13trn bill: Why petrol subsidy must be removed — NEITI

13trn bill: Why petrol subsidy must be removed — NEITI

VANGUARD

THE Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, NEITI,  has insisted that the Federal Government must end the costly policy of petrol subsidy as the N13 trillion spent on it between 2005 to 2021 was more than the entire budget for health, education,  agriculture and defence in the past five years.

The Executive Secretary of NEITI, Dr Orji Ogbonnaya Orji disclosed this yesterday in Abuja at a dialogue organised by Policy Alert with the theme: Policy dialogue on the utilization of beneficial ownership information on crude oil swap deals in Nigeria.

Dr Orji explained that Nigeria has over the years paid huge costs for the continuing subsidy of petrol, stressing that the country has spent more on the subsidy than capital projects in the past 10 years.

He noted while new developments in the sector have overtaken the challenges posed by the oil swap deal which was introduced in 2010, the government need to urgently tackle emerging issues.

“The first is the urgent need to make a decision on the agitation for the removal of fuel subsidies. The full deregulation of the petroleum sector will permanently lay to rest the conversation around oil swaps. NEITI’s latest policy brief titled “The cost of fuel subsidy: A case for policy review revealed that Nigeria expended over N13 trillion ($74 billion) on fuel subsidies between 2005 and 2021. 

“The figure in relative terms is equivalent to Nigeria’s entire budget for health, education, agriculture, and defence in the last five years, and almost the capital expenditure for 10 years between 2011‑2020. 

“It is also important to note other economic opportunity costs of fuel subsidy which include among others slashing allocations for the health, education, and technology infrastructure sectors; Deterioration of the downstream sector with the declining performance of Nigeria’s refineries and recording zero production in 2020; Disincentivized private sector investment in the down and midstream petroleum sector; Low employment generation since the refining process is done outside the shores of Nigeria; Worsening National Debt; Declining balance of payment, Forex Pressures and depreciation of the Naira and of course product losses, inefficient supply arrangements-scarcity and its attendant queues etc”.

Report

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *