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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. (31721 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 gohome: 5:30pm On May 27, 2015 |
wirinet: It wont. Everything manufactured in Nigeria run on Diesel not PMS. Event services (Bank, entertainment, Hotels) run on Diesel. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 5:33pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome:Believe me, i don't know and don't care. What i am telling you is my own personal experience. I want my children to get the best possible education i can provide to make them able to compete in this globalized world, and enegy is a crucial part of that education. 2 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by frehage: 5:33pm On May 27, 2015 |
atlwireles: Benue State churns out hundreds of thousands of tons agricultural produce annually. As a result, the state's residents could practically get some products next to nothing. This is not the case with Lagos and some other states. We are an oil producing country. We shouldn't buy petrol at the same price that non oil producing countries like South Africa do. 3 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 5:35pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: I do not understand your answer. Do not use Japan and Hungary for your debate. If these were Crude Exporting Countries, their Government will Subsidize their Petrol prices. Their prices are not subsidized because they are not Crude Exporting countries. If you want to tow that line, use Crude Exporting countries. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by atlwireles: 5:38pm On May 27, 2015 |
frehage: Please name one globally traded commodity produced in Benue, that is cheaper in Benue than Lagos. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 5:43pm On May 27, 2015 |
Sweetguy25: And exchange rate is determined by the amount of pressure you put on the Naira. Create an environment for investors, they build refineries, you reduce 40 million litre of imports per day, you reduce the pressure on your naira, then bang you will cruise. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 5:49pm On May 27, 2015 |
atlwireles:Cashewnuts, seseme seeds and soya beans. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 5:55pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: And the Diesel is not imported energy? Petrol, Diesel, Aviation fuel and Kerosine are all imported energy. Manufacturing companies should not run on diesel, if you do you will not be able to compete in the international market. Diesel is a very expensive form of energy. Industries in industrialized nations run on electricity or in the alternative gas. Even homes in Europe run on gas for hot water and heat during winter, it would be too expensive to run on diesel. 3 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 6:03pm On May 27, 2015 |
TheGoodJoe: Most crude exporting countries are poor. I wont use all of them. I will only use the rich once. 1. UAE: The UAE is 8 million migrant and 1.4 millions citizens. Budget is in excess of 4 trillion Naira. Economy is so diversed that only 4% of oil revenue go to Dubai city budget. They produce 3.2 million bbl per day. Again, a population of 1.4 million people produces 3.2 million bbl/day 2. Saudi: Population 27 million people with a whooping 11 million bbls/day. Saudi also has a gold mining sector and other mineral industries, an agricultural sector that can feed the whole middle east and large number of temporary jobs created by the roughly two million annual hajj pilgrims. They have about 1 Trillion dollars saving, super infrastructure in place and is looking to emulate dubai and build 4 cities (1 Trillion dollars can do that). The cities will be spread around Saudi Arabia to promote diversification for each region and their economy, and the cities are projected to contribute $150 billion to the GDP. 3. Kuwait: 1.2 Million people (voting population of Alimosho LGA) and produces 2.8 million bbls per/day. They have about 600 billion dollars saving. 4. Qatar: 270,000 Qataris (1/10th the size of lekki). 1.5 million bbls/day of crude oil produced. 120 billions saving. Great infrastructure in place. Now soak this information and see what these guys have in common 1. Extreamly low population 2. Massive infrastructure 3. High production rate 4. Massive savings Your country lacks all 4. You need all 4 badly. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by frehage: 6:04pm On May 27, 2015 |
atlwireles: Well, petrol is three times cheaper in Venezuela, the gulf states, etc, than Nigeria and more than five times cheaper than is obtained in South Africa and other non oil producing countries. How about that? |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by atlwireles: 6:08pm On May 27, 2015 |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 6:10pm On May 27, 2015 |
wirinet: So in other words, Apart from rashes for your kids removal of subsidy on PMS as no major economic impact right? |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by wirinet(m): 6:15pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: Why are you now being sacarstic? I said petrol affects every facet of our lives and its cost places a great strain on the masses. You mischievoulsy ignored where i wrote that power is essential for their homeworks. I was responding to your analogy where you implied that fuel for the home is a luxury that can be dispensed with, i was telling you it is a neccessity. I have not even gone into how much i spend in my office daily. 2 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by atlwireles: 6:16pm On May 27, 2015 |
