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‘FG Needs $5bn To Stabilise Economy’
Minister of Finance and Co-ordinating Minister of Economy, Dr.Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, declared yesterday. That for Nigeria’s economy to retain its current stability, the excess crude account which had been depleted to the tune of $4.1billion now, will have to be jerked up to about $5 billion,
The minister made the submission at the National Assembly while fielding questions from members of the Senate Committees on Finance and National Planning during Consideration of the 2015-2017 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) as a working document for the 2015 budget insisted that Nigeria is not broke in spite of some cash fluctuations in the system.
Okonjo-Iweala said: “Nigeria as a country has quite enough assets and I think anybody inside and outside will agree to that. That is why it is very difficult when people say the country is broke, I say absolutely not because if we wanted to mobilise any of our assets to cover, we could do that. Of course it could take a little bit of time.
”However, that does not mean that we cannot have some cash flow fluctuations, we just have to manage it because we have an economy that is reasonably self-sufficient. We are able to manage ourselves well and everybody is willing to do a few things we should be able to get there”, she added.
Specifically responding to a question on whether the 2015 budget would be a workable one or not, based on its proposed parameters in the MTEF document, the minister said whatever oil price benchmark will be approved by the National Assembly, the most important thing is for the country to arrive at a price that will give leverage for enormous savings against times like this.
Her words: “My belief is no matter what is settled on at this point in time, what is pleasing and that brings us all together is the realisation that what we were trying to say a few years ago has happened and it is happening in front of us and all of us need to come together to find a solution.
Whatever the decision will be, even if we agree on another benchmark, we still need measures to be in place because we have no idea on whether the oil price will continue to drop or go up.
She said “I think we need to prepare ourselves in two or three scenarios and we can share some of the scenarios that we have been thinking about that will guide our development of those contingency measures.”I think that the excess crude account was built to be able to cushion us at times like this, when we have some kind of difficulties and I think it played that role to perfection during the crises of 2008, when oil fell to 38 to 40 dollars per barrel, even worse than what we have now. At that time we had saved up quite a lot of money as such we were able to draw at least for a quite a few months to carry the economy.
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