Nigeria eyes $1.3 bln package to combat soaring prices
ABUJA
Students of Lorat Nursery and Primary School attend a lesson inside a classroom without electricity in Ibadan, Nigeria, Tuesday, May 28, 2024.
Nigeria's president has proposed a $1.3 billion package to combat soaring prices and food insecurity as the country battles its worst economic crisis in a generation, the Finance Minister has said.
The two trillion-naira package is still only a plan as Bola Ahmed Tinubu faces pressure to ease the burden of economic reforms he brought in after becoming president last year.
Tinubu ended a fuel subsidy and currency controls, leading to a tripling of petrol prices and a spike in living costs as the naira has slid sharply against the dollar.
The measures have hit people hard and many poor Nigerians have had to skip meals, while in the north the economic crisis has forced people to eat poor-grade rice used as fish food.
Finance Minister Wale Edun has been appointed the chairman of a new council the president set up to help "put together for his consideration a 2 trillion Naira package."
Edun said it included around $229 million towards health and social welfare and roughly $328 million for agriculture and food security.
The Finance Minister insisted the government would be able to fund the package, which he said would be implemented over six months.
He told AFP the funding would "not impose any additional burden" and was set to come partly from higher oil revenues as well as unallotted budget reserves and ongoing support from the World Bank.
The minister also outlined other proposed measures and targets such as increasing the country's limited power supply, reducing losses in the oil sector and boosting production.
Nigeria, an OPEC member, has struggled to increase its oil production due to oil theft and foreign companies shifting to offshore operations.