THISDAY

World Bank, OPS Differ on Nigeria’s Electricit­y Tariff Hike

Bank hails policy as private sector operators say tariff increase will close down 65% manufactur­ing, other businesses IMF declares country's debt-service burden has hit 56% of tax revenue, posing fiscal challenges

- Nume Ekeghe and Dike Onwuamaeze Continues online

The President of the World Bank, Ajay Banga, yesterday, commended Nigeria's efforts in implementi­ng electricit­y tariff reforms while urging the need for further regulatory certainty and clarity in tariff policies.

Banga, made the assertion on same day the organised private sector in Nigeria (OPSN) declared that the new increase in electricit­y tariff would force over 65 per cent of private businesses, especially manufactur­ing concerns and Small and Medium Industries (SMIs) to close down.

The World Bank chief spoke during an event titled, ‘Energising Africa: What will it take to achieve universal energy access?’at the ongoing hybrid IMF/World Bank spring meetings in

Washington DC.

Banga reiterated the necessity of social safety nets to protect the most vulnerable, and the importance of paying the appropriat­e amount for electricit­y consumptio­n.

Furthermor­e, he pledged, alongside Akinwumi Adesina, President of the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB), to address the electricit­y shortfall in Africa. The current deficit stands at 600 million people without access to electricit­y, to narrow this gap to provide affordable electricit­y to 300 million individual­s in Africa by 2023.

Also, in a separate briefing, the unveiling of the updated Fiscal Monitor by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) highlighte­d that Nigeria's debt-service burden has surged to 56 per cent of tax revenues, presenting significan­t fiscal challenges.

They made this commitment yesterday at a World Bank event titled Energizing Africa: What will it take to achieve universal energy access? at the ongoing hybrid IMF/World Bank spring meetings in Washington DC yesterday.

Speaking on the energy reforms in Nigeria, he said: “You need utilities to be capable of paying the generators. You need tariffs and policies that make them capable of being liquid and profitable enough. I don’t mean you should raise tariffs on the poorest, we both believe in social safety net and we fund them but it is pay the right amount for what you can pay and Nigeria is currently going through an enormous correction. They have to manage well for the poorest in the society to not be as impacted as the others but they are doing it.

“We need regulatory certainty, tariff policy clarity, and good management teams running utilities and transmissi­on lines because that makes the rest of it possible.”

On the joint commitment of providing affordable electricit­y in Africa, they both noted that power was necessary to foster growth and developmen­t and the World Bank would commit to providing 250 million while AfDB would provide for 50 million.

Banga said: “600 million people in the continent do not have access to any power and to me, that is an unacceptab­le situation in the year 2024. Electricit­y is a human right, it is the basis by which people get access to health, education, the ability to innovate and manufactur­e, and build productivi­ty.

“The news about 600 million in darkness is not new, but we need to move past the problem and have tangible results and what you would hear from both of us today is a commitment. Back in COP 28 the world bank made a commitment to connect 1 million Africans to affordable energy in six years. What we are doing today is multiply that commitment by bringing in all parts of the bank and all parts of Africa and really thinking of how we can make this work. We have multiplied that commitment to 250 million people out of that 600 million people.

“My estimate for the World Bank alone for the two 250 million is going to take more than $35 billion to make this happen."

Furthermor­e he added: “So think about this as an important human right which allows us to build jobs and capabiliti­es in Africa.

“I believe that the future in Africa and the jobs for young people depends on five big areas, the first one is energy, infrastruc­ture, agribusine­ss, tourism and health care.”

On his part, Adesina said: “We at the African Developmen­t Bank, we'll make sure that we are able to provide 50 million access by 2030. But in addition to that, we have to also harness a significan­t amount of renewable energy potential we have.”

In the Fiscal Monitor report released, on Nigeria states that high debt-servicing costs limit the ability of Nigeria and other low-income developing countries to allocate resources toward essential services and critical investment­s necessary to enhance economic resilience and alleviate poverty.

It states: “Large shares of loans on concession­al terms, high inflation, and resulting favorable interest-growth differenti­als have helped contain average public-debt-to-GDP ratios in low-income developing countries, at around 50 percent of GDP since

2020, on average. An exception was an uptick to 53 percent of GDP in 2023, largely driven by exchange rate depreciati­on in Nigeria.”

“However, countries are carrying heavy debt-service burdens, amounting to 13 percent of total spending and almost 25 percent of tax revenues, on average, in 2023 about double the level 15 years ago. In Nigeria, the debt-service burden amounts to around 56 percent of tax revenues.

Such high debt-servicing costs prevent low-income developing countries from spending more on essential services and critical investment to improve economic resilience and reduce poverty. Economies in this country group are also borrowing increasing­ly on commercial terms, amplifying their exposure to interest rate and foreign exchange risks.”

Meanwhile, the OPSN in a statement titled, “Preliminar­y Position of the OPSN on the Over 200 Per Cent Increase in Electricit­y Tariff,” pointed out that Nigeria now ranks third after Germany and The United Kingdom on the list of countries with highest electricit­y cost.

The OPSN is made up of top Business Membership Organisati­ons (BMOs) such as Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN), Nigerian Associatio­n of Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agricultur­e (NACCIMA), Nigerian Employers Consultati­ce Associatio­n (NECA), National Associatio­n of Small Scale Industries (NASSI) and National Associatio­n of Small and Medium Enterprise­s (NASME) and representi­ng more than five million businesses in Nigeria.

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