Wednesday, October 1, 2025 - President Bola Tinubu on Wednesday said his decision to end fuel subsidy was not an easy one, but a necessary step to rescue the economy and redirect Nigeria’s wealth to benefit ordinary citizens.
In his Independence Day broadcast to mark Nigeria’s 65th
anniversary, the President recalled inheriting what he described as a
“near-collapsed economy” and said tough choices had to be made.
“As a new administration, we faced a simple choice: continue
business as usual and watch our nation drift, or embark on a courageous,
fundamental reform path. We chose the path of reform. We chose the path of
tomorrow over the comfort of today,” he said.
Tinubu explained that subsidy payments and multiple exchange
rates had long created a system where “a tiny minority” reaped all the
benefits, while the masses got nothing.
“In resetting our country for sustainable growth, we ended
the corrupt fuel subsidies and multiple foreign exchange rates that created
massive incentives for a rentier economy, benefiting only a tiny minority. At
the same time, the masses received little or nothing from our commonwealth,” he
said.
The President stressed that money saved from subsidy removal
was being channeled into education, healthcare, security, agriculture, and
infrastructure, areas he said would improve the lives of Nigerians.
“Following the removal of the corrupt petroleum subsidy, we
have freed up trillions of Naira for targeted investment in the real economy
and social programmes for the most vulnerable, as well as all tiers of
government,” he said.
He admitted the reforms had come with hardship but assured
citizens that the sacrifice was already paying off.
“I have always candidly acknowledged that these reforms have
come with some temporary pains. However, the alternative of allowing our
country to descend into economic chaos or bankruptcy was not an option. Our
macro-economic progress has proven that our sacrifices have not been in vain.
Together, we are laying a new foundation cast in concrete, not on quicksand,”
he said.
Tinubu had, on May 29, 2023, during his inauguration as
Nigeria’s 16th President, announced that “fuel subsidy is gone,” a declaration
that immediately triggered fuel scarcity and sharp increases in pump prices
across the country.

0 Comments