The failure of the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari to
present its 2016 Budget proposals to the National Assembly, less than
one and a half months to the end of the current Fiscal Year is a
demonstration of its unpreparedness for governance, the Executive
Director of the Centre for Social Justice, CSJ, Mr. Eze Onyekpere, has
said.
He spoke at the roundtable meeting on Budget Transparency and Public
Engagement in Budget Process, following the release of the Open Budget
Survey 2015, in Abuja , yesterday.
“That the executive has not presented the 2016 budget to the National
Assembly until now shows the unpreparedness of the current
administration in matters of governance”, Mr. Onyekpere said.
He noted that by the provisions of the Fiscal Responsibility
Commission Act, 2007, the reviewed Medium Term Economic Framework, MTEF,
should have been approved by the National Assembly, and that the 2016
budget should have almost been passed by the legislature, by now.
His words, “Right now , we don’t have the MTEF to underpin the budget
and we don’t have the budget. The implication is that the budget is
going to be presented very late and it may not be ready until the end of
the first quarter of 2016, which has been the usual tradition. The
implications are not funny for the administration of the Nigerian
people.
That means that the capital budget will be delayed and by the time
they approve it in March, April or May, it will be raining season and
all out-door constructions will stop.
“So we are continuing the cycle of poor capital budget implementation
and of course that would mean addressing less of the needs of the
Nigerian people who are suffering infrastructure deficit and also
attending to less of the poor because the majority of Nigerians are poor
and the budget is expected to address their needs.”
What to do
Mr. Onyekpere who is a budget enthusiast said that the federal
government should hurry up the preparation of the budget and present it
to the NASS since it has already lost a lot of time with a view to
seeing what could be in an already bad situation.
“They should give it to the NASS before the Christmas and New Year
break, so that they can complete work on it before the end of the first
quarter of next year,” he said
Recurrent/Capital budgets imbalance
On the lopsidedness of the federal government budget against capital
votes, the CSJ boss said that it would remain a major challenge for the
Buhari team, considering the fact that the bulk of the recurrent goes to
personnel cost, but that it should think on how to improve the funding
of capital expenditure through saving a lot of money by plugging every
leakage and using other sources of funding outside of the Consolidated
Revenue Fund.
In a message, the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Godwin
Emefiele, called for a greater public participation in the budget
process as according to him, “a budget should not be a secret
instrument” and that the CBN would be glad to see Civil Society
Organisations, CSOs, actively participate in both the budget
preparations process and implementation monitoring.
Mr. Emefiele who was represented by the Director, Finance Department,
Mrs. Tope Omage, said, “for a budget to be effective, it must be
approved before the period which it is to be implemented,” and that the
CBN would play sufficiently its roles in the implementation of the
federal government budget.
Also speaking, Engr. Babatunde Kuye who stood in for the
Director-General of the Bureau of Public Procurement, BPP, Engr. Emeka
Eze said that the organization saved the federal government over N650
billion in inflated contracts between 2012 and 2014.
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