By Joan Nwagwu/Emmanuella Anokam
Abuja, Sept.3, 2024
The Nigeria Employers Consultative Association (NECA) says the new hike in pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), also known as petrol, is worrisome and unfair.
Mr. Adewale-Smatt Oyerinde, the Director-General of NECA, said this in a statement while reacting to the new hike in pump price of PMS on Tuesday in Abuja.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd. (NNPCL) had said that with effect from Sept. 3, the new pump price of PMS would be N897 per litre.
According to Oyerinde, the new pump price of petrol is not only worrisome but also unfair.
“We had expected that the government will leverage on the momentum created by the completion of the Dangote refinery and the planned commencement of operation of the Port-Harcourt refinery.
“This is in order to clear the obvious self-inflicted pain on Nigerians and progressively reduce the pump price of petrol. This seems not to be the case.
“This new pump price could be seen as making Nigerians to pay for the crass inefficiency in the NNPCL,” he said.
He said that rather than address the fundamentals that have made Nigeria a net importer of petrol, even when we have four refineries, government has continued to inflict pain on Nigerians.
According to him, the government is, inadvertently, contributing to the increase in cost of doing business.
“We advise that government should have a rethink and do all that is necessary to address the continuous impoverishment of Nigerians and incapacitation of organised businesses,” he said.
Meanwhile, an economics expert, Dr Sand Mba-Kalu has said that the fuel price hike by NNPC Ltd. from N617 per litre to N897 per litre will push more Nigerians into poverty.
He said the sudden increase in PMS pump price by the NNPC Ltd. was beyond a simple fuel price adjustment.
He said that it would have a far-reaching impact on Nigeria’s private sector, trade and the already suffering Nigerian masses.
Mba-Kalu, the Executive Director, Africa International Trade and Commerce Research said this in an interview with the NAN on Tuesday in Abuja, while reacting to the development.
NAN reports that NNPC Retail Management has approved upward review of the pump price from N617 per litre to N897 per litre, effective from Sept. 3, amidst economic hardship and persistent fuel scarcity.
Checks by NAN revealed that the NNPC retail stations have adjusted their pumps and totems (price boards), reflecting new PMS price of N897 against N617 per litre while independent marketers are selling between N930 to N1,200.
Mba-Kalu said without government interventions, the economic and social repercussions of this price hike could be severe and long-lasting, pushing more people into poverty.
“What we will witness is the immediate high cost of transport, which will lead to higher costs of food and inflation.
“In the long term, it could pose challenges for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and the agricultural sector,” the expert said.
He urged the Federal Government to acknowledge these implications and consider measures to reduce the impact, such as targeted incentives for energy efficiency, stopping wasteful spending, and reducing cost of governance.
“Without such interventions, the economic and social repercussions of this price hike could be severe and long-lasting, pushing more people into poverty,” he warned.
Mr Chris Nzeh, a motorist, who condemned the development, describing it as crazy, said what had been going on in Nigeria under the current government would only suffocate Nigerians.
“How do they want the average man to survive?
“We were told that with the removal of fuel subsidy, fuel will be available everywhere in Nigeria, but today, it appears NNPC Ltd. is scamming Nigerians.
“They are the sole importer of petroleum and they have refused to make refineries work and you ask yourself what is going on in Nigeria?
“Nigerians should rise and save this country from collapse,” he said.