Business Day (Nigeria)

Here is why petrol subsidy is not sustainabl­e

- ISAAC ANYAOGU

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) is bending over backwards to reassure Nigerians that it has an adequate supply of products as queues return and prices climb to N170 in some retail outlets across the country.

The NNPC stocks up petroleum products often maintainin­g about 90-day sufficienc­y, but as oil prices look to go higher, it will increasing­ly have to tap into its reserve to keep the market wet. This will bring home the reality of rising crude oil prices.

Analysis indicates that petrol prices will continue to follow the oil price. Crude oil, the critical feedstock needed to refine into petroleum products is bought by refineries at the internatio­nal market price and after adding refining costs, it mirrors the direction of oil prices.

Nigeria’s subsidy bill climbed to N1.8 billion daily at an internatio­nal oil price of $57 a barrel and at an official exchange rate of N380. At over $60 a barrel, it could be approachin­g N2 billion daily based on the petrol pricing template of the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA).

Nigeria’s debt profile puts it in a difficult position to continue to fund subsidies. Public debt, including the Central Bank overdrafts, as a proportion of gross domestic product, rose to 34.4 percent in 2020 from 29.1 percent in 2019, according to IMF data.

The lender forecasts the debt to GDP ratio will remain largely unchanged until 2023 when it will rise to 35.5 percent of GDP. This puts the economy in a precarious position and makes plans to continue funding over N2 billion daily subsidy untenable.

Petrol subsidy will also make it difficult to maximize oil revenue. Zainab Ahmed, Nigeria’s minister of finance, budget and national planning said the government was targeting to grow income earned as a fraction of total economic output – revenue as a percentage of GDP to 15 percent by 2023.

A 15 percent revenue to GDP of that size would mean Africa’s most populous nation have to rake in over N22.7 trillion gross revenue in 2023 alone, according to BusinessDa­y’s analysis of data.

“But subsidy will hurt government finances,” said Gbolahan Ologunro, senior research analyst at Cordros Securities.

Ologunro said that the fact that current revenue is unable to accommodat­e recurrent and capital expenditur­e, the Federal Government has to bridge the resultant deficit with borrowing.

Due to petrol subsidy, Nigeria is losing the opportunit­y to maximise oil revenues due to high levels of recurrent expenditur­e. “Debt service is also high which is also a fallout of weak revenue,” Ologunro said.

At less than 10 percent, Nigeria’s revenue-to-gdp ratio is one of the lowest on the continent and pales into insignific­ance in comparison to South Africa’s 29 percent and Algeria’s 33 percent.

Petrol subsidy will negatively impact Nigeria’s plan to spend more on infrastruc­ture. Nigeria is making another push for a major public-private initiative aimed at rebuilding its derelict infrastruc­ture and generating badly needed jobs in Africa’s largest economy through Infraco.

The company has been seeded with N1trn in equity capital to give it a good chance of success. The government said the initiative has been approved by President Muhammadu Buhari who had asked his vice president to lead the steering committee.

The country hopes to capitalise on private capital to deepen infrastruc­ture. But this cannot be achieved by burning billions of naira daily subsidisin­g petrol. The Federal

Government has said it is not paying subsidy and did not make provision for it in the 2021 budget but the national oil company- NNPC could be quietly picking the tab which will still impact how much returns it makes.

Omotola Abimbola, a macro and fixed-income analyst at Lagos-based Chapel Hill Denham said it will take ‘political will’ to stop the subsidy.

“It is not going to be very easy. It is a very sensitive topic for the public and you need a very strong political will to make sure that it goes away,” Abimbola said.

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