Now
that the pump price of petrol has nearly doubled, we can officially
conclude that President Muhammadu Buhari has finally blinked. For a man
of the masses, we can assume that this was a very difficult decision for
him. The truth is: any upward adjustment in the price of petrol
increases the cost of living and worsens economic hardship, even if in
the short run. Transportation is a major component of the cost of living
in Nigeria. It is not just about commuting; we are transporting goods
and services. We are powering our homes and businesses with generators.
Even the landlady will raise the rent to make ends meet. That is why
hiking fuel prices has always led to protests and riots.
But
why was petrol price increased? There can only be one explanation: the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) does not have the forex
to pay for imports. At the official rate of N197 to the dollar, the
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) needs to make some $500 million available
to the NNPC every month for fuel imports. Where will CBN get the
dollars? Petrodollar is by far the apex bank’s biggest source of forex
inflow. Crude oil price is down. Against our budgeted daily production
of 2.2 million barrels per day, output is down to around 1.4 mbpd as a
result of militant activities. We are losing in both price and quantity.
In plain English, we are in soup.
The CBN/NNPC “partnership” was
not going to last. To start with, do we even make up to $500 million
monthly from crude oil sales these days? Even if we do, will every
dollar inflow go into fuel importation? What about our several other
international obligations, such as debt repayments, letters of credit
and investors’ funds? We think our foreign reserve is $28 billion, but
by the time we go into details… it is a big bubble. And our
international trading partners know this very well. The moment the
reserve can no longer finance three months of import, they will pull the
plug. Then we will know the true meaning of economic crisis.
What
the government has done is to implore marketers to return to the
importation business to stop the crippling crisis. NNPC has been badly
exposed by the logistical nightmare, and incapacitated by forex
scarcity. In extending invitation to the marketers — who stopped
importing in October 2015 as a result of lack of clarity in policy — the
government has told them to source their forex from “secondary market”.
That means parallel market. If they buy dollar at N285, there is no way
they will sell petrol at N86.50, the official price. The PPPRA template
landing cost of N99 per litre is priced at the official N197 to the
dollar. Something must give. Pump price had to go up.
But our
problem may have just begun. As soon as marketers invade the “secondary”
market, the rate will go up. Again, that is simple logic. Forex inflow
has not increased. What we are facing is a forex supply crisis.
Increasing fuel price does not increase forex inflow. It follows,
logically, that even the N145 pump price is not sustainable. The more
the pressure on the parallel market, the more the rate will inch
upwards. And the marketers will have to reflect this appropriately in
the pump price, except we have to return to the subsidy regime to keep
the price at N145 at all cost. In sum, except forex inflow improves, the
naira will continue to fall, and petrol price will keep rising.
What
then? How do we improve the inflow of forex so that the naira does not
depreciate further? One common prescription is that the CBN should
devalue the naira officially, since the naira has already devalued
itself. Only NNPC and a few manufacturers were getting the dollar at
N197 in any case. Most prices had adjusted to N320/$1 before now. Now
that oil marketers will source forex at non-official rate, and most
manufacturers either go to the black market or shut down, the CBN rate
is nothing but window dressing. Who actually gets dollar at N197?
Manufacturers are complaining of getting little or nothing. NNPC is
complaining.
The argument of the pro-devaluation group all along
is that if the CBN devalues the naira, non-oil sources of forex would
open up. Remittances and repatriation would return through official
sources, and investors would also be more confident to bring their
capital into the Nigerian economy. Our foreign reserves would thus be
boosted and the pressure on naira would ease. The implication would be a
one-off inflation that would be offset by economic growth rather than
the contraction we have witnessed in the last one year. But Buhari has
maintained for a long time that devaluation is not an option, that he
would not “kill” the naira.
Now that the president has allowed an
upward adjustment in petrol price, the pro-devaluation group would be
feeling hopeful. Former CBN governors Chief Joseph Sanusi, Professor
Chukwuma Soludo and Alhaji Muhammad Sanusi II all argued that falling
oil revenue and dwindling foreign reserves meant the official exchange
rate was no longer sustainable — and capital controls would only worsen
the currency crisis. They canvassed, at various fora, the need to allow
the naira to depreciate to reflect market realities. However, they
should not celebrate still: the naira has not been devalued — only
petrol price has gone up. Our fingers remain crossed.