frehage: Petrol is cheaper than bread in Venezuela, unfortunately they have none available to sell, without your food/fuel ration card. The Gulf states enjoy a massive production volume, extremely low population, so their governments can actually give it away for free, if they choose to. Just Imagine Bayelsa state keeping their 600,000 barrels a day for themselves only. Petrol will be N10 in yenegoa, not the N160 paid by the locals with or without subsidy. Nigeria is not Venezuela neither are we the gulf states. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 6:25pm On May 27, 2015 |
If our country was run well, this debate should not be an issue. In the past, subsidy was run without it having an effect on infrastructural development. Look at the amount of loans GEJ took with nothing to show. Without the Subsidy, the money gotten from it will go down that drain. If our country was run like the other Crude producing nations, we will not talk of subsidizing petrol prices. So, we should not use infrastructure as an argument for removing Subsidy. It was the same argument NOI used to take loans and increased our foreign debt. Nothing to show for it. With total Subsidy removal, infrastructural decay will continue especially, if GEJ continued to rule. Put a system in place, curb out corruption in the system. We will see we do not even need this Subsidy removal of our refineries are working in full capacity. gohome: |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 6:26pm On May 27, 2015 |
wirinet: I used candles to read in my secondary and univeristy school days. 30 million of the kids in this country use candles to read. At least you can guy a Gen, maintain it and can also afford it at 87 Naira Protest for infrastructure not subsidy. Protest so these kids will have light to read their books not subsidy. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 6:29pm On May 27, 2015 |
TheGoodJoe: This is a joke right? TheGoodJoe: The call for removal has nothing to do with GEJ. It has everything to do with whoever will write the next budget |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 6:43pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: What do you mean by joking? I was among those that believe it is corruption in the system that is the problem and not Subsidy. That is why unlike the cry for Buhari not to probe GEJ's government, I feel it is necessary. Before writing the next budget, the system must be probed and a clear understanding of what is going on should be known. We should not be importing Petroleum products. If OBJ's government was sincere, his turn around maintenance would have gotten our refineries working. We should not debate much on Subsidy but on how to rid our system of corruption and get refineries functioning in Nigeria. Most Crude exporting Nations do not import petroleum products. That is why it is cheap. 2 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by jpphilips(m): 6:47pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: Whether or not the Nigerian state can afford subsidy is immaterial to the Nigerian people, the Government should worry about that. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by jpphilips(m): 6:49pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: You did not answer the question, you are just making ignorant blank statements, how did a regulated PMS affect a deregulated AGO, if you dont know the answer, keep quiet. 2 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 6:50pm On May 27, 2015 |
gohome: You just said, this is not about GEJ but you went back to the proteast. The issue of the protest is simple. It is better we lose billions to marketers and buy petrol cheap. You read with Candle but you entered Public transport, your parents had cars, stores you bought things used gen sets to cool drinks and water. You cut your hair with barbers that used gen sets. A hike in petrol price is a hike in everything. Including candles. As long as the petrol is cheap, some way, some how, the government worked for us. Take Subsidy, you take government responsibility. They have sold the whole country in the name of privatization. Yet Subsidy is their problem. |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by jpphilips(m): 6:56pm On May 27, 2015 |
[quote author=omenka post=34137060]Interesting! I have just a few questions. Less than what Jonathan paid which raises a red flag on the mannerism he conducted the subsidy regimen, even a factor of population growth still does not add up to Jonathan's figures. 2). How much did Jonathan pay on assumption of duty as the president and in subsequent years as president?? Immaterial 3). What necessitated the geometric increase in the expenditure on subsidy soon after Jonathan took over?? It was about 300billion on the budget but burgeoned to nearly 2trillion at the end of the fiscal year. Was there a corresponding increase in the demand of products to have warranted such increase in "supply"?? Did Nigeria get thirstier for petroleum products?? Corruption which Jonathan refused to curb, exchange rate, strength and weakness of the dollar abroad, price of crude oil etc. 4). Was there any supplementary budget passed by the NASS to accommodate the increase as stated in #3?? Immaterial because we are not discussing the legality of subsidy rather we are discussing whether or not it will be removed. 5). There were about 40 importers of products prior to Jonathan's regime. After he took over, the list went over the roof to about 150!! What was the reason behind this?? Corruption, financial muscle, Audit assessment, integrity assessment of facilities, political patronage etc #waiting. Cc: gohome. 2 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by jpphilips(m): 6:58pm On May 27, 2015 |
