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Economist tasks FG on reforms to ease fuel subsidy removal

Lagos, July 3, 2023: Renowned Economist, Dr Muda Yusuf, has urged the Federal Government to address the social outcomes of its recent reforms, especially the inflationary pressure induced by the fuel subsidy removal.

Yusuf, also founder, Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), said this in the CPPE Half Year Economic Review report on Sunday in Lagos.

According to him, urgent measures need to be put in place to mitigate the soaring cost of living and the escalating operating and production costs, especially for businesses.

He stated that in the first half of the 2023, the Nigerian economy was impacted by diverse global and domestic variables.

Some of which, he said, included the Russian-Ukrainian war, the persistent monetary tightening in the advanced economies and a growing fragmentation of the global economy amid increasing anti-globalisation sentiments.

He noted that on the domestic front, major headwinds to growth were the naira redesign policy, dysfunctional foreign exchange policy and the political transition processes.

Others, Yusuf said, include weak recovery of oil production and the intractable challenge of insecurity in some parts of the country.

“The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth remained weak and fragile as it slowed to 2.31 per cent in the first quarter of 2023, from 3.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2022.

“It is laudable that the President Bola Tinubu administration is charting a new and positive course for the economy which portends bright prospects for recovery and growth.

“Already, there are clear indications of elevated investors confidence, improvement in the government fiscal space, higher prospects of exchange rate stability in the near term, and positive expectations of better economic governance.

“Meanwhile, the Tinubu administration needs to promptly deploy measures to mitigate the current headwinds inflicted by the current reforms.

“The interventions should be a mix of direct interventions, tax incentives for low-income employees and small businesses, reduction in import duty on some critical intermediate products for key sectors of the economy, import duty concessions for the transportation, health, power and energy sectors.

“The improved fiscal space created by the reforms should make these mitigating measures feasible and they have to be implemented urgently in order to give the current reforms a human face,” he said.

Yusuf projected that inflationary pressures may intensify in the near term and the exchange rate may come under pressure in the short term as demand backlog exerts pressure on the official forex window.

He, however, stated that the pressure was expected to ease before the end of the year, paving way for an equilibrium exchange rate which would be more tolerable and sustainable.

He urged the Central Bank of Nigerian (CBN) to put in place a sustainable intervention framework to moderate the volatility in the foreign exchange market.

He said with a better fiscal space, the outlook for lower fiscal deficit, moderation in the growth of public debt, reduction in debt service burden, and an improvement in the macroeconomic stability were very positive.

All of these, the Economist explained, would impact on economic growth prospects in the second half of the year.

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