Delayed or
dysfunctional adjustment is costly, Soludo warned Buhari in his famous
lecture in Enugu in November 2015. Has he been proved right? Buhari
tried to hold on to N197/$1 and N87 per litre of petrol for nearly a
year, though he has finally let go of petrol price. But between 2015 and
2016, a lot has gone wrong. Inflation has gone into double digit;
billions of dollars in investors’ funds have taken flight out of
Nigeria; petrol has been sold for as high as N250 per litre in many
parts of the country as a result of lingering shortages; 26 states are
unable to pay salaries; many factories have closed down; and many
companies and states have retrenched workers.
Would things have
turned out differently if Buhari had taken a different route on assuming
office in May 2015? We may never know, but many analysts would argue
that if Buhari had allowed the devaluation of the naira in June or July
last year, the peg would probably be around N250 today. The uncertainly
sent the currency market into an overdrive, and the arbitrage by the
speculators did serious damage to the naira. That is the price of late
adjustment, many of the analysts would argue. By freeing the pricing of
petrol but holding on to the exchange rate, Buhari may be setting the
stage for a more brutal outcome. Rent-seeking behaviours get
incentivised this way.
In other words, we may end up paying a much
higher price for another delayed adjustment. As pressure shifts to the
non-official currency market, the naira will continue to crash. Fuel
prices will inevitably go up. And as CBN continues to share oil revenue
at N197 to the dollar, the three tiers of government will continue to
receive half the market value of their statutory allocations. The
paucity of funds continues. Many states will still be unable to pay
salaries. Many manufacturers will still be unable to access forex at the
official rate. More jobs will continue to be shed. Arbitrage will be
more unrelenting and more rewarding. The picture is not pretty.
I
almost forgot the good news: there could be a miracle. Crude oil price
could do the extraordinary — that is, go back to the days of $100 a
barrel. We can then forget all our troubles. There will be enough forex
inflow to finance our needs, the naira will regain strength, government
will have enough money to pay salaries and embark on new projects, and
manufacturers will complain less. Purchasing power will be on the rise
and the market women would be smiling again. That is the painless way to
recovery. Otherwise, there is nothing we can do now that will not bring
severe pains. Adjustment has a price, and delayed adjustment a bigger
price.
AND FOUR OTHER THINGS…
OCCUPYING NIGERIA
The
fuel price hike is eliciting the usual response: threats of mass
action. However, I would advise that we proceed with caution. Many of
the economic problems we are facing today originated from the
mismanagement of the petroleum industry. Despite that, we made it
impossible for Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan to
deregulate the downstream sector. Are we better off today? That is one
question we should keep asking ourselves. It should be clear to all now
that reform is inevitable. Let us try something new, endure the pains
and see where we end up in years ahead. Wisdom.
DEREGULATION OR WHAT?
A
litre of petrol will now sell for a maximum of N145 per litre. But what
does that mean really? Many commentators have identified lack of policy
clarity as a major problem of the Muhammadu Buhari administration — and
here is one more evidence. Raising the pump price of petrol from N86.50
to N145 without telling us what will happen to “equalisation fund”,
without saying anything on kerosene pricing, without letting us into a
clear-cut deregulation programme, without a word on the petroleum
industry bill (PIB), what exactly is that? To me, it looks like just
another fuel price hike. Disjointed.
QC DEAD END
At
the end of it all, the allegation of sexual harassment of a student at
Queen’s College, Lagos, could not be proved, according to the
investigative panel set up by the federal ministry of education. This is
because the accuser failed to come forward to give evidence that indeed
her daughter was harassed. There is an unconfirmed report that the
woman chickened out because her husband was angry with her for daring to
expose their daughter to danger with the school authorities. If this is
true, that is unfortunate. Or could it be that no harassment ever took
place? Puzzling.
CAMERON ON CAMERA
There is
a mistake many Nigerians are making over the “fantastically corrupt”
statement by David Cameron, the British PM. People say it is a statement
of fact. But as Eseoghene Al-Faruq Ohwojeheri has pointed out, there is
a difference between mockery and statement of fact. Cameron was simply
mocking us in a private conversation with the Queen, unaware it was
caught on camera. Am I surprised? The US diplomatic cables published by
Wikileaks years ago showed clearly that while these people openly talk
about us with choreographed respect, sympathy and concern, they are full
of nothing but contempt for us. Hypocrisy.
Source: www.thecable.ng
Source: www.thecable.ng
0 comments:
Post a Comment
PLEASE BE POLITE