Monday 14 July 2014

Despite recent hikes

Petrol prices comparatively low in Cameroon
Senegal, CAR, Cote d’Ivoire etc. retail petrol at lower prices than Cameroon, according to informed and unimpeachable sources.
By Ayukogem Steven Ojong in Yaounde

The prices of petroleum products in Cameroon are still much lower than in some countries, especial countries in West and Central Africa. Despite the recent  readjustment of prices at retail stations, petrol still sells at 650 frs per litre, far lower than in countries like Senegal and Cape Verde where it sells at 894frs and 880frs respectively.
    The government of Cameroon kept the prices of fuel stagnant and affordable to the average Cameroonian since 2008 through a sustained increase in petroleum subsidy. This was in spite of the ever rising prices of petroleum and petroleum products on the world market. Agencies like the Hydrocarbons Prices Stabilization Fund (CSPH), SCDP and SONARA were used by government not only to regulate the prices of fuel and fuel products but to also ensure uninterrupted supply of these products throughout the national territory and irrespective of the situation at the world market.

    The build up to the recent price restructuring began in 2008 when food prices hit a record high. For several years, government ignored pressure from the IMF and World Bank to withdraw the subsidy on fuel which they considered suicidal to Cameroon’s economy.
    But the subsidy became increasingly unbearable for the government, following the sustained hikes in prices of crude oil on the world market. This was all the more because, the sole refinery in the country, SONARA, imports all the crude that it refines from the world market. Even the liquefied gas that is used in homes is also imported.
    It should be noted that between 2004 and 2013 the price of crude more than quadrupled on the world market (rising from 35 dollars in 2004 to 110.43 dollars in 2013). This increase in prices on the world market translated into the home market, with prices of petrol more than tripling between 2009 and 2013, while those of kerosene and gasoil more than quadrupled during the same period.
    To prevent its citizens being affected by the price hikes government made enormous sacrifices in terms of subsidy to fuel consumption. During the period from 2008 to 2013 government subsidy to fuel and cooking gas increased by more than three folds ie rising from 142 billion in 2008 to 434 billion in 2013 for white petroleum products (super, gasoil and kerosene) and from 13 billion to 36.5 billion for cooking gas.
    It should be pointed out that the amount spent as subsidy to petroleum in 2013 alone corresponds to 120% of the total investment budget for 2014; it is five times the budget of the ministry of public works and four times the combined budgets of the ministries of Higher Education, Secondary Education and Basic Education put together. It can also finance the construction of four hydro-dams, six reference hospitals and 2400 km of tarred road.
    And because subsidy on fuel only benefits the rich who can afford cars, and not the poor who form the majority in Cameroon, the government has decided to curtail the billions it has been pumping on fuel consumption. These funds would be diverted to other more beneficial investment and socio-economic projects, goverment authorities say.
    Then to buffer the shock of an ensuing hike in food prices, the government has taken some accompanying measures. The salaries of state workers have been raised by 5%, while some sectors of the economy have witnessed appreciable tax reductions. Also, taxi fares have been reviewed upwards. Meanwhile, studies are ongoing towards an increase in the minimum wage for all sectors in the country.

Prices of petrol (super) in some West and Central African countries as of July 2014
Country            Super in FCFA/L
Senegal                      894
CAR                          880
Cape Verde                818
Mali                            770
Cote D’Ivoire              741
DRCongo                    741
Burkina Faso               736
Ghana                          736
Gambia                        732
Mauritania                    712
Guinea Conakry           693
Togo                            660
Cameroon                    650
Congo Brazza               595
Benin                            559
Gabon                          535
Chad                            480
Guinea Equ                   480

Source: CITAC AFRICA; Elaboration     CSPH/AD2

Before New measures
Products                 Average real price (2013)    Price at the Pump              Subsidy  
Super (in fcfa/l)                802,94                                   569                       233,94   
Kerosene (in fcfa/l)          683,52                                    350                      333,52
Gasoil (in fcfa/l)               771,52                                    520                      251,52
Cooking gas ( 12.5kg)    11200                                      6000                    5200

After new measures
Super (in fcfa/1)            802,94                                      650                       152,94
Kerosene (in fcfa/1)      683,52                                      350                        333,52
Gasoil (in fcfa/1)          771,52                                       600                        171,52
Cooking gas  12.5kg bottle)      11200                                        6500                       4700

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