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LCCI demands clarity on fuel subsidy policy

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The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has demanded that the Federal Government tell Nigerians the truth on the petrol subsidy.

The LCCI also lamented that the prices of petrol have risen by approximately 430 percent since President Tinubu assumed office on May 29 last year.

In a statement issued on Friday,, the LCCI President, Gabriel Idahosa, opined that the price hike may be part of the government’s intention to fully deregulate the oil and gas sector and implement a complete petrol subsidy removal policy.

He, however, said the controversies surrounding the policy has contributed significantly to the distortions in the business environment.

Idahosa said; “We try to understand that the recent fuel price hikes could be the government”s intention to fully deregulate the oil and gas sector and implement a complete fuel subsidy removal policy,

“However, the dynamics and controversies around these steps create most of the distortions we experience in the business environment, making businesses operate under dark clouds of uncertainties.

“It has become difficult to understand the plans and moves taken by the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited, and the various oil and gas sector regulators in the face of recent happenings.

“The controversies surrounding the working relationship between NNPCL and the Dangote Refinery are equally confusing.”

READ ALSO: Nigerian govt clarifies position on leaked policy papers, insists ‘fuel subsidy truly gone’

The LCCI president said since the current administration came on board, petrol prices have risen by approximately 430 percent.

Idahosa said businesses have continued to grapple with escalating operating costs, including rising logistics and power supply expenses, as well as a shortage of foreign exchange (FX) for critical imports.

He warned these may worsen in the coming months due to a thriving speculative environment, harsh regulatory ecosystem, unguided controversies, persistent insecurity challenges, and weakening purchasing power that restrains demand for goods and services.

“With the CBN’s monetary policy rate at 27.25 percent (with allowance up to about 34%), inflation elevated at 32.15 percent (August 2024), an exchange rate above N1620 per USD Dollar, and an unemployment rate at 5.3 percent, we run a business environment that is too tense for businesses to thrive,” he added

By: Babajide Okeowo

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