sparkleboy: Buhari won't be stup1d to remove subsidy outrightly, I am confident he understands the down stream sector pretty well, so you can continue in your ignorance or watch as events unfold. 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by jpphilips(m): 7:00pm On May 27, 2015 |
Pavore9: Stick your mouth in Nairobi affairs that is where you pay your taxes, Nigerians should decide whether or not they want subsidy 1 Like |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by Pavore9: 7:07pm On May 27, 2015 |
jpphilips: l still carry my Nigerian passport and still pay tenement rates in Lagos, so l am no less a NIGERIAN! 3 Likes |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 7:10pm On May 27, 2015 |
TheGoodJoe: I mean protest (by voting or strike) that your kids have this in future. Stop living in the past. Because a protest was done in 2012, i should not use the word protest in any context? There are no reasons while the hike in PMS would mean hike in anything. What was the hike in prices when we paid 97 Naira? Even if everything hikes, we would not die. Again do you want your kids to be out of school, you want your wife to die in the hospital because you do not have good medicare, but you want to fuel your Gen in a leaking house? PMS being cheap is like your government giving you 20 Naira and collecting 200 Naira. from your reasons, If you do not allow them take subsidy the same government has the license to take loan on your head will go and take loan, pay the subsidy (their cronies) and chop the balance. So why dont you trust your government? The same government will devalue your Naira and the 20 Naira, 80 Naira or even 200 Naira you want your govenment to give you is erased. Think. you have put so much pressure on your Naira |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by 989900: 7:11pm On May 27, 2015 |
TheGoodJoe: If you said the above in 1999 up till 2008 thereabout, you will be correct. As we stand now, the present subsidy scheme would only destroy Nigeria. Imported fuel accounts largely for why the Naira is so weak, that hurts your purse 10 times more than removing the present subsidy will. As it is, only those involved in the scheme/scam wins! Next time Nigerians take to the streets, I want us to do it for the refineries, do it for stable electricity supply -- that's when we win! |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 7:15pm On May 27, 2015 |
jpphilips: Please esplain futher, I do not understand this question. I will put an answer, tell me if this helps 1. Because the sector is not fully deregulated. The money these marketers get from PMS, they can afford to sell diesel to you at any price. You are lucky. If the sector is fully deregulated, you may buy diesel at 180 Naira per liter 2. I also believe the reason that the price of diesel is high is because it is not lucrative to import it. The marketers simply ignore it and all rush for the beautiful bride called PMS because of the subsidy they will get from govt. This creates artificial relative scarcity of diesel and the price remains high 3. The price of crude oil is not directly proportional to the price of diesel. In other words if the price of crude oil is reduced by 40 percent, the price of diesel will only reduce by 5% or less The reason being diesel is a necessary by product from the very cherished PMS. It's prices are determined by refining margins amongst other factors. These margins are calculated from the composition of crude refined The price of diesel has dropped in several countries but risen in others. From July 2013 to July 2014 (oil price peak), the retail price of diesel dropped by 3.6 percent in Germany. In Japan, prices increased by 9.7 percent during the same time. The United Kingdom had some of the highest prices for automotive diesel, reaching 1.93 U.S. dollars per liter in July 2014. Today in the UK, the price of diesel is 1.91 U.S. Dollars. 4. I also believe the reason why diesel was scarce last week is because markerters refused to lift. diesel boggle everywhere 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 7:16pm On May 27, 2015 |
jpphilips: Great answer. Thanks |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by gohome: 7:19pm On May 27, 2015 |
989900: Fantastic |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:43pm On May 27, 2015 |
Even with total Subsidy removal, Nigerian kids will die of hunger in the streets. Women will still die without adequate medicare. The stealing of the government will be like giving you N0 and taking Billions of dollars. Even with total Subsidy removal, these people would have taken loans and ran the country to debt. The problem with infrastructural decayis not Subsidy but Corruption. gohome: |
Re: Subsidy 101: Q &A On Subsidy. by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:50pm On May 27, 2015 |
If we want to put up a thread for debate, it should not be on Subsidy but what is wrong with our refineries. We should focus on us having refinery than a reason why the leaders will rob the people blind and make their cost of living harder. As far as I am concerned, GEJ only had one thing in mind with his Subsidy removal plan. More money to loot. 989900: |
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