Deregulating Robbery In Nigeria: The Announcement Of A
Civil War
Writers Articles And Opinions
20 October 2009
By Kola Ibrahim
Against all
opposition, the Yar’Adua government has again come out
boldly to announce total deregulation of fuel come
November 1, this year. This crude and rude behaviour
of government against the hues and cries of the
toiling people is highly condemnable. The labour
movement must immediately commence mass mobilization
through a One-Day national warning strike, with mass
mobilization through rallies, pickets of government
places including national assemblies and state
government houses, leafleting, etc before this month
runs out to prepare for an all-out mass movement
against this obnoxious policy. Local, community and
state mobilization committees must be immediately
set-up to include workers, students, youth, market
women, peasants, artisans and community groups.
The labour movement must not wait until the terrible
policy start taking its tolls on the poor masses of
this country; when government will be using the
argument of ‘negotiation’ to water down the opposition
before taking action. Even if Yar’Adua government is
forced to concede for now, it will rebuild its arsenal
to launch this and other anti-poor policies. Thus, the
labour movement and pro-labour groups must demand open
democratic probe into the over 3 trillion-naira oil
subsidies and public declaration of financial assets
and business of all oil companies in the country and
nationalization of the commanding oil industry under
the democratic control and management of the working
people and consumer association. This is the real
alternative to the fraudulent deregulation policy of
the government.
With the government’s announcement, a civil war has
already been declared on the working masses by the
government, the labour movement should not wait any
longer. It should be recalled that already prices of
kerosene, diesel and industrial fuel have already been
deregulated without any formal announcement.
Therefore, to wait for an official announcement of
government before responding to this declaration of
open war by the government, is giving government time
to re-strategize attack and mobilize all its forces of
reaction against working people. The labour movement
should not take the masses to the barricade with a
white flag.
Indeed, the implementation of this policy is a leeway
to the expansion of all the anti-poor, neo-liberal
policies, being introduced for over two decades which
have made the rich corrupt few richer while making
life more miserable for the working but poor people.
However, the leadership of the labour movement must
not only re-strategize its opposition to this policy,
it must take a revolutionary, working class. It must
be totally and unflinchingly opposed to not only
deregulation but all anti-poor, neo-liberal capitalist
policies if it must to secure a better living for the
working people.
To the Yar’Adua government, the Governors’ Forum, the
big business and the capitalist pundits in the media
and boardrooms, deregulation is necessary because the
subsidy on fuel pricing has led to huge corruption and
looting of the treasury by “unknown” leeches within
the ruling class, which the government claim is
holding it to ransom. How many of these public looters
have been probed or prosecuted the Yar’Adua government
and its town-criers have failed to tell the people?
What an irony: an “anti-corruption” government
accepting the superiority of gangsters! Maybe they are
the real sponsors of the variously rigged elections in
Nigeria that put current political officers in power,
thus they are sacred cows.
The argument of Yar’Adua government to justify
deregulation is a continuation of the old worn-out
excuses of the ruling class. The excuse of the
Obasanjo government for incessant increase in fuel
prices was that it was spending tens of billions on
fuel subsidy; therefore the poor people must bear the
brunt through fuel price hike. Yar’Adua government has
only stepped this up by exposing that the subsidies
running to over 3 trillion Nigerian naira have only
gone to the sharks in big oil marketing business and
government. But, what are government’s alternatives to
this obviously maddening scenario painted by the
government itself: arrest the looters? Stop the
financial hemorrhaging of the nation? Obviously not –
but making the people the direct victims of the
looting: more deregulation.
According to the Nigerian economist, Prof. Sam Aluko,
oil marketers make over $160,000 on a ship-load of
refined petrol fuel imported into this country. This
is aside profit being made on other crude products
like Paraffin and jet fuel. Neither is it part of the
profit being made by shipping companies and private
port managers, among other sundry charges that will
add up to extra 40 percent of fuel cost. With the
country’s refineries working at less than a third of
its capacity, Nigerian government has already
privatized fuel production and deregulated its
importation, while only using public resources to
subsidize the profit of the oil marketers. Therefore,
the latest attempt is only a re-deregulation of this
obvious robbery. In this what can be termed
“subsidized” deregulation system, the Nigerian
government use public resources meant for the
development of social infrastructures to service the
profit interests of fuel marketers, their bank
creditors (some of whom are now being made scapegoats
for massive fraud perpetrated by all shades of big
business class), shipping companies, private port
managers, stock gamblers, etc. In the planned
re-deregulation, the poor people are to directly bleed
out billions in profit for these fat-cats while
government also doles out billions through other means
to them.
