The Director General of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Mr. Segun Ajayi-Kadir, has said that the recent hike in the price of petrol from N568 per litre to N855 will compound the rising cost of products and services challenge confronting the Nigerian real sector.
The Director General said in a statement that the price increase would harm the manufacturing sector, which had been struggling.
He stated that the petrol price hike would lead to higher prices of other commodities in the face of the dwindling disposable income of the average Nigerian.
Ajayi-Kadir admitted that with a global increase in crude oil prices and Nigeria’s dependence on imported fuel due to non-operational refineries, a price hike was inevitable.
“The increase in the cost of crude oil will have a direct impact on the cost of importing fuel into Nigeria and expectedly, the NNPC would at some point, adjust domestic prices.
“Also, right from the time fuel subsidy was either reduced or removed, it became inevitable that the price may rise,” he said.
According to him, the sharp decline in the value of the naira would also impact the importation of petrol.
The MAN DG noted that as more of the income of Nigerians goes to transportation and energy, they would find themselves with less money to spend on other essentials, leading to a decrease in demand for non-essential goods.
The economic scenario is likely to contribute to a further increase in inflation, putting additional pressure on household budgets, according to Ajayi-Kadir.
He added that the manufacturing sector’s vulnerability to the developments included the rise in the costs of production and logistics, forcing manufacturers to increase their prices and risk a buildup of unsold inventory and reduced capacity utilisation, which would potentially lead to a downturn in manufacturing performance.
GIK/APA