Nigerian Parliament Sets Date on Passing Delayed Budget
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, center, sits with the National Assembly leadership after submitting his 2016 budget in Abuja, Nigeria, December 22, 2015. Parliamentarians say the budget should be passed on March 17 after several delays.
Nigerian parliamentarians say the country’s budget should be passed
on March 17, following multiple delays after copies of the document went
missing and huge irregularities were revealed.
President Muhammadu Buhari announced Nigeria’s biggest ever budget
in December 2015, increasing capital spending by 20 percent to 6.1
trillion naira ($30.6 billion) and predicting a doubling of the deficit
to 2.2 trillion naira ($11 billion) in 2016. Buhari’s budget came amid
difficult circumstances, as the West African oil giant—which depends on
petroleum products for more than 90 percent of the value of its
exports—struggled to deal with plummeting oil prices. Oil is now trading at around $30 per barrel, down from more than $100 in 2014.
Debating and implementation of the budget has suffered several delays since then. Hard copies of the document went missing from the Senate—the
upper house of the Nigerian parliament—in January. After Buhari
submitted an amended version of the budget to the Nigerian parliament,
huge discrepancies were discovered, including
a 3.8 billion naira ($19 million) allocation for the State House
Medical Center, which treats only a few patients including the president
and his family, compared to just 2.7 billion naira ($13.6 million) for
the construction of hospitals throughout the country.
Representatives
of both houses of the Nigerian parliament have now held talks with
government ministries on their respective allocations and Abdulmumin
Jibrin, who chairs the budget committee in the lower house, said its
report on the budget should be submitted to both houses on March 16. “So
it is safe for us to conclude that the 2016 Appropriation Bill will be
passed on the 17th of March,” said Jibrin using the budget’s official
title, Reuters reported.
The fiasco led to Buhari firing Yahaya Gusau, the director general of Nigeria’s budget office, earlier in February. Nigeria is also reportedly negotiating loans with the World Bank and other international financial institutions to fund the massive spending it has outlined for the year.
This is not the first time Nigeria’s national budget has been subject to delay. The 2015 fiscal plan was only passed by parliament in late April and approved by former President Goodluck Jonathan in May, after he had lost the election to Buhari but before the new president had been inaugurated.
Nigerian Parliament Sets Date on Passing Delayed Budget
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