Private Refinery: Sheer Mirage
Worse still, whenever there is crisis for oil
importers, government will immediately intervene on
their behalf (tax break, special offer, price
flexibility, cheap credit, etc) in the name of
‘encouraging investment’ – the same way that it
arbitrarily fixed the price of petrol at 65 naira,
even when it should be less than 50 naira. Therefore,
the planned re-deregulation is a cover to insure
super-profit. Some have argued that deregulation will
‘encourage’ private investors to invest in oil
refining. But, funny enough, while tens of persons
were given licenses by Obasanjo government to build
private refineries, these shylocks have converted
these into license to import refined fuel, no thanks
to the connivance of the Obasanjo government.
According to reports, it will cost around $2 billion
to build a standard refinery. How many local investors
can commit this amount to a long term project like
refining?
The main reason why these oil companies (local and
foreign) will not build refinery is because they
depend on short term profits and not long-term
investment that will tie down their capital. This
explains why the world’s financial sector overtook the
industrial sector (in US, manufacturing share of GDP
fell from 25% to 12% while financial share increased
from 12% to 20.5% from 1973-2008), which led to the
current global economic crisis that has foreclosed any
tangible investment in the third world – except
financial gambling. Nigeria’s case is worsened by the
terrible state of the nation’s infrastructures which
has made investment in the country costly. Nigerian
capitalists are parasitic, who only mushroom on the
decayed carcass of mismanaged national economy. They
are the beneficiary of government’s hand out of public
resources to private hands – privatization of public
corporations/oil wells, commercialization of social
services, official corruption cum nepotism, etc. This
is why they will prefer to buy the nation’s
refineries, cement companies, telecomm companies, oil
wells, etc at token where they can easily sell their
estates to make quick profits, than investing
directly.
However, assuming without conceding that private
individuals invest in oil refining, as is being hoped
by some pundits, can this alleviate the suffering of
Nigerians? In the first instance, the refining will be
hijacked by a clique as most of these moneybags can
hardly bear the risk alone thus leading to formation
of cartel and monopoly – the example of NNPC
privatization in 2007 where a cartel of big companies,
banks and foreign firms bid to buy less than a third
of NNPC at fraction of its value is instructive. Thus,
the question of competition and consequent price
reduction is out of it as demand and supply will be
manipulated for price increase. A vital example is the
deregulation of paraffin (kerosene), diesel, cooking
gas and jet fuel, which prices have skyrocketed daily.
Moreover, these companies will have to provide their
own power, transport system, etc, as the nation’s
infrastructures are dilapidated, which will bear on
the cost and availability of the products while prices
will have to be hiked meet international profit level.
Meanwhile, there is no way government can get provide
these infrastructures without impinging on the
super-profit of the business and political class. More
important is the profit flight by multinational
companies which will escalate devaluation and balance
of payment. All this will worsen the already comatose
industrial sector with attendant job losses and
associated social crises.
Labour’s limited opposition to
deregulation
In a statement by the NLC, the central labour union,
it tasked government to in the immediate, refine
petroleum products from neighbouring countries (so as
to reduce landing cost) and then start the process of
building new refineries. This may sound pragmatic, but
it is clearly unrealistic. This NLC’s position fails
to take into cognizance, the political economy of
Nigerian ruling class. It assumed that the government
is acting independent of big business. The question we
must ask is: Is it not the same private companies, and
Nigerian looters who have majority shares in oil
refineries in these neighbouring countries that will
refine, import and distribute the fuel? Will
government not continue to subsidize their profits?
