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Nigeria's Chance for Reform
By
Alexandra Gillies (Huff Post World)
Posted Sun Jan 15,2012

President Goodluck Jonathan (Source: GoogleImage)
Since the Nigerian government ended longstanding gasoline
subsidies as of New Year's Day, Nigerians have responded with
nationwide strikes and protests,
resulting in several deaths. The government has a chance to
respond in turn, by addressing the rampant corruption and
mismanagement of the country's oil industry.
The gasoline subsidy embodied the worst characteristics of the
country's economic governance. In 2011, the subsidy on gasoline
cost the government over $9
billion, more than the entire federal government capital budget
and about double the subsidy's cost in 2010. Global fuel prices
did not, of course, double during this time period. Nigeria's
tab skyrocketed thanks to the costly, corrupt system by which
the country produces and imports gasoline, as well as rising
interest charges and insurance premiums as government failed to
pay fuel importers on time.
By the end of 2011, Nigeria
owed importers over $4
billion. Relying on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC), the national oil company, the government devised
complex, opaque methods for covering import costs, including
swap deals where crude oil was awarded to commodity traders in
exchange for gasoline and other refined products.
Officials allowed the subsidy to rise because it included
lucrative opportunities for corruption. In 2009, then President
Umaru Yar'Adua called the manipulation of prices and supplies
"the greatest institutional corruption in the history of the
nation." Only when NNPC faced bankruptcy -- owing billions of
dollars to importers as well as to the treasury -- did the
government decide to end the subsidy.
This will not eliminate corruption in the oil sector. That would
require the kind of coherent reform that the administration of
President Goodluck Jonathan has so far postponed. The
Petroleum Industry Bill,
which would restructure the industry, has idled in parliament
for years. NNPC, which is unique among the world's largest
national oil companies in its total reliance on international
traders to sell its crude, has similarly resisted change. Unable
to pay its share of operating expenses, it maintains financing
deals with international oil company partners that cut deeply
into national earnings. Yet it is allowed to regulate itself and
manage the country's four refineries, which
produce at 40 percent
capacity on the best of days.
Transparency and oversight are limited throughout the sector.
The petroleum ministry and regulatory bodies provide no
information to the public, and NNPC fails to disclose even an
annual financial report much less its audit statements. Most of
the sector's financial transactions -- including NNPC's
earnings, and transfers to the diminished Excess Crude Account
-- do not appear as part of the budget thereby sidestepping
legislative and public scrutiny. Nigeria's reports under the
Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative suffer delays, so
far
covering only the years through 2008.
Executive discretion prevails over most decisions, including the
allocation of valuable exploration, production and export
licenses.
High oil prices and increased production should have made
2010-2011 the most profitable years yet for the Nigeria.
However, the country's economic health worsened. Budget deficit
estimates exceeded $8 billion in 2011 and, over the last three
years, foreign
reserves dropped by 40 percent
and public debt doubled.
Only a package of reforms will correct the paradox of robust
revenue potential and declining fortunes. Removing the subsidy
will not solve the larger economic problems unless additional
reforms take place, including the re-drafting, passage and
implementation of the Petroleum Industry Bill in a manner that
eliminates the current system's opportunities for inefficiency
and graft.
Much can be done to make the sector more accountable to the
public interest. NNPC should make public its financial reports.
Discretion and secrecy should be removed from the allocation of
licenses and the regulation of exports and imports. The status
of the Excess Crude Account requires explanation, as does that
of the proposed new sovereign wealth fund. And these reforms
must include clear deadlines for action.
To generate economic development, the government will also need
to fulfill its promise to transparently use these savings to
improve infrastructure and social services. It will also need to
implement the public sector cuts announced by President Jonathan
on Dec. 8, including a 25 percent reduction in
civil servant pay.
Moreover, public trust will only be rebuilt through committed
investigation and prosecution of corruption, and measures such
as declaration of assets.
The problems are well known, but so are the concrete steps that
can increase transparency,
accountability and the earnings of the state. They have worked
in other countries and can help Nigeria too.
It is not too late for Nigeria's government to make the end of
its fuel subsidy the beginning of reform. Citizens will bear the
cost of the higher fuel prices. This sacrifice will be
worthwhile only if the nation's oil wealth begins to serve the
public's interests rather than those of only a favored few.
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