london —
Like thousands of Nigerians and millions of others across the developing world, higher fuel costs have irked Antonia Arosanwo.
“I am angry,” the 46-year-old mother of five said at a bus stop in Lagos, the teeming commercial capital of Africa’s most populous nation.
Her journey from Ojuelegba, a bustling suburb just 13 kilometers north of Lagos’s business district, has more than doubled in price to 700 naira (45 U.S. cents) since the government announced an end to fuel subsidies last year — allowing petrol prices to triple.
Arosanwo’s anger mirrored that of thousands of other Nigerians, whose nationwide protests last week demanding protection from rocketing inflation, spreading hunger and dwindling jobs rattled the government.
Nearly all had one core complaint: fuel prices.
Across Africa — and a string of other emerging market nations — debt-laden governments trying to shed costly fuel subsidies are running headlong into angry populations reeling from years of increasing living costs.
Egypt and Malaysia this year boosted prices to cut subsidy spending, while Bolivia’s President Luis Arce, who fended off an attempted coup in June, called this week for a referendum on fuel subsidies. The government expects gasoline and diesel subsidies to cost Bolivia some $2 billion this year.
Arce, like others, faces dollar shortages and a flagging economy.
“Difficult moments require firm, mature, thoughtful decisions and human beings who do not falter in the face of adversity, and this is precisely a moment of this nature,” Arce said in a speech in the Bolivian city of Sucre.
But the smoke of protests is clouding governments’ hopes of ending fuel subsidies, as the same stagnating economic growth that’s punching a hole in budgets is making life harder for citizens.
Leaders in Angola and Senegal are, like Nigeria, struggling to cut them.
“In a situation of cost-of-living crisis and high inflation, (more expensive fuel) becomes even unbearable,” said Bismarck Rewane, chief executive of the Financial Derivatives Co in Lagos and a government economics adviser.
Removing the subsidy, he said, must be phased in according to two principles — “One, what the government can afford (and) two, what the people can afford?”
Into the fire
Nearly every nation on earth has some form of energy subsidy, costs of which hit a record $7 trillion in 2022 — a whopping 7.1% of GDP — according to the International Monetary Fund.
Experts slam subsidies as blunt-force tools that give more to wealthy car owners than to the poor — and that they are prone to corruption and bad for the environment.
The biggest spenders, according to the International Energy Agency, are Russia, Iran, China and Saudi Arabia — countries that can, broadly, afford the costs.
But for emerging countries, saddled with costly debt and still-high global interest rates, financing these is more punishing.
“It’s acute now, because countries have fiscal problems,” said Chris Celio, senior economist and strategist with ProMeritum Investment Management. “And so then the question is, why do you have fiscal problems? Well, one reason is because you have this hole in your budget going to something that’s inefficient … and you’re having problems financing it.”
Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu announced an end to subsidies after taking office last year. But when pump prices tripled, he froze them. And when the naira currency crashed, subsidies crept back — despite higher pump prices.
Unpopular policies
Now, leaders mulling further price hikes are also nervously eyeing revolts elsewhere over unpopular economic policies. Bangladesh’s prime minister resigned after hundreds died protesting job quota changes, while Kenya’s president fired his cabinet and backtracked on tax hikes after deadly demonstrations in June.
“If there was a reluctance to increase fuel prices prior to the events in Kenya … that reluctance, if anything, is probably even higher,” said Goldman Sachs senior economist Andrew Matheny.
“Politicians around the world are tuned to this cost of living crisis … that probably does limit the willingness of policymakers to undertake reforms that, at least in the short term, might prove to be unpopular.”
That could further strain budgets. Nigeria’s subsidies cost 3% of GDP, Matheny said, and its oil company owes billions for imports. Senegal’s electricity and fuel subsidies hit 3.3% of GDP last year, while Angola’s 1.9 trillion kwanza ($2.1 billion) subsidy bill in 2022 was more than 40% of spending on social programs, according to the IMF.
Angola has pledged to scrap fuel-price supports by the end of next year, though five people died in protests over price hikes last year.
Celio of ProMeritum said a sustainable budget is key to attracting the investor cash these countries need.
In a post on X, Tinubu appealed for patience and promised social support, such as access to affordable education.
“I urge you all to look beyond the present temporary pain and aim at the larger picture,” he said, without commenting on whether he would further hike fuel costs.
But Rewane noted that “shock therapy” of higher fuel costs could have even greater consequences for Nigeria than Kenya’s proposed tax hikes did. Arosanwo, for one, questioned why she should “stop talking,” or protesting, with doubled transportation costs and as she struggles to feed her family.
“The government has a political will,” Rewane said. “But … time is something that is not a friend of everybody right now.”
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