Nigeria receives World Bank social program funds before fuel subsidies cut
Nigeria is
getting ready to get rid of its expensive gasoline subsidies in June. The World
Bank has
given the country $800 million so it can keep its national social program
going. The largest economy in Africa has allotted 3.36 trillion naira, which is
equivalent to $7.3 billion, for petrol subsidies, and these subsidies will
remain in place until the middle of 2023. Nevertheless, despite the fact that
it will cost more than both healthcare and education put together, there are no
reserves made for the costs after that time.
The government is thinking about giving workers cash transfers and free rides on public transportation as a way to make up for the negative effects that taking away subsidies will have on the poorest parts of society. The Minister of Finance has stated that the government has identified ten million families, which is equivalent to fifty million people, as part of its vulnerable list, and there are still a number of programs that are in the process of being developed.
In 2021,
the World Bank predicted that because of COVID-19, more than 11 million
Nigerians would fall below the poverty line by 2022. This would bring the
overall number of people living in poverty in the country to over 100 million.
This number represents more than fifty percent of the approximately two hundred
million people in the population. At the moment, different levels of government
are talking about the possibility of getting rid of fuel subsidies. The
incoming government, which will be led by President-elect Bola Tinubu, is also
involved in these discussions.
Not too
long ago, Labour Minister Chris Ngige said that when the gasoline subsidy ends
in June, workers in the public sector could get pay raises under Tinubu’s new
government, which starts in May after Buhari leaves office.
Many Nigerians
see cheap fuel as one of the few things the government does for them, even
though oil exports bring in billions of dollars every year for the government.
This is because the government hasn’t taken care of important things like
security and energy.
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