An economist Muda Yusuf has tackled Dangote Refinery and the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL).
He said the faceoff between the two organisations over petrol price is worrisome.
Yusuf made this remark on Monday in an interview with Channels Television’s The Morning Brief.
He said the drama could scare investors away and affect public perception of this new alternative.
“I’m worried about the dramatisation of the cost the NNPCL is buying from Dangote. Coming to the public space to exchange the things we’re hearing. I don’t think it’s good for the economy, it’s not good for our perception and it’s not good for investors’ confidence,” Yusuf said.
The economist also said that Nigeria can’t walk away from the issue of petrol subsidy removal yet because of the low social safety net for the poor and vulnerable in the country.
Yusuf, the Managing Director of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), said even after the presidential statement on May 29, 2023, that the subsidy is gone, the NNPCL admitted to shouldering cost differentials with imported petroleum products.
He said, “We cannot walk away so quickly from this problem of subsidy otherwise it would make life extremely difficult. Things are already very difficult.
“Up until now the NNPCL was subsidising although progressively the level of subsidy is being reduced which is fine, but to talk of a complete deregulation of the whole system in an economy without a social safety net will not be appropriate at all.”
He stated that the citizens are economically overstretched, adding that the hike in the pump prices of petrol has made the situation worse.
“The economy is about human beings and we need to recognise that because we are driving the citizens almost to their limits,” the economist said.
According to him, total deregulation is not possible in a country like Nigeria which doesn’t have a safety net for the citizens to fall back on.
The economist proposed that the government reduce the demand for imported products through import substitution across all sectors of the economy.
“If we’re able to move that pressure away, it will have a significant impact on the exchange rate. If progressively we can look inward and reduce import we’ll be making progress,” he added.