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Diversity of opinions
77,075 次观看 • 1 年前 •via X (Twitter)
10 条评论

Talking nonsense with confidence. Continue

Intellectual jargons, but there's freedom of expression.

He is right. Petrol should be sold for at least N3,000 per liter in Nigeria so that we can be on same page with US. Poor people always defending the people impoverishing and reducing them to slaves in their own country. The only reason why black Africans are the poorest globally.

He’s saying the truth

We are not expecting petrol to drop to ₦200/L. All we are saying is that if NNPC, after the removal of subsidy, could sell a liter at ₦580/L and the product was imported, why should Dangote's product be priced higher than NNPC's imported price?

Nigeria is not subsidizing anybody, the so-called subsidy is the grandmother of stealing.

Libya has more reserves and produces more crude per barrel. But its population is less than 7 million. But, in Nigeria, it can be significantly cheaper if the will to make all the refineries in the future and the NNPC can sell more affordable to local refineries. NNPC should work for Nigeria, and Dangote should delay buying Arsenal.

Lmao bro literally broadcasting his illiteracy 😂 Those country he mentioned are Oil producing countries, has abundance of reserves, production cost is extremely low due to them having the resources already ( they extract the resources as it’s freely given by nature and all they pay for is the refinery production costs) and also they literally also run an oil industry. So all this money they make from the crude business they literally put it back into subsidizing the oil to make it cheap for the citizens. Make money off the oil, pay back your the citizens who owns the oil. Here nothing goes on in Nigeria they way it’s suppose to be after all the loans they literally keep taking… how’d you have oil in reserve then

It’s annoying to see people trying to compare America and Nigeria when it comes to wages, without understanding the full picture. In the U.S., the minimum wage is about $12 per hour. If someone works 8 hours a day, 5 days a week, that amounts to 40 hours per week. Over a month, that’s roughly 160 hours. This would give a monthly income of $1,920. Now, if you convert $1,920 to Nigerian naira, based on an exchange rate of #1,600 per dollar, it comes to around #3,072,000. In comparison, the minimum wage in Nigeria is #70,000 per month. How can anyone with a clear mind even compare these two? The difference is staggering. Trying to put these on the same level is not only misleading, but it ignores the huge gap in earning power and the cost of living between the two countries.

Facts
