Business a.m.

‘Hell hath no fury…’ as FG set to unleash inflation wrath

Analysts warn 2022 forebodes ‘no love lost’ With planned subsidy removal Fiscal eggheads plan N5,000 palliative­s to 40m But Nigerians to pay N340/ltr for fuel

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CHARLES ABUEDE

NIGERIA’S FISCAL AUTHORI TIES APPEAR to have clearly lost steam and now seem unable to find the permutatio­n to come out of the economic maze they have been walking in for well over six years following a decision to go in with eyes wide open and unleash the wrath of inflation through an ill-prepared, less thought-out fuel subsidy policy set for the new year. It is what some analysts are likening to a government acting out a ‘hell hath no fury like a woman scorned’ policy against its citizens.

Analysts warn that they see the government appearing to be acting in a knee jerk manner and would be extending the misery quotient for citizens, amids an avalanche policy permutatio­ns that have not been fit for purpose over the last six years.

While the government appears to have set a June 2022 date for the commenceme­nt of the policy implementa­tion, some

experts believe it may come into effect earlier than planned as the government appears keen to double down on reforms ahead of the elections in 2023.

But the government appears to be showing concern over what it knows will be a likely fallout of its new fuel subsidy policy coming into force and is, therefore, promising to handle the impact on lowincome and poorest of Nigerians by promising to pay out N5000 per month as a transporta­tion grant to these categories of Nigerians.

Economic analysts have countered this decision describing it as a white elephant project without a shred of value to the GDP of the average Nigerian. They say the impact of the subsidy removal will be enormous on Nigerians, businesses, and including the government as a whole, questionin­g how long can the federal government effectivel­y remit such an amount as palliative without any form of bottleneck­s, following which it becomes wearied and abandons the people as it has done in the past.

An analyst who spoke with Business A.M on the matter said: “Do you remember when FG said they will pay Nigerian youths the same amount as unemployme­nt stipend; was it not kicked against? The move by the federal government is a white elephant project as it is an expense in the government purse. How long will the government keep remitting the monthly N5000 stipend to 40 million most vulnerable Nigerians to cushion the effect of the subsidy removal? Though, it is well understood that the removal of the subsidy may bring about an increase in government’s revenues.

“In the fiscal year 2021 budget, there was no provision made for fuel subsidy,” he said.

Some days ago, Zainab Ahmed, minister for finance, budget and national planning, after the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting, which was presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari, stated the inability of the federal government to sustain the payments of petrol subsidy, which currently prints at N250 billion monthly. The minister further explained that the federal government will end fuel subsidy by 2022 and replace it with a N5000a-month transporta­tion grant to the poorest Nigerians.

“So, the Petroleum Industry Act has a provision that all petroleum products must be deregulate­d. And in the 2022 budget, we made a provision to assume that at the maximum by the end of June, we must exit [the] subsidy. The subsidy cost to the federation was N243 billion. So, if we look at a cost of about 250 billion per month, and it has been increasing consistent­ly. So we’re expecting something around N120 billion per month from NNPC. And now we’re getting to a point where NNPC is remitting near zero.

“If you take 250 billion times 12 months, that is about N3 trillion. If we don’t remove that, that is what it is costing us. This is money that we can use to apply to health and education.

“The interventi­on we want to provide, it’s for between 20 and 40 million people and there is still a lot of work going on. We have a committee that is chaired by His Excellency the Vice President, state governors and a few of us ministers as members. So we have to have a landing as to the exact number between 20 to 40 million.

“We already agreed it will be N5000 and we have also agreed that the remittance­s have to be done digitally. So the eNaira will help but also will the various payment platforms that are currently available. What we will not do is pay people in cash. The transfers that people will receive is meant to be for a period of six, nine or 12 months. These are things that we are still in negotiatio­n for because it’s still money that would have to come from the federation account,” the minister said.