The demand for building more refineries is correct but
limited. The labour movement must be aware that many
of the Nigerian politicians at all levels are directly
linked up with the business class. The labour movement
must ask itself why Nigerian governments for the past
ten years of civil rule have not added a tangible
value to the nation’s refineries (despite over $300
billion that had accrued to the country’s coffer) but
have actually used it as a conduit pipe to drain
billions of dollars to private accounts of corrupt
government officials, bank-sters, big business,
contractors and foreign corporations. Yet more working
people are being thrown into the dungeon of poverty,
want and misery. That Yar’Adua government could not
build more refineries or undertake an ambitious
sustainable and environmental friendly energy project
more than two years in office is not accidental. It is
a product of the neo-colonial, neo-liberal capitalist
arrangement where the rich few rent-seekers are in
control of the economy on behalf of the international
imperialist capital. If at all Nigerian government
commit itself to building new refineries it will
result from either government’s intervention to
restore oil oligarchs’ falling profitability or a
product of intense mass political struggle which tend
to overturn the system.
The labour unions like PENGASSAN (oil workers’ union)
and TUC even stated that they are opposed to
privatization unless ‘it is necessary and
transparent’. The question is: what transparency is
needed for a policy that is in itself robbery of the
whole country by a tiny clique? The same unions oppose
deregulation and privatization because it will lead to
worsening living standard of the working people; why
then must the same policies be necessary in any form?
Comically, the same government that failed to probe
into hundreds of billions wasted on refurbishing the
country’s refineries now wants to sell the refineries
to their plunderers, in the name of encouraging
private investment.
Democratic Public Ownership
Without working class movement, through organized mass
political movements, opposing not only deregulation
but also demanding public ownership of the oil
industry under democratically control and management
of elected representative of working people and
consumers’ organizations, building new refineries, if
at all it is undertaken by government, will become
another conduit pipe for massive looting of public
treasury, collapse of these refineries (through
nepotistic and corrupt managements) and their eventual
privatization. Public ownership under democratic
management of the working people and consumers will
imply that management officials of oil industry will
be elected by the workers and consumer associations,
and such officials will collect salaries of averagely
skilled workers and be subject to immediate democratic
recall. This will also mean opening of financial
records of oil companies while huge profit going to
private coffer of big business sharks will be used to
undertake long term plans for sustainable energy
development.
With this, it will be possible to have plans of not
only building new refineries on sustainable basis but
also developing other sustainable energy and power
sources. All this can only be possible by developing
other sectors of the economy. Meaningfully, this will
require the extension of public ownership to the
commanding height of the economy. The tens of billions
of dollars in the nation’s foreign account will be
used to undertake a long term development of all
sectors of the economy and energy resources. This will
means among others, free, quality, massively funded,
expanded and democratically-run education and
healthcare system, provision of employment for all
able bodied citizens, efficient social infrastructures
– cheap, efficient and environment friendly transport
system (road, water, rail and air), energy system,
mechanized, poor-peasant-oriented and environment
friendly agricultural, potable water and mass public
housing.
For a new social order
But all the above programmes cannot be achieved by
‘advising’ Nigerian capitalist ruling class. It needs
to be demanded by the labour movement through mass
movement built democratically from the grassroots and
communities, which will place the working class in
power. The rot in the oil industry is also glaring in
other sectors of the economy – social services, power
generation, financial sector, etc. So, the working
class movement must understand that resistance to
deregulation policy needs mass actions which must
start with re-building mass organizations of the
working people, especially the labour movement (as a
fighting and democratic organization) that will
combine struggle for N52, 200 wage without
retrenchment, massive funding of education,
healthcare, etc, with the political struggle to take
over governance. The labour movement need to call an
immediate summit of all working people’s
organizations, pro-poor organizations, student/youth
movements, peasants/market women organizations,
socialist movements, leftwing political parties,
self-determination groups, etc to draw up plans of
building a mass working people’s political platform
that will champion the struggles. Such platform will
have to adopt a revolutionary democratic socialist
stand against neo-liberal capitalism.
A genuine socialist system will combine nationalized
economy with workers’ democracy (as against monstrous
bureaucracy of Stalinism that collapsed the
nationalized economy of Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe in the 1990’s) while taking an internationalist
outlook as a nationalized economy cannot operate in
isolation. A successful movement of the working people
in Nigeria will resonate and serve as beckon to
working and oppressed people all over the world.
Kola Ibrahim Obafemi Awolowo Univeristy (OAU), Ile-Ife.