Minister of State for Labour, Festus Keyamo, says the Federal Government now relies on the revenue from Customs, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and others to pay salaries.
The minister also admitted that petroleum subsidy was no longer sustainable, insisting that it had eaten deep into the country’s economy.
Indeed, he disclosed that conversation on the removal of fuel subsidy would commence next year, noting that it was no longer sustainable for the Federal Government to keep subsidizing the essential product.
Keyamo, who is spokesperson for the Presidential Campaign Council of the All Progressives Congress, disclosed this on Tuesday during the unveiling of The Progressives Forum in Abuja.
He said, “Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) is no longer remitting money to Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC). So all the money they earn goes to subsidy. So, the government has to rely on revenue from Customs, from Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), from others to pay salaries and other things.”
He also said, “As a progressive party, we believe there must be intervention in the lives of the very poor and the middle class. That is why we have conditional cash transfers to the very poor. That is the philosophy of President Muhammadu Buhari, that is the philosophy of APC. We care a lot for the poor.
“If it were to be other government existing today as I speak with you, there would be no subsidy now. But President Muhammadu Buhari said before we remove it, we need to put some measures in place to cushion the effect on the poor. Because there is no longer any justification to retain subsidy as I speak with you today.”
Keyamo stressed that even in the United States and the United Kingdom, the prices of petroleum have gone up more than four or five times.
He added, “We are in government; we cannot hide it again from the masses, from the people. We must all keep saying that subsidy has eaten deep into our country, into our economy.
“But it is still the sympathy that the President has for the poor because he feels that we have to put measures in place to cushion the effect on the poor before they remove subsidy. And that is why they’ve pushed it to sometime next year. The conversation on how to remove subsidy will begin.”
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