FG proposes N7.281trn for 2017, pegs exchange
rate at N305 to $1 By Henry Umoru & Joseph Erunke ABUJA— THE Federal
Government has proposed a budget of N7,281,361,611,853 for the year 2017. The
proposed budget represents an increase of 19.95 per cent over the 2016
Appropriation of N6.07 trillion.
This came as President Muhammadu Buhari formally told the Senate, yesterday, that he would present the budget proposal before a joint session of the Senate and House of Representatives next Wednesday.
In a letter read by Senate President,
Bukola Saraki, at plenary, President Buhari said the 2017 budget would contain
proposals and packages that would lead Nigeria out of the present economic
recession.
An online news portal, Economic
Confidential, yesterday, reported that a highly placed Presidency official
confirmed the budget details in Abuja, adding that the government pegged the
exchange rate at N305 to a dollar.
According to the online news portal,
“the source disclosed that the 2017 budget was based on a crude oil
benchmark price of $42.5 per barrel and a production estimate of 2.2 million
barrels per day. “In the 2016 Budget, the crude oil benchmark price was $38 per
barrel, while production level was 2.2 million barrels per day.
Crude oil production level, however,
dropped to 1.9 million barrels per day due to the activities of Niger Delta
militants. It said: “The 2017 budget is ready and has been considered by the
Federal Executive Council (FEC). A total spending of N7,281,361,611,853 is
proposed for 2017. “Next year’s budget was also predicated on an exchange
rate of N305 to a dollar.
The figure was the prevailing exchange
rate as at the time the 2016-19 Medium Term Expenditure Framework, (MTEF) was
prepared in August 2016,” the official said.
A glance at the 2017 Budget shows
that the government proposed N2.078 trillion as capital expenditure and N2.9
trillion as recurrent expenditure. The 2017 capital and recurrent expenditures
rose by 15.44 per cent and 9.43 per cent over the 2016 Appropriation
figures of N1.8 trillion and N2.65 trillion respectively.
No salary increment for workers in 2017
Budget There was no provision for new minimum wage or salary increment for
government workers in the proposed budget for next year.
The government, however , retained the
social intervention programme of N500 billion in the 2017 Budget. “I don’t
think we should be talking about salary increment or new minimum wage.
What will really assist Nigerians and
the workers are the social intervention programmes and investments in
infrastructure. “Most of the government policies are targeted at reducing
unemployment and poverty and wealth creation.
These are areas of benefits for
Nigerians and the workers,” the source said. The Presidency official, however,
politely declined to give details of the domestic and foreign borrowings
in the 2017 Budget, saying the details would be provided by the President
during the budget presentation.
Economic recovery and growth plan A
senior officer of the Ministry of Budget and National Planning also confirmed
the budget details in Abuja. The officer revealed that President Buhari would
launch a new economic recovery and growth plan for Nigeria before the end of
December 2016.
He added that the Minister of Budget
and National Planning, Senator Udo Udoma, would be at the National Assembly
within the week to brief the legislators on the new economic recovery and
growth plan.
“This is a long term economic plan for
the nation. It is a more comprehensive economic plan. It will position Nigeria
on the path of sustainable growth and development. It is not just about growth;
it encompasses development,” the ministry’s official said.
The source confirmed that the
government had achieved a 75 per cent performance ratio of the pro-rated budget
for January-September 2016, while the recurrent expenditure had been funded 100
per cent. The 2016 Appropriation, according to the source, will run till May
2017.
“The 2016 Appropriation has a legal
backing to run for one year from May 2016 when it was assented to by the
President till May 2017,” the source said.
Budget padding President Buhari
had on November 25, 2016, warned that his government would not allow a repeat
of the padding of 2016 Budget in the 2017 Budget.
The President gave the warning at a
meeting with members of the Governance Support Group (GSG), led by Chukwuemeka
Nwajiuba, at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.
The President said: “I am waiting for
the 2017 Budget to be brought to us in council. Any sign of padding anywhere, I
will remove it.”
The President noted that he had been in
government since 1975, variously as governor, oil minister, head of state, and
Chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF), “and never did I hear the word
‘padding’ till the 2016 Budget.”
He promised that such would never
happen again under his watch. He assured that the government stands by its
tripod campaign promises of securing the country, reviving the economy, and
fighting corruption, but lamented that some people are deliberately turning
blind eyes to prevailing realities in the country.
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