By Wednesday, 1st and Thursday, 2nd of December 2021, OPEC+ will converge to chart a way forward on production and supply in the coming months and in the face of a pandemic resurgence eroding oil demand. What seems rather more interestin­g is that there has been a positive rally in oil price in recent times to above $80 per barrel, while Nigeria’s budget benchmark prints at above $55 per barrel. Similarly, the internatio­nal Brent crude price closed at around $83.00 per barrel at the time of writing last Friday.

However, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) has said it spent about N864.07 billion on the payment of petrol subsidy in the 9-months to September of 2021, indicating about 31 percent of its revenue, which printed at N2.7 trillion in the same period. In meantime, however, Mele Kyari, the group managing director of the stateowned oil corporatio­n, has hinted that the removal of subsidies will push the pump price of petrol to between N320 per litre and N340 per litre while it spent N164.33 billion, N103.28 billion, N173.13 billion and N149.28 billion on PMS subsidy in June, July, August and September respective­ly.

Finance minister, Zainab Ahmed, who shared the same sentiments with the NNPC boss, has also stated that petroleum marketers who sell the product across borders are the ones benefiting from the subsidy, so far as fuel consumptio­n has been subsidized in Nigeria with a litre been sold at around N165 per litre when neighbouri­ng countries sell at N500 per litre.

In her statement, “The transition is not an easy one if we have to remove the subsidy. What are the alternativ­es? What can we provide for citizens? So, we are projecting we’ll be paying at least N900bn subsidy for next year.”

Neverthele­ss, economic analysts at Financial Derivative­s Company (FDC) Limited, have noted that although the move to eliminate subsidies is in congruence with the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA). which was signed into law earlier this year, it would lead to higher logistics costs and further stoke inflationa­ry pressures.

“Many businesses will be confronted with higher logistics and operationa­l costs, which may be absorbed or passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices. This could be negative for profitabil­ity, as the embattled Nigerian consumer is likely to reprioriti­ze his expenses in order of affordabil­ity. Also, the Nigerian consumer will bear the brunt of the removal of subsidy as higher pump prices for fuel will further eat into his already eroded disposable income. The N5,000 palliative is expected to cushion the impact of subsidy removal on the poorest consumers.

“For the government, we expect subsidy removal to increase government revenue and narrow the fiscal deficit. It is, however, important that the freed-up funds are channelled to critical infrastruc­ture projects sectors of the economy that have a direct impact on the common Nigerian (transport, education and health system). However, deregulate­d petrol pricing could require the government to take on powerful trade unions and civil society groups who have in the past responded to major hikes in petrol prices with strikes and protests,” they concluded.

Elsewhere, the intentions of the Nigerian government to revise electricit­y tariffs upwards by this December as it steps up its mass metering initiative has been termed by experts as inflationa­ry to the consumer; and coupled with the recent hike in liquefied petroleum gas price by over 200 percent, which has made Nigerians resort to the use of charcoal and firewood as alternativ­es to the commodity.

The analysts have said that improvemen­t in revenue resulting from the FG’s intention will tackle the challenge of inadequate transmissi­on and distributi­on infrastruc­ture, which will boost efficiency and the capacity of the players to meet their debt obligation­s as well as attract funding will also improve.

 ?? IMAGE by Pius Okeosisi ?? L–R: Temi Popoola, chief executive officer, Nigerian Exchange Limited; Bola Onadele, chief executive officer, FMDQ Group; Ike Chioke, president, Associatio­n of Issuing Houses of Nigeria (AIHN); Dayo Obisan, executive commission­er operations, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); and Haruna JaloWaziri, managing director/CEO, Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc, during the 2021 Investment Banking Awards in Lagos recently.
IMAGE by Pius Okeosisi L–R: Temi Popoola, chief executive officer, Nigerian Exchange Limited; Bola Onadele, chief executive officer, FMDQ Group; Ike Chioke, president, Associatio­n of Issuing Houses of Nigeria (AIHN); Dayo Obisan, executive commission­er operations, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); and Haruna JaloWaziri, managing director/CEO, Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc, during the 2021 Investment Banking Awards in Lagos recently.

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