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Buhari Seeks $30bn Foreign Loan …Wants N180bn Virement In 2016 Budget …Explains Why 2017 Budget’ll Hit N6trn
President Muhammadu Buhari has forwarded requests to the National Assembly to approve external borrowing plan of $29.960billion for execution of key infrastructural projects across the country between 2016 and 2018.
The president also requested for virement of N180.8 billion in the 2016 budget for provision of needed votes for some sectors.
The president made the requests in two separate letters to the Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Yakubu Dogara which were read on the floor of both chambers, yesterday.
Buhari, in the external borrowing plan, explained that targeted projects cut across all sectors with special emphasis on infrastructure , agriculture, health, education, water supply, growth and employment generation.
Other sectors he said included poverty reduction through social safety net programmes and governance and financial management reforms, among others.
According to him, the cost of the projects and programmes under the borrowing (rolling) plan is $29.960billion.
This is made up of proposed projects and programmes loan of $11.274billion, Special National Infrastructure projects $10.686billion, Euro bonds of $4.5 billion and Federal Government budget support of $3.5billion.
He explained further that the loan was very necessary in view of the serious infrastructure deficit in the country.
He said the country had huge infrastructure deficit and enormous financial resources required to fill the gap in the face of dwindling resources.
“This is in addition to the inability of our annual budgetary provisions to bridge the deficit. It has become necessary to resort to prudent external borrowing to bridge the financing gap.
“This will largely be applied to key infrastructure projects namely power, railway and roads among others”, he added.
Buhari in the virement request, said the N180 billion would be moved from monies already appropriated for special Intervention programmes both recurrent and capital for funding of critical recurrent and capital items.
He said the request arose due to shortfalls in provisions for personnel costs; inadequate provision ab initio for amnesty programme; continuing requirements to sustain the war against insurgency; and depreciation of the naira.
The letter reads in part:” In the course of implementing the 2016 Appropriation Act, several MDAs have presented issues pertaining to salary shortfalls, the settlement of part of which has led to the depletion of the Public Service Wage Adjustment. “This Vote, which had a provision of N33, 597,400,000, now has a balance of N2, 758,296,000.
“The provision for NYSC in the 2016 budget is inadequate to cater for the number of corp members to be mobilised this year.
“In fact, an additional N8.5billion is required to cover the backlog of 129, 469 corps members who are due for call-up but would otherwise be left out till next year due to funding constraints.
“Similarly, the provision for meal subsidy for the Unity Colleges is inadequate for the number of students in the schools.
“Due to the devaluation of the naira, the budgetary provisions for the foreign missions are no longer sufficient to cover all their costs.”
Meanwhile, the Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun, yesterday, told the Senate that the Federal Government would sustain its over N6trillion national budget in the 2017 appropriation bill, expected to be submitted by President Muhammadu Buhari, after the consideration and subsequent approval of the pending 2017—2019 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP) by the National Assembly.
Adeosun told members of the Senate Committee on Finance, led by its Chairman, John Owan Enoh (PDP, Cross River Central), who were on oversight visit to her ministry, that government would maintain its over N6trillion annual budget because it spends over N3 trillion out of the budget sum for salaries, pension and debt services, leaving a paltry amount for capital projects.
She insisted that the country would be gambling with the figure for now as it can’t go below it anymore in the face of high expectations from its citizens.
Enoh had told the minister that the committee’s visit was “actually driven by the collective decision of the Senate a few weeks ago that all its standing committees embarked on oversight visits to all ministries, departments and agencies of government.
“So, for us as a committee, in addition to having to respond to that requirement, it also became imperative that we embark on this maiden visit.
“Our hope is that on this visit, the minister, quite apart from giving us some highlights of the implementation of the Ministry of Finance budget in the year 2016, would also throw some highlights on few of some of the things that she feels the committee should know, especially the performance of our economy, no matter how briefly, and some things that we could take advantage of because we oversight her ministry, so that we don’t just hear as secondhand but hear as firsthand.
“This is October, the Medium Term Expenditure Framework is already sent to the National Assembly for approval so that the 2017 budget can come. We have a few revenue challenges, most of all is the performance of the independent revenue of government. So, we think that the minister would take advantage of this meeting and be able to bring us to speed with a few of these things,” he added.
The committee berated the minister for what it described as her poor handling of agencies under her watch, resulting in monumental leakages and loopholes.
“There are a lot of drain pipes and leakages in the customs, I don’t think that the ministry under your watch has given sufficient attention to the customs in particular,” Senator Hope Uzodinma, a member of the committee and chairman, Senate Committee on Customs told her.
Responding, Adeosun disclosed that government’s efforts at realising money from revenue generating agencies to meet the expectations of Nigerians were being hampered by high-level corruption still existing in the agencies, especially the Nigerian Customs Service, which she described its men as “cohesive crooks hard to break.”
To this end, she solicited an urgent intervention of the National Assembly in curbing the loopholes and excessive leakage not only in the revenue sourcing agencies but also all other Federal Government’s agencies, saying they were stinking of corruption.
The minister particular disclosed that about N2 trillion from the budget was going out for salaries of workers and pensions alone, and the sum of N1.4 trillion was also going out for debt servicing, saying the situation considerably slashes down the budget sum, a development, she noted, made it impossible to downsize the budget.