NIGERIANS
were probably jolted by the Petroleum Minister, Ibe Kachikwu’s confirmation to
a National Assembly Committee, last week (4/1/18), that the current landing
cost of petrol is about N171/litre, i.e. well beyond the present N145/litr
e
regulated pump price. Instructively, the deregulated price of petrol is about
$1.00(N305)/litre in nearby Ghana.
However, in the wake of deregulation of
petrol prices under Obasanjo in 2004, and the anxiety of Labour and the
Nigerian public on the adverse impact of rising fuel prices, this writer
published two articles titled “The Mother and Father of Fuel
Prices”(22.11.2004) and “Only a Stronger Naira Will Stop Rising Fuel
Prices”(22.08.2005) in the Vanguard Newspaper.
The solution
proposed in both articles, remain solidly valid today as it was over 12 years
ago. A summary of both articles is again presented, in the hope that government
will one day heed our counsel and resolve the dilemma of higher crude prices
and weaker Naira exchange rates. Please read on. “The economic and social
benefits of deregulation are evident from the demonstrated success in several
countries. Deregulation would mean competitive market determined prices for
fuel, and will equally drive improvement in customer services. Furthermore, our
comatose refineries would be rejuvenated, while investors would also eagerly
establish new refineries, with the assurance that their survival and
profitability would not be dependent on market manipulations or distortions by
Government. Petrol smuggling and hoarding would similarly cease to be an
attractive venture while Governments’ Treasury will conversely be bolstered by
the plug of the heavy leakages from subsidy. However, the oppressive
inflationary impact of deregulation since commencement seems to be the exact
opposite of popular expectations; for example, instead of lower prices, pump
prices conversely remain on a continuous rise with a debilitating impact on the
Nigerian patient! Consequently, NLC has become buoyed by vibrant public support
to insist that the promised palliatives to deregulation and higher prices are
insignificant and not likely to restore the Nigerian patient to good health.
Consequently, we have both organized Labour and an enamoured President killing
their beloved, slowly with love, despite the patient’s deteriorating health.
The NLC and the Federal Government, obviously share similar aspirations, in
their quest for improved social welfare, that would restrain inflation, and
support a progressive economy, which is efficiently driven by competitive
market forces. Furthermore, Nigerians also expect that with deregulation, new
refineries will be built, to adequately supplement domestic supply, so that
surplus output will become available for profitable export. Evidently, both NLC
and government clearly desire the same basic objectives, of increasing job
opportunities with diversification and expansion in industrial capacity;
regrettably, the pursuit of these objectives seems to have taken different
tracks and yet neither party is anywhere nearer the declared goals. Generally,
the following factors have been canvassed as mainly responsible for rising fuel
prices: these are the poor shape of refineries, additional cost of imported
fuel, corruption and smuggling, increasing crude oil price and the price of the
naira vis-à-vis the US dollar. However, a thorough examination of these major
factors, will reveal that even if present refineries run at full capacity while
new refineries are also built, the local price of petrol in such a deregulated
scenario may only be cheaper than the cost of imported fuel by not more than
10-20%! The cost difference will be the additional cost of transporting crude
oil to Europe or elsewhere and the cost of shipping back to Nigeria, plus local
port and other clearing charges of the refined petrol. The potential cost
savings from relatively cheap local labour may become nullified by the cost of
provision of own infrastructure, particularly high cost of power, and the high
interest rates on loans to importers. We cannot deny that corruption and
smuggling indirectly affect petrol price, just as inefficiency in public
service and lack of accountability could also lead to indiscrete resource
allocations with attendant market distortions and higher prices. Although,
massive crude oil smuggling, from exporting countries, may help to stabilize or
lower international crude oil prices, but cross border smuggling of imported
PMS instigates a bloated local demand and also represents a substantial open
subsidy to the economies of our ECOWAS neighbours; however these factors by
themselves, may not explain the geometric leap in domestic fuel prices from
less than N1/litre in the 1980s to its present oppressive level of over
N50/litre in 2005. Indeed, the popular welfarist argument that Nigerians should
enjoy lower prices for their natural resource endowment may jeopardize the
advantages of a free market mechanism and truncate foreign investments in local
refineries, to sustain competitive product pricing and improved customer
services. Besides, the cost impact of an open ended subsidy to stabilize petrol
prices, in a climate of steadily depreciating naira, will have a catastrophic
effect on the survival of existing public refineries, as they would most
certainly go under if, for example, the NNPC continues to absorb daily subsidy
values in excess of N350 million (over N150 billion annually) as reported by
the Group Managing Director Funsho Kupolokun recently. This burden would
ultimately sound a death knell on the prospect of private investment in local
refineries! However, it is also realistic to expect that even if international
crude oil prices are rising, the related increase in domestic fuel prices will
be cushioned by a stronger value naira vis-à-vis the dollar (the crude oil
value denominator), as the additional dollar revenue which automatically accrue
from rising crude oil prices would also increase our foreign exchange reserves,
to support a stronger naira exchange rate; in this process, domestic fuel
prices will either stabilize or even fall with a stronger naira. Although,
petrol will technically be cheaper, locally, when crude oil prices rise,
smugglers of petrol will, however, be put out of business, as the stronger
naira will reduce smugglers’ margins and make the business unprofitable! Thus
the stronger the naira rate, the lower, ultimately will be the local price of
fuel. Furthermore, it will also become expedient and not unduly oppressive to
supplement government revenue with a 10-15% tax on petrol consumption, as in
other more successful economies; the fuel tax so consolidated can be dedicated
to critical areas of need such as education, health, transportation and
provision of infrastructure. So it should be evident that the single most
important factor in the determination of local fuel prices, is actually the
naira exchange rate. In a deregulated domestic market, fuel prices will
invariably move in sympathy with international crude prices, but appropriate
and sensible management of the foreign exchange inflow from increasing dollar
revenue will ultimately determine a lower naira exchange rate and consequently,
also the domestic fuel price.” SAVE THE NAIRA, SAVE NIGERIANS!
*vanguardngr*
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