The Federal Government should not effect
the proposed increase in the price of Premium Motor Spirit, popularly
known as petrol, without reaching an agreement with the organised
labour, the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria has warned.
However, the Lagos Chamber of Commerce
and Industry described the proposed withdrawal of subsidy on petrol as a
welcome development.
The Minister of State for Petroleum
Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had on Monday said the country would need
to revert to the old pump price of N97 per litre of petrol next year.
Kachikwu explained that the Federal
Government was considering a reversal to N97 per litre in order to
ensure that it would no longer fund the subsidy scheme, adding that the
issue of total subsidy removal would come after the nation had been able
to convince itself that the reversal to N97 would still be costing the
government extra funds.
The Chairman, Trade Union Congress of
Nigeria, Rivers State, Mr. Chika Onuegbu, said in a telephone interview
with our correspondent on Tuesday that the government should engage the
organised labour before removing subsidy on the product and reverting to
the old pump price.
He said, “Whatever the government wants
to do, I expect that it should engage the organised labour represented
by the Nigeria Labour Congress and not to take a unilateral action.
There should be an agreement between both parties.
“Every country in the world has one form
of subsidy or the other. So, the issue is not about subsidy, but how it
is managed and the costs and benefits of the subsidy regime to the
country. In the case of Nigeria, it is estimated that fuel subsidy costs
between 20 per cent and 30 per cent of the budget. This figure is
actually huge, especially considering the infrastructural deficit in the
country.”
Onuegbu, however, said a good percentage
of the figure was perceived as cost of corruption in the subsidy
management process, adding that this was partly the reason why it was
difficult to convince the unions and the ordinary people that the
solution to the conundrum was the removal of subsidy.
“Labour leaders and their civil society
partners believe that the government should remove the corruption in the
fuel subsidy scheme and not the subsidy itself. To us, the issue of
subsidy removal is more about transferring the burden of the payment for
the corruption in the subsidy scheme from the government to the
ordinary people,” he said.
The Director-General, LCCI, Mr. Muda
Yusuf, who stressed the need for the government to remove fuel subsidy,
said, “Our position is that the government should allow the private
sector to drive that sector. The subsidy regime has been a major
hindrance to investment in the downstream sector.
“Look at fuel queues and look at how the
black market is overrunning the whole place. Outside Lagos, in the
hinterland, look at how much people are paying, apart from the agony and
suffering. Oil price is already below $40 per barrel; so, it is even
likely that petrol could sell far less than that N97 by the time the
government frees the market and we have competition.”
The LCCI DG stated that the subsidy
regime had created more problems for Nigerians and investors in the
downstream petroleum sector.
“For us, it is a welcome development
that the government should totally exit from that area and just play a
regulatory role to make sure that the quality of products are okay, to
make sure that there is a level playing field, and to make sure that
there is a truly competitive environment. That way, we will have sanity
back in the sector,” Yusuf said.

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