According to a statement he released yesterday May 19th, Tinubu said President Buhari acted right by removing subsidy from oil.
President
 Buhari after carefully weighing the options decided to do what is 
right. In an act of courage he removed the oil subsidy thereby freeing 
the downstream component of this strategic sector of the economy from 
the distortions of price fixing. However,
 this decision was not to be a step toward conservative austerity as 
practiced by the former government. That government simply wanted to end
 the program that they may prove obedient to neoliberal economic 
doctrines. They offered no programs of valid compensation to the people.
 Instead, they instigated a policy of monumental fraud known as Sure-P. 
However, the only thing sure about it was that its architects would 
siphon the public’s funds to fatten their own wallets. They wanted to 
save money (for themselves) yet expend the people for no good reason at 
all.
Read his full statement after the cut
Ending Price Fixing, The Making of Economic Sense
To
 construct the right building sometimes means we have to tear down the 
wrong one standing in our way. Our economic development hinges in equal 
measure on saying good bye to debilitating and corrupted old practices 
as it does on embracing efficient, wealth creating new ones.
As
 political progressives, we are anchored by a healthy and strong regard 
for the positive role government must assume in ensuring fair play and 
the just allocation of wealth and benefits within our political economy.
 We understand that the so called free market is not always fair. This 
is the major reason that we advocate a comprehensive policy of economic 
development projects coupled with social programs. These development 
projects will build the infrastructure and create jobs that were beyond 
the ability and rationale of our private sector to do. The social 
programs will bring succor to those the dynamics of the free market 
would have otherwise left behind.
Yet,
 as progressives we must be pragmatic and not allow ourselves to become 
blinded by or render ourselves subservient to ideological bias. Ideology
 is meant to serve us, not us to serve it. As such, we must recognize 
that there are certain things the workings of the market perform better 
over the longer arc of time than government may perform. Establishing 
the most efficient price for what is essentially an economic commodity 
is one such thing better left to the interplay of supply and demand. 
While short-term exigencies may at times call for government action to 
stabilize markets and prices, government’s long-term determination of 
such economic prices, although initiated with the finest intentions, 
often contorts into something ugly and callous. It tends to transmute 
into corruption, waste and distorted pricing signals that cost the 
economy more than they benefit the people.
Against
 this background, we must assess the recent decision to allow the 
workings of supply and demand to determine the price of fuel. Most of us
 have called this process one of deregulation. This is an inaccuracy 
that should be promptly corrected. This decision should end arbitrary 
government price fixing. By ending this price fixing, government 
regulation of this market will not be eliminated. It will simply change 
from its emphasis on maintaining a subsidized price to ensuring that the
 market remains free and devoid of collusion so that sufficient supply 
is available at a defensible and affordable albeit higher than subsidy 
price. Government must still monitor this market to ensure against 
unjust enrichment that comes from attempts at price fixing.
Understandably
 the new pricing decision elicited mixed reactions from a cross section 
of Nigerians. This is understandable in view of the fact that the fuel 
subsidy had been with us for such a long period that it seemed integral 
to our political and economic life. However, we should not lament the 
departure of something just because of its longevity particularly when 
that very policy had ceased to serve us long ago.
The
 decision to end the subsidy was hard but it was also inevitable. It had
 distorted into a system where wrongdoers benefited at the expense of 
the innocent. The bogus supplier was paid for supplying nothing while 
you sweated in long lines for fuel that was never there. The smuggler 
secreted fuel across the border while our economy crossed the border 
into fuel scarcity. As the price stayed fixed at a low level, investors 
were apprehensive about fixing existing or building new refineries. Our 
petrochemical industry remained unfertilized because potential investors
 could not decipher how they could make a decent return under such a 
pricing regime. Because of these imbalances, we were forced to export 
hard currency and many jobs to purchase fuel and other products abroad.
While
 the price of fuel was cheap in paper, these were the hidden costs that 
made the subsidy regime an expensive and heavy yoke the nation could ill
 continue. With dwindling revenue from oil due to the slump in global 
oil prices and a dwindling forex reserve, the country could no longer 
live in denial.
