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Review Of 2013 Budget Proposal

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The interest and efforts put in by the media and public policy analysts in commenting on the 2013 Budget Proposal so far are quite commendable, and deserve continuing reinforcement for greater public awareness on the budgeting process. This very contribution, it is hoped, will both respond to some of the issues raised so far and also further reinforce the interest of all parties in the public finance discourse. And this will also be a good reference point for the formulators of both state and local government budgets still in the works.

The lesson from the eventual and relatively early presentation of the budget is that a people’s consistent demand for change will eventually pay off: the demand made by informed individuals and civil society organisations(CSOs) last year in particular for an early passage and committed implementation of budgets has not been in vain.

The perennial low percentage implementation of capital budgets has so far afflicted the 2012 budget. That the figure of 23.94% implementation of the 2012’s N1.34trn capital budget will be recorded by October is even a lesser evil when the canker of contract price-bloating is factored in – a phenomenon that even the President had about two weeks ago alleged makes the cost of projects in the country to be adjudged the highest in the world. The implication for public finance activists is that the Bureau of Public Procurements (BPP) must be compelled to review its pricing template in 2013 as to drastically reduce the cost of public procurements, still without slowing down the pace of contract approval. We should no longer be content with barely monitoring procurements, as this may amount to just monitoring (and validating) inefficiency and fraud – the proverbial case of garbage- in- garbage- out. Increased advocacy for the inauguration of the National Procurement Council may become more imperative in this regard.

On the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB): The prospects of the PIB positively impacting on the economy and the ordinary people are very appealing. But we must be doubly wary of emerging subterranean moves to arm-twist and torpedo the Bill, as exemplified in the declaration from some parts of the country of a sectional stance on the eventual parliamentary debate. Proper explanations and education must be given to avoid a repeat of the kind of schism that scuttled Enahoro’s 1953 patriotic motion for Nigeria’s Independence in 1956.

On the $75 Benchmark Price of Crude Oil: It is difficult to fault the precautionary stance of the Executive. That the Legislature muddled through with the addition of $2 to the 2012 bench-mark cannot justify their proposed raise of the 2013 bench-mark to $80/$85. They did the one of 2012 fiscal year solely to avoid a reduction in their N150bn haul in the recurrent budget.   The global uncertainties pointed out by the Executive cannot be whimsically waved aside, nor can the expected gains from reducing the deficit stand against the potential instability from oil-price dive in 2013. We will rather take calls for a supplementary budget from accretion to the Excess Crude Account/SWF than groan over the discomfort of adjusting to a diminished revenue inflow.

On the absence of link between the Growth Rate and Vision 20-20-20:  It is very instructive to point out the imperative to forge a link between the projected 6.5% growth rate of the Budget and NV20-20-20 average of 11% for the 2010-2013 phase.  This downward revision, though realistic, cannot be justifiably attributed to the recent flooding in the country. Recall that since after the funfair and exhilarations over the technical quality of the Plan (NV20), we have virtually gone to sleep as if we have no vision and set development targets: the NASS has gone hay wire with appropriation of wasteful expenditure, while Boko Haram has showed that even a security budget of N1trn may not be an answer to a poorly conceived  security policy; the flood may only have come to warn us of the dire need for us to organize our spiritual and physical affairs in a better manner. Let us henceforth compel the Planning Ministry/NPC to constantly link us to the Vision as we budget and implement. Right now we have a lot of grounds to cover, especially in the critical area of reducing recurrent expenditure to free more investment capital, if we want to rekindle hopes on achieving any portion of the Vision’s targets. We must insist that NASS reflect this reality in considering the 2013 budget before it.

On Fiscal Deficit and Debt Management: As was said about the MTEF figures, the deficit figure remains a projection; and deficits in general should be evaluated on the backdrop of a given country’s peculiarities: what brought about the deficit, how is it being financed, and what are the future streams of cost-benefits attached to the deficit, etc?  The ‘safe’ margins currently being pegged as international benchmarks are just necessary to check the fiscal imprudence of leaders of most developing economies.

The President still contrived to link our borrowing and debt management practices to the provisions of the Fiscal Responsibilities Act, 2007. Perhaps, it is possible to point out the dangers inherent in the literal compliance with the Act’s proviso that borrowing can be justified if, among other things, it is for capital budget. This makes it apparently logical to approve of the Finance Minister’s recent journey to China to collect a $600million (N96bn) loan for the Abuja Light Rail project being executed by a Chinese company. But wait a minute: Is N96bn not far smaller than the N130bn that can be saved from NASS’ bloated N150bn annual budget haul? Or, what is N96bn to the N191bn recovered out of Mrs Cecilia Ibru’s bank probe, or to the trillions of naira oil price/subsidy scam, pension scam, Abuja Airport and Kubwa Road Expansion contract scams, etc? The spirit of the FRA proviso is that these pervading acts of financial malfeasance must have been drastically reduced before determining what needs to be borrowed and for whatever purpose.

