctional children. 3 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 5:08pm On May 27, 2015 |
989900: Do you know what your government earn annually? Your budget is 4 Trillion (deficit). Even if binge drinking and patronizing prostitues every night stops, you are flat broke. binge drinking and patronizing prostitues every night and you double that figure to 8 Trillion, you are still flat broke. In this case, your security lies in building infrastruture (Military, Agriculture, Education). It does not lie in fueling your generator. You have proven that you did not die the last week. You have proven that when the price was almost doubled from 65 naira to 97 naira, you did not die. Infact you bought more cars. Your poorer neighbours are not dead. Do not mortgage you kids future. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 5:12pm On May 27, 2015 |
I agree with you that the country is broke. The country is broke because of the massive wastage of GEJ and his many thieves. Not because of Subsidy. As long as these men export our crude oil, we can not buy fuel like countries who do not export crude oil. As long as the government have to find a way to provide Petrol at a cheap rate, we will feel the dividends of being a major crude oil exporting Nation. mbulela: |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by mandarin: 5:17pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: I don't agree with you sir or ma. If you have 110millionpoor people that you want to take out of poverty, you don't take them out of poverty by making them pay more. For every liter of petrol that sells higher you take more from them but what they need is not spending more but saving more. You are increasing their cost of living and when a tailor who needs to power hie electric sowing machine to sow for cloth for Uche or Sami, they will pay more. Who do you think get richer when more money leaves your country? Those countries where you import, they will have more jobs for their citizens and expand their own economy.My brother, concerted efforts are required to move the economy forward o |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 5:18pm On May 27, 2015 |
It is easy to make an argument with countries like Hungary and Netherlands. Why don't we discuss using major Crude Oil producing Natons. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 5:19pm On May 27, 2015 |
wirinet: How do kids in Togo sleep? 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 5:22pm On May 27, 2015 |
mandarin: You take people out of poverty by education. 100 million people will remain poor if you do not give them access to MDG. You can not do that with using half of your mere 4 Trillion dollars for subsidy. Get your priorities right. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 5:24pm On May 27, 2015 |
mandarin: Thank you. This is the message i am trying to pass through. We cannot depend on imported energy to run Nigeria. That cost would reflect in everything manufactured in Nigeria and you will lose jobs to other countries. Our industries are running on foreign raw materials, foreign equipments and foreign technical manpower, we cannot afford to run on imported energy. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 5:26pm On May 27, 2015 |
TheGoodJoe: Raw materials have to be translated to money before it makes sense. 170 million people with 2 million bbls per day? Take a moment and soak that figure then You can not compare your selves with Oil producing nations doing well. 1 UAE 2. Kuwait 3. Saudi. If you still do not get it let me know, i will expantiate. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by 989900: 5:26pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: 1. Like I have stated earlier, I support removal of the present subsidy scheme -- it's scam nothing more, nothing less. 2. I agree with building infrastructure, developing the manufacturing and service industries and e.t.c. 3. Do I know what my government earns annually? No, no one knows, even the FG does not know, we only have an idea of the left overs (the declared). 4. My grouse is, non-accountability by the gov't; from the LGs to the FG. 5. How do you grow, how do you fast, when your leaders (crooks-in-chief) are feasting? Nigeria poor or rich, is not going to grow without first stamping out corruption/stealing -- you can't fill a severely leaking bucket. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by 989900: 5:28pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: I'd ask, what is the electricity supply situation in Togo? |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 5:29pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: Even after total Subsidy removal, these politicians like those under GEJ will not get their priorities right. Like their billions in feeding, public travels and massive election wastages. More money in the system means the people pay more and the government waste more. If GEJ was a serious leader, most Sure-P funds would have been invested in building a refinery. |
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