Nigeria plans to cut subsidy on petroleum products by half
next year after sharp falls in global crude prices, spurred the government to
revise its 2015 budget downwards, data from the revised budget proposal has
revealed.
President Goodluck Jonathan submitted the revised budget
figures to National Assembly this week, proposing to spend 458.68 billion naira
($2.59 billion) on petrol subsidy in 2015, down from 971.14 billion naira
presented for 2014. It also assumed further cuts to petrol subsidies in 2016 to
408.68 billion naira and 371.18 billion naira for 2017.
The country’s finance minister has proposed lowering the assumed benchmark oil price for the country’s 2015 budget to $73 per barrel from the $78 proposed in September, after global crude prices collapsed.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told Reuters on Thursday that declines
in the price of oil, which has lost almost 30 percent since July, would impact
Africa’s largest economy and top oil producer, requiring the government to cut
non-essential spending and raise more revenues.
Nigeria tried to end subsidy in 2012 in efforts to cut government spending and encourage badly needed investment in local refining, doubling the price of a litre of petrol overnight to about 150 naira ($0.93) from about 65 naira.
The move angered citizens, who see cheap petrol prices as
the only benefit they derive from living in an oil-rich country, and lead to
eight days of nationwide strikes.
The government later reinstated part of the subsidy to end the strikes. The budget proposals, according to Reuters, assumed an exchange rate of 162 naira to the U.S dollar for 2015, weaker than 160 naira assumed for 2014. It expects the naira to weaken further to 163.50 in 2016, reaching 165 in 2017.
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