On Sectoral Allocations: Again, we have the problem of balancing in apportioning our resources efficiently as determined by our socio-economic circumstance and the alternative course of blindly aiming to meet some international benchmarks. All in all, the major culprit is self-aggrandisement of politicians and civil servants, which ultimately balloons the recurrent budget and decimates the impact of the capital budgets. We must find a solution to this well-identified problem. The NASS needs to yield to the popular demand for it to drastically prune its recurrent budget, in order for it to have the moral authority to prune the excesses in the other segments of the public sector’s budget. NASS cannot just be asked (by some analysts) to reduce its recurrent expenditure from N150bn to N100bn without supporting calculations of justifiable expenses. A simple calculation based even on the excessive remuneration packages which RMAFC approved for NASS members will reveal that NASS’ annual recurrent budget for personnel cost (including NASS staff), committee work, public hearing, oversight, etc, can be prudently met with a sum of N20bn (twenty billion naira); NASS can thus free at least N130bn from the N150bn it has been awarding its members. If NASS contests this fact let it obey a recent court order on it to disaggregate its budget and publish the remunerations of its members since 1999.

Currently, NASS’ budget cannot be vetted or queried by the President or Ministry of Finance/BOF, for obvious reasons. Not a few consider as high-handed and contemptuous the description (by NASS leadership) of the Appropriation Bill presented by the President as “mere estimates”. This de facto absolute power has naturally emboldened NASS to continuously balloon its budgets, with the result that other public sector and the organised private sector labour unions have successfully extracted unreasonable conditions of service and unsustainable remuneration packages from the treasury: the Customs, Immigration, SEC, FIRS, ASUU, SSANU, and PHCN, are easy references. Without equivocation, the jumbo pays /allowances of the legislators must be trimmed in the 2013 budget for us to begin the process of reasonably reducing the offensive bloat in personnel cost. Civil society organizations must constructively engage the legislators on this process to ensure desired results in the 2013 appropriations. Mere grumbling, insults and condemnation cannot help us.

 Still along this line, the expected White Paper on the Oronsaye Committee Report must not be influenced by undue consideration of possible negative impact on current job-holders. The rationalization exercise should be clinically executed. This critical exercise cannot be held down by legislative/legal hiccups. While we wait, it might as well be less wasteful to allow possible job losers to continue to receive their salaries from their homes than for them to remain in office and inflict more injury on public treasury.

On Job Creation: The continuing placement of our unemployment problem on the front burner is very commendable. What is required in this budget is a critical evaluation of the various job creation policies and programmes, to see which is relevant and/or more efficient at quickly impacting on the huge unemployment problem confronting us: let us consider the relative efficiency of YOUWIN’s targeted 80 to 100 thousand jobs in three years and the over 3.5 million jobs that can be readily realised yearly from agriculture and other QUICK-WIN proposals. We cannot afford further playing to the gallery with government-sponsored job creation programmes that have no history of success and sustainability in the country.

Power Sector: the relatively small allocation to the Sector is understandable, considering the divestiture resulting from progress in the Reform programme.  But we must sustain the vigilance to ensure continued progress, as the success of job creation and general socio-economic transformation aspiration hinges on it.

Agriculture: Despite the absolutely meager cash allocation, the commendable tax incentives will definitely impact positively on the dynamism being injected in the critical sector.

Corruption War: The realization that corruption is at the root of our failures in governance and budgetary process, and that the officially designated anti-graft agencies cannot win the war should make us decide on new ways of confronting the canker in 2013. Otherwise, we have no basis for expecting different results.

On Sports: our desire for outstanding ranking in international competitions should be based on objective consideration of our true needs vis-à-vis our level of economic development and priority needs of the masses. Japan and the US only recently started paying serious attention to football, after they had attained great economic and technological capabilities to sustain the huge investments in sports facilities. Nigeria currently imports even the jerseys and whistles used in the games. Our governments need to rationalize their level of spending on sports and religion, and not flow with the whims and clichés of a vocal few. What does it take to indigenise our sporting activities and export same to the international community, while not restricting private individuals and organisations from funding their participation in global events for now?

