By Emma Ujah, Abuja Bureau Chief & Noel Onoja
ABUJA—The rate at which the Federal Government plans to convert its
dollar earnings from oil in 2013 will be N160 to the dollar. This is one
of the highlights stated by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating
Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in her budget
breakdown, yesterday.
This implies that the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, will allow the
naira to depreciate further from the current N155 to the dollar to N160.
Giving the breakdown of the 2013 budget, the Minister of Finance gave
the indication of the plan of government to allow the exchange rate of
the naira to dip.
The government is envisaging that the production of 2.5 million
barrel per day, on which the 2013 budget is predicated,may not be
realised due to continued oil theft and pipeline vandalisation that is
currently hindering production and export of Nigeria crude.
Only last week Shell declared a force majure on oil export as a
result of pipeline vandalisation. The way to make up is to adjust the
exchange rate of the naira.
What amendment seeks
Okonjo-Iweala disclosed that the executive was preparing an Amendment
Bill on the 2013 Appropriation, which would be forwarded to the
legislature shortly, with a view to addressing three main areas which
she described as “challenges” for the budget.
They included reductions in overhead costs, re-allocation of capital expenditure and the erosion of the SURE-P funding.
She said: “At the beginning of the year, when we reviewed the National
Assembly’s version, there were several challenges which had to be
revisited.
“There were three main challenging areas, namely: reductions in the
wage bill, major capital expenditures which had been re-allocated, and
re-allocations of the budget for the SURE-P program.
“We successfully resolved these changes in the past two weeks, and
Mr. President will send a proposal to the National Assembly for
amendment of the 2013 budget.”
The minister also disclosed that the issue of the supervision of the
N100 billion Constituency Projects had been resolved as they have been
brought under the supervision of the Minister for Special Duties.
She said: “Let me also add here that Mr. President has assigned the
Minister of Special Duties to assist in overseeing the implementation of
the N100 billion constituency projects across the country.”
Budget breakdown
The breakdown of the 2013 budget showed that security took the lion
share as the Federal Government has allocated the single largest
budgetary provision of N950 billion to security, out of the total
aggregate expenditure of N4.987 trillion in the 2013 fiscal year.
The total expenditure outlay for 2013 represented a 6.2 percent
increase over the 2012 budget of N4.697 trillion and about N600 billion
above the executive proposal of N4.92 trillion presented to the National
Assembly by President Goodluck Jonathan on October 10, 2012.
According Okonjo-Iweala, who gave the breakdown of the budget at a
briefing in Abuja, yesterday, non-debt recurrent expenditure took, N2.38
trillion; statutory transfers, N387.97 billion; debt services N591.76
billion and N1. 62 trillion earmarked for capital expenditure,
representing 32.5 percent of aggregate spending.
Major highlights of the 2013 budget included: oil production of 2.53
million barrels per day, compared to 2.48 million barrels per day in
2012.
Benchmark oil price of $79 per barrel, up from $72 per barrel in 2012
and the $75 per barrel proposed by the executive; a projected real GDP
(Gross Domestic Product) growth rate of 6.5 percent and an average
exchange rate of N160/$.
Revenue
With revenue projections put at N4.1 trillion for the year,
Okonjo-Iweala said the Federal Government would run a budget deficit of
about 1.85 percent of the GDP, down from 2012 figure of 2.85 percent and
2.17 percent, initially proposed by the executive.
According to her, “this is well within the threshold stipulated in
the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007 and clearly highlights our commitment
to fiscal prudence.”
The minister said the Federal Government remained focused on critical
infrastructure and the creation of an environment necessary for private
sector operators to play leading roles in the nation’s socio-economic
transformation efforts.
Sectoral allocations
Detailed breakdown of the allocations according to Dr. Okonjo-Iweala
was: “Critical infrastructure (including power, works, transport,
aviation, gas pipelines, and Federal Capital Territory), N497 billion;
human capital development (i.e. education and health), N705 billion; and
agriculture/water resources, N175 billion.
“We also allocated over N950 billion for national security purposes,
comprising: N320 billion for the Police, N364 billion for the Armed
Forces, N115 billion for the Office of the NSA, and N154 billion for the
Ministry of the Interior.
“For 2013, the SURE-P programme has a projected allocation of N180
billion, augmented by the 2012 unspent balances of N93.5 billion. This
amount will be used to make further progress in the provision of social
safety net schemes, maternal and child healthcare, youth development and
vocational training for Nigerians.”
Borrowing
In spite of the deliberate strategy at keeping debts low, the minister
disclosed that the need for more infrastructure investment would drive
the nation into floating $1 billion Eurobond and Nigeria Diaspora Bond
within the year.
