Monday, July 13, 2026

Return fuel subsidy; impact too harsh on Nigerians, don urges Tinubu

The lecturer said that an economy like Nigeria’s cannot run without subsidies.

• September 29, 2024
Fuel pump
Fuel pump

A professor of History at the Federal University Dutse, Kenneth Azaigba, has urged President Bola Tinubu to reintroduce fuel subsidy to reduce the sufferings of Nigerians as the country turns 64 on October 1.

The lecturer gave the advice during an interview on Sunday in Makurdi.

He stated that the reintroduction of subsidies would help the Nigerian economy to thrive.

According to him, the problem has not been the subsidy itself but the management of the subsidy.

Mr Azaigba said that when President Tinubu made the statement that ’subsidy is gone,’ not only the value of the naira depreciated, but even the lives of the people.

He said no state or economy survives without subsidy.

He said, “Given the nature of our ecosystem, the President must find a way of reintroducing subsidy; the problem you know is not subsidy per se; the problem has been with the management of subsidy. We cannot run an economy like ours without subsidies. So the subsidy management regime has to be looked at; electricity tariffs are on the high side, and the price of fuel is also outrageously high. There is a need to mitigate that otherwise we would not be able to breathe in Nigeria again. The President needs to revisit some of the economic policies. The impact on the people is too harsh; economic policies are meant to improve not just the economic system but the lives of the people.’’

He further stated that when the impact of policies makes life miserable, then such policies need to be revised.

He urged the President to rethink the reforms because the level at which the naira is losing its value was worrisome, as it was making life tougher for the people.

On Nigeria’s 64th independence, the lecturer said that the country has a lot to celebrate as it has made incremental progress in some areas.

“But if you take a look at what has happened since 1960, development has largely eroded the country given the type of resources Nigeria has. Given the kind of resources that we have, our resources are still at the level of potential. We have not been able to transform those resources into products that can transform the economy, which can improve the standard of living in the country. So far, so good; we are on the march to development; hopefully one day we will get there even though it is very slow; Nigeria is making progress. Government needs to put on its thinking cap and find solutions to the economic situation that is hovering around the country.

(NAN)

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