We believe that if these and other aspects of the budget are attended to and watched, we can make out a truly Budget of Fiscal Consolidation and Inclusive Growth. Now is the time to engage the National Assembly, and insist that the legislators show why they will receive more than N20bn for their recurrent budget in 2013; the pitfalls in 2012 approach can be avoided. The facts are so obvious we just need maturity, wisdom, good presentation, persuasiveness and mass following to get NASS members yield to the demand for prudence and social justice in the 2013 appropriation. We thus need greater public participation in the 2013 budgeting process.

 Anyanwu is an executive director at Citizens for Justice, Employment & Transparency (C-JET) in Port Harcourt.

 

Victor Anyanwu

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Nigeria’s ETF correction deepens as STANBICETF30, VETGRIF30 see 50% decline in a week

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Nigeria directs all oil, gas revenues to federation account in sweeping reform
Nigerian President Bola Tinubu has signed an order directing that all oil and gas revenues owed to the government be paid directly into the federation account, in sweeping reforms aimed at boosting public finances, the presidency said on Wednesday.
Under the law, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation keeps 30% of oil and gas profits for frontier exploration in inland basins. The presidency said those funds will now be paid into the federation account and appropriated by the government.
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NNPC also retains 30% of oil and gas sales as operational costs and receives 30% of proceeds from Production Sharing Contracts. Under the new directive, all revenues under these arrangements will flow directly to the federation account, while the company will instead receive appropriated management fees.
Royalty payments, petroleum profit taxes and other statutory revenues previously collected and retained by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) will also be paid directly into the Federation Account. The Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) will likewise remit its revenues in full, with its cost of collection to be funded through appropriation.
Tinubu’s office said deductions enabled by the law had sharply reduced net oil inflows and contributed to fiscal strain across federal, state and local governments. The president also ordered a review of the law and established an implementation committee to enforce the changes.
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BOI Introduces Business Clinic 

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The Bank of Industry (BoI) has introduced a business clinic model designed to diagnose, treat and rehabilitate the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) to ensure long-term growth and sustainability.
The Divisional Head, Business Development, BoI, Dr Obaro Osah, made this known at the bank’s Thrive Summit with the theme: “Driving Growth through Innovation and Financial Empowerment” on Tuesday in Lagos.
Osah noted that traditional banking often treated businesses as mere account opening and management relationships.
He said the BoI business clinic model was created to reimagine the essence of a bank as a specialised teaching hospital.
According to him, just as a hospital requires a thorough diagnosis before service treatment/surgery, the bank must analyse the structural health of a small business before injecting capital.
“Financial distress is often just a symptom, the disease lies in operations and adopted philosophy, strategy, or governance,” he said.
Osah noted the many MSMEs, in spite of their potential, suffer from recurring ailments: restricted cash flow, poor operational structure, lack of proper packaging and market access, poor management among others.
He said the bank’s triage and vital signs included screening SMEs by maturity stage, pulse check to assess cash flow and liquidity and market temperature to evaluate competitive landscape.
Osah said after these evaluation, advanced diagnostics, prescriptions, surgical interventions and recovery and rehabilitation would be carried out where necessary.
“Prescription without diagnosis is malpractice and the Thrive Summit ensures we treat the root cause, not just the symptoms,” he said.
The Chief Strategy and Development Officer, BoI, Dr Isa Omagu, noted that MSMEs needed more than finance to succeed.
Omagu said they needed structure, advisory, capacity building, governance, digital readiness, access to market information and the right business infrastructure to operate and scale effectively.
He said as part of the bank’s 2025-2027 Corporate Strategy, the business clinic would expand BoI’s value proposition to broaden its products and services to better reach target segments.
Omagu said by offering structured business advisory and project development support, the clinic would enable the bank deliver deeper, more holistic value to MSMEs beyond financing.
“This vision of a structured, holistic business clinic; one that strengthens MSMEs across all core business functions and makes them more bankable, competitive, digitally enabled, and sustainable, is fully aligned with our strategic initiative to develop and roll out non-financial product offerings.
“Through this initiative, BoI commits to providing business advisory for MSMEs and project lifecycle support for enterprises, and the business clinic serves as the practical platform through which this commitment comes to life,” he said.
Omagu urged MSMEs to apply the guidance received to strengthen structure, governance, and financial management.
He added that they must adopt digital tools and improve internal processes to boost competitiveness while engaging BoI as a long-term partner in building a resilient, scalable business.
Mrs Eniola Akinsete, Divisional Head, Sustainability, BoI, said adopting Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG), principles often led to business prosperity.
Akinsete, however, noted that in spite of the benefits, adoption challenges persisted.
She affirmed BoI’s support on the adoption of ESG Practices by the MSMEs.
Earlier, the Executive Director, Corporate Finance, Sustainability and Investments, BoI, Mr Rotimi Akinde, said the summit represented a shared commitment to building a stronger, more resilient business ecosystem in Nigeria.
Akinde stated that the business clinic created a platform for practical knowledge sharing where entrepreneurs and small business owners could gain actionable insights to overcome challenges and seize opportunities.
He said discussions would focus on critical areas that drive sustainable growth, including branding and marketing, financials and activities, human rights, human resources, raising capital for equity and technology.
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Dangote signs $400 mln equipment deal with China’s XCMG to speed up refinery expansion

