The whole issue
of fuel subsidy has come to be perceived as one huge scam the government
is not coming clean on. The skewed policy moved the country to near
fiscal collapse between 2011 and 2012. Between 2008 and 2010, the
federal government paid a total sum of N1.2trillion, an equivalent of
$8billion on subsidy at the 2011 exchange rate. The fact of the matter
is that subsidy creates soft money for some smart persons and the
privileged in the society.
The result is
the creation of billionaires that have negligible impact on the economy,
because they do not have the capacity to create jobs or employment or
add value to production. While they make humongous wealth from subsidy,
the rest of society suffers from infrastructural and institutional
decay, especially in the social sectors.
Subsidy
withdrawal is a far-reaching economic restructuring strategy that
requires tough political will and an even greater measure of toughness
to ensure that the savings from its removal are judiciously utilised to
meet the needs of the people. It is not enough to announce its removal,
government must engage in a communication strategy that can convince all
stakeholders.
The need to do
away with subsidy must be obvious to all by now; presently the cost
varies with location, going as high as N140 per litre in the southeast
and far north. Though there are challenges associated with it, its
greatest handicap lies in the lack of trust for the government by the
people. So long as government insists on running a closed shop on the
issue, so long will there be perpetual suspicion of its policies, no
matter how well intended.
The supposed
subsidy on fuel is a rip-off. Given the state of our poverty-ridden
economy where more than half of the population lives below the poverty
line, 38 per cent of the women have no education and less than 10 per
cent attended school beyond secondary level, it is important to muster
the political will necessary to pronounce and execute such delicate
policy thrust.
We tout the fact
that Nigeria is the largest economy in Africa now. It is also the 10th
largest oil producer, even though much of it is lost to oil theft and
bunkering, which is to say that this giant has not done well for itself.
We have lived with economic recklessness and excesses for too long;
there is the need for a rethink of the nation’s economic situation. This
is the task before the outgoing and incoming ministers of finance and
other economic advisers.
The reality of
our economic situation is far from rosy and this must be properly
communicated and addressed. This fuel subsidy only benefits a negligible
percentage of the populace while impoverishing the majority. This is
the predicament we are faced with and which the incoming administration
must address head on.
No comments:
Post a Comment