According to her, the Nigeria Diaspora Bond would give Nigerians
abroad the opportunity to invest their savings in their home country
and, therefore, contribute to the economic development efforts back
home.
She said: “We recognise that Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit remains
one of the binding constraints to growth in the economy. Therefore, our
strategy is to prioritise infrastructure investments in the budget, and
also to leverage additional external financing for infrastructure
investments in the country.
“For example, budget 2013 has some important infrastructure projects
in the transportation sector, such as the second Niger Bridge.
“We plan to augment our domestic resources with a proposed $1 billion
EuroBond as well as a Nigeria Diaspora Bond, which will harness savings
from Nigerians abroad.
“These additional financial resources will be invested in various
infrastructure projects such as building the country’s gas to power
infrastructure.
“We plan to use PPPs aggressively, working with the Sovereign Wealth
Fund, which will attract co-investors from home and abroad such as
pension’s funds, institutional investors and so on.”
$79 bpd benchmark
On the oil benchmark, the minister said: “We have stressed the need
to build a buffer. We have said it all but at the end of the day, we
have a collaborating process and in that process we thought that, well,
the biggest challenges we face in the budget have now appeared and the
National Assembly is now willing to constructively work on that.
“So let us not, for the sake of both moving this budget and Nigeria
forward, decide to live with this benchmark and then next year,
hopefully, we will have another more collaborative way of setting a
proper benchmark that will work for all Nigerians. We have accepted it.
“We will try to mitigate the risks by trying to see how we can
strengthen our buffers in collaboration with the CBN and then next year
things will be better.
“My own suggestion is that maybe we need to move to the module used
by Chile, which has an independent body that determines the benchmark of
copper which is their main commodity.
“When you have an independent group, not the executive, not the
parliament certainly in a professional way, we are not the only
commodity-dependent economy in the world.
“There are so many, and people have evolved different ways of dealing
with this benchmark. You remember eight years ago we didn’t have a
benchmark. It didn’t even exist.
“This scrutiny that we are all now focusing on, people have
forgotten. We were all just going like a yoyo. Our economy was moving up
one year and crashing the next and we showed you that was why our
economy was growing by 2.4 percent because we couldn’t control the
volatility in our economy in the commodity market.
‘We brought stability’
“Today people are so complacent. Now that’s what I keep saying. When
we make a success of something in Nigeria, people rubbish it and then
they move on to the one you have not done.
“It is barely eight years since we began to enjoy the stability.
Forty something years of our history we were not doing it, so I think
Nigerians should really be a bit fair, now we have brought the stability
and people are wondering ‘what is macro, we can’t eat that’.
“Off course, you cannot. But if you don’t have it, you can’t even begin to think of what to eat.
“Now we can focus on what we need to eat and it is government job to
work on that out rightly. So this benchmark, maybe we need to move to
the next level of having an independent way of checking the benchmark.
Whatever they bring all of us will accept it and work with it.
“In Ghana they have been very wise. They have legislated the way it
is set. It is not a political issue. The law is set. They move with it.
“So those are some of the things we need to look at and I believe we
are having a very constructive discussion with the National Assembly on
this issue and my hope and prayer is that we are able to move to that
level so that benchmarking will no longer be an issue of discussion.”
Building buffers
According to the minister, the administration has commenced the
implementation of an aggressive buffer-building strategy to cushion any
future shock from the international oil market.
She said: “Government is also building up the necessary savings to
cushion the economy against a possible global recession or collapse of
oil prices.
“For instance, the balance in the excess crude account has increased
from $4.22 billion in August 2011 to about $9 billion at the end of
2012. In addition, we have launched Nigeria’s Sovereign Wealth Fund,
with an initial capitalisation of $1 billion, and we hope to increase
this Fund further in the future.
“Our foreign reserves have also grown steadily, and now stand at
$47.38 billion as at the end of February 2013. It is the highest level
for almost three years.”
In his presentation, Director-General of the Budget Office, Dr.
Bright Okogu, said the administration would work towards greater
monitoring of budget implementation in the year, with a view to ensuring
value-for-money on all projects.
He added that Federal Government was also concerned about non-full remittance of revenue by government agencies.
“The MDAs must realise that the revenue they generate doesn’t belong
to the Chief Executive Officer and his staff but the federal government
and Nigerians” , he said.
Dr. Okogu also said that crude oil theft was a reason for massive
revenue loss to the nation as vandals and illegal oil bunkering
continued to take tolls on the nation’s revenue, as well as, the
environment owing to pipeline vandalism-related spillage.
by vanguard news
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