President
 Buhari after carefully weighing the options decided to do what is 
right. In an act of courage he removed the oil subsidy thereby freeing 
the downstream component of this strategic sector of the economy from 
the distortions of price fixing.
However, this decision was not to be a step toward conservative austerity as practiced by the former government. That government simply wanted to end the program that they may prove obedient to neoliberal economic doctrines. They offered no programs of valid compensation to the people. Instead, they instigated a policy of monumental fraud known as Sure-P. However, the only thing sure about it was that its architects would siphon the public’s funds to fatten their own wallets. They wanted to save money (for themselves) yet expend the people for no good reason at all.
However, this decision was not to be a step toward conservative austerity as practiced by the former government. That government simply wanted to end the program that they may prove obedient to neoliberal economic doctrines. They offered no programs of valid compensation to the people. Instead, they instigated a policy of monumental fraud known as Sure-P. However, the only thing sure about it was that its architects would siphon the public’s funds to fatten their own wallets. They wanted to save money (for themselves) yet expend the people for no good reason at all.
The
 Buhari government took a vastly different approach. Given the 
inefficiencies inherent in the pricing regime, this administration asked
 the fundamental question: could this money be better spent to help the 
most vulnerable of our people. For it was also recognized that the 
pricing regime was a regressive feature. Its benefit went 
disproportionately to the well off who needed no such help. Better to 
use the sums to more directly and exclusively assist poor and working 
class Nigerians.
Thus,
 President Buhari followed through with a 500 billon fund to support a 
social safety program and empower the poor and needy. Five million 
School children will be fed for 200 days. Other plans of funding social 
infrastructure, education, transportation, health and other critical 
areas needing attention. What the President did is about the future of 
our country and that of the next generation.
With
 regard to our petroleum sector, The President’s decision constitutes a 
major step toward removing the nightmare of fuel importation and its 
attendant hardships especially to our foreign reserve condition. It was 
the right choice to make. The club of fuel importers had become a 
parasite and a drain on our economy. With this decision the exploitation
 by marketers, the unchecked smuggling, mismanagement, lost of 
productive man hours with people waiting in fuel queues, traffic 
congestion and health hazards associated with black market and other 
desperate practices will steadily pass away.
For
 almost 3 decades we have entertained distortions in the downstream 
sector by operating an opaque system susceptible to manipulation and 
structured in a way that allowed a few people to gain mightily from the 
system and feed fat on the misery and frustration of millions of 
Nigerians.
The
 oil sector became unattractive to both local and foreign investors. 
Government price pricing was a disincentive. Our oil refineries became 
epileptic and later comatose. But now investment in the sector will open
 to all. Instead of fighting this measure, opposing segments of 
organized labor should consider collective investment in refineries. 
Such investment will enrich membership and give them a direct interest 
in the success of refineries crucial to our national growth.
As
 it now stands, while we were paying on the front end a low price for 
fuel when it could be gotten, we were being asked to pay too high a 
price in hidden and indirect costs for such malpractice to continue. Not
 every cost is defined by what comes out of your pocket. There are times
 when the greatest cost is the failure to receive a benefit otherwise 
due.
It is time to come to grips with the hard facts of the price fixing. It cuts and bleeds the economy in ways more numerous and deeper than those it heals.
It is time to come to grips with the hard facts of the price fixing. It cuts and bleeds the economy in ways more numerous and deeper than those it heals.
Moreover,
 there are vastly better ways to spend the same money and materially 
improve the wellbeing of millions of our people. This government did not
 withdraw the subsidy in order to save them but spend the people. It is 
transferring the funds to better spend them and better save the people.
Nothing in this world is perfect but this decision is a just and correct one aimed at bolstering the economy while better caring for those the system has unfairly treated. I can find little fault in the new policy taken and the reasons for it. When all is placed in the balance, the scales now better tip in favor of better economy and future because of the decision so wisely made.
Nothing in this world is perfect but this decision is a just and correct one aimed at bolstering the economy while better caring for those the system has unfairly treated. I can find little fault in the new policy taken and the reasons for it. When all is placed in the balance, the scales now better tip in favor of better economy and future because of the decision so wisely made.

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