President Muhammadu Buhari has presented a N7.298 trillion 2017 budget before the joint session of the National Assembly.
The presentation was made on Wednesday, December 14, 2016 in Abuja with members of the Senate and House of Representatives in joint session.
President Buhari said at the ceremony that government benchmarked the 2017 budget at N305 against one US$1.
He said the budget is also predicated on daily crude oil production of at least 2.2 million barrels and at $42 per barrel.
Buhari said that 2017 budget proposal is 20.4 per cent higher than that of the 2016 estimate.
He explained that for the country to effectively diversify from oil, it would need oil money for the movement.
Tagged budget of economic recovery and growth, he said, it was centered on agriculture and manufacturing.
He said that the budget would bring the nation out of recession.
The President said that government would continue to fortify “our defence’’ and spend on it till “all our enemies within and without are subdued.”
He said that government would retain N500 billion social intervention fund in the 2017 budget.
The Senate President, Bukola Saraki and the House Speaker, Yakubu Dogara received President Buhari.
The President appealed to governors to make land easily accessible to farmers to boost food production.
Earlier in the morning, protesting Super Falcons were at National Assembly gate to draw attention of Buhari who was going to present 2017 Budget.
Some people have taken to twitter to talk about the budget.
The House had mandated its joint committees on Finance, Appropriation, National Planning and Economic Development, Legislative Budget and Research and Aids, Loans and Debt Management to further scrutinise the document.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Buhari had on Oct. 4, forwarded a request to the National Assembly seeking for approval of the 2017 to 2019 MTEF and FSP.
Moving the motion for the adoption of the MTEF/FSP, House Leader, Rep. Femi Gbajabiamila, said Section 11(2) of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2007, provides that “the MTEF shall be considered for approval with such modifications if any, as the National Assembly finds appropriate by a resolution of each House of the National Assembly”.
He further noted that Section 11 (3) of the FRA, 2007, states that “the MTEF shall contain, among other things, a macro-economic framework setting out the macro-economic projections for the next three financial years.
“The underlying assumptions for those projections and an evaluation and analysis of the macro-economic projections for the preceding three financial years”.
He said that some analysts forecasts that the shortage of forex supply may push exchange rate to as high as N350 to the dollar in the official and N500 in the parallel markets.
He recommended that “the budgeted exchange rate of N290 per dollar is unrealistic and should be moved to at N350 to encourage foreign capital inflows”.
On crude oil, he said that “the proposed oil benchmark is 42.50 dollars per barrel with a daily production of 2.2million barrels per day.
“Both seems to be realistic as oil is currently trading at about 50 dollar per barrel”.
According to him, though there is a steady improvement in oil prices, the government has chosen to play safe and benchmark oil price at 42.50 dollars, 45 dollars and 50 dollars for 2017, 2018 and 2019.
Buhari explained that “with current price level of over 50 dollars per barrel and Nigeria’s current output at 1.9 million barrels per day, the estimates are conservative enough especially with OPEC output freeze last week”.
He maintained that the revenue target of N4.169 trillion and total expenditure of N6.687 trillion were audacious to move the country out of recession.
According to him: “These are achievable only on effective combination of strong fiscal and monetary tools by government, increasing the tax base in the country.
“Curtailing militancy in the Niger Delta and injecting back looted funds, diversification of the country’s revenue sources, controlled government spending and strong anti-leakage and
anti-corruption drives.”
anti-corruption drives.”
He stated that GDP was projected to grow at 3.02 per cent in 2017, while inflation was expected to moderate to 12.92 per cent.
Also consumption was projected to increase to N80.5 trillion.
“However, GDP growth at end of third quarter, 2016 slowed to 2.24 per cent, while inflation rose to an all-time high of 18.3 per cent. (NAN)
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