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Nigeria’s Dangote Group has signed a $400 million equipment deal with China’s Xuzhou Construction Machinery Group to speed up the expansion of its oil refinery toward a planned 1.4 million barrels per day, the company said on Tuesday.
The additional equipment is expected to support major projects under construction across refining, petrochemicals, agriculture and infrastructure.
Dangote said the XCMG agreement would allow it to acquire a wide range of new heavy-duty machinery to complement existing assets deployed for the refinery build?out, which the company expects to complete within three years.
As part of the expansion, polypropylene capacity will rise to 2.4 million tons per year from 900,000 tons. Urea production in Nigeria will triple to 9 million tons per year, alongside an existing 3 million-ton plant in Ethiopia, positioning the conglomerate as the world’s largest urea producer, the company said.
The output of linear alkyl benzene – a key raw material for detergents – will increase to 400,000 tons annually, making Dangote the biggest supplier in Africa. Additional base-oil capacity is also planned in the programme.
Dangote Group described the equipment deal as a strategic investment aligned with its ambition to become a $100 billion enterprise by 2030.
“The additional equipment we are acquiring under this partnership will significantly enhance execution across our projects,” it said in a statement.
Owned by Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote, the $20 billion refinery began operations in 2024 after years of delays. Once fully operational, it is expected to reduce Nigeria’s heavy dependence on imported refined fuel and reshape fuel supply across West and Central Africa.
Reporting by Isaac Anyaogu; Editing by Anil D’Silva
The Nigeria-Slovenia Chamber of Commerce on Thursday urged the Nigerian business community to explore business opportunities in Slovenia to widen their horizons.
The Tide source reports that the chamber made the call at its 2025 Last Quarter Business Forum held in Lagos State.
The forum is the chamber’s routine session aimed at informing businesses about the latest opportunities of mutual benefit between both countries, encouraging people to explore them to improve their livelihoods.
Speaking at the event, which was attended by businessmen and trade regulatory agencies, the Director-General of the Nigeria-Slovenia Chamber of Commerce, Mr Uche Udungwor, described the relationship between the two countries as a bilateral economy.
Udungwor said the body, established to build, promote and facilitate trade and investment activities between Nigeria and Slovenia, had positively impacted both nations.
He said the mandates of the chamber include: “To provide a forum representative of Nigeria and Slovenia’s interests for the development and improvement of commerce and industry between the two countries.
“Also, to create, promote and sustain broad exchanges and interactions in commercial, industrial and economic fields between the countries.
“To promote cooperation on technical and scientific innovations between institutions of the countries through the exchange of regular information on trade and investment opportunities.
“To advise members on opportunities, challenges, legislation or otherwise arising from the pursuit of trade between Nigeria and Slovenia, and to encourage the exchange of ideas and views on trade matters within the context of trade promotion between both countries.”
According to him, Slovenia’s major imports include organic chemicals, agro products such as cocoa beans, iron and steel/metal scraps, wood, and mineral fuels/petroleum products.
He said the trade balance between Slovenia and Nigeria is “not quite encouraging”, citing United Nations COMTRADE data indicating that Slovenia’s imports from Nigeria in 2022 amounted to $5.7 million.
Udungwor described the Republic of Slovenia, located in Central Europe with about 2.1 million inhabitants, as a promising business frontier for Nigerians.
He noted that the country features Alpine mountains, thick forests and a short Adriatic coastline.
“Slovenia, which borders Italy to the west, Austria to the north, Croatia to the south and southeast, and Hungary to the northeast, has a 2024 GDP of 72.49 billion dollars, a sound economy and a low-risk business environment.
“Slovenia has been a member of the European Union since 2004 and of the Schengen Group since 2007. It is also a member of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
“Slovenia today is a stable, vibrant democracy that offers a stimulating business environment and represents a bridge between the Balkan, Central European and Western European countries.
“The Nigeria-Slovenia Chamber of Commerce is at your service to provide up-to-date information and advice about Slovenia’s economy, business opportunities, companies, products and services for the mutual benefit of all,” he said.
A participant, Mr Muyiwa Ajose, said his partnership with the chamber had bolstered his agro exports to Slovenia.
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