Nigeria to spend Ksh.926 billion on petrol subsidy to mid-2023
Nigeria's Minister of Finance Zainab Ahmed speaks during a panel discussion at the headquarters of the International Monetary Fund during the Annual Meetings of the IMF and World Bank in Washington, U.S., October 13, 2022. REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan/File Photo
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Nigeria will keep its costly
but popular petrol subsidy until mid-2023 and has set aside 3.36 trillion naira
($7.5 bln, approx. Ksh.926 billion)
to spend on it, Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed said on Wednesday.
Africa's biggest economy
spent 2.91 trillion naira ($7 billion, approx. Ksh.864 billion) towards a petrol subsidy between January and September
2022, state-owned firm NNPC said, a cost the government has blamed for
dwindling public finances.
President Muhammadu Buhari
signed the 2023 budget of 21.83 trillion naira ($49 billion, approx. Ksh.6
trillion) into law on Tuesday after
lawmakers increased the size by 6.4% and raised the oil price assumption.
"Petrol subsidy will
remain up to mid-2023 based on the 18-month extension announced early
2022," Ahmed said.
Buhari said in October that
the country would stop the petrol subsidy in 2023, when he steps down after
Nigerians vote for a new leader in February.
Successive governments in
Nigeria have tried and failed to remove or cut the subsidy, a politically
sensitive issue in the country of 200 million people.
Inefficient use of resources
is constraining Nigeria's development goals, the World Bank has said, urging
the country to remove subsidies on petrol, electricity and foreign exchange
that mostly benefit wealthy households.


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