The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, has said that at the end of
September, N3.9tn out of the N6.1tn budgeted for the year has been
released.
The Director Special Projects in the ministry, who represented the
minister, Mr. Mohammed Dikwa, a stakeholders’ forum on reducing the cost
of governance in Abuja on Tuesday said only 18 per cent of the releases
was for capital expenses against 82 per cent for recurrent expenditure.
In a paper, “Public Sector Financial Management Reforms as a Strategy
for Cutting Cost of Governance in Nigeria”, Adeosun said that the
releases to the productive sectors of the economy remained the highest
in recent times.
She said that Nigeria’s inability to finance most of its development
projects had been largely attributed to high cost of governance in the
form of large recurrent expenditure.
She said, “In order to grow the economy and fasten the rate of growth and development, there is the need to reverse the trend.”
She said it was important to “allocate through the budgeting process, a
larger proportion of funds for massive investment in infrastructure and
other capital projects.’’
Adeosun said in the last two decades, costs associated with the running of the government in Nigeria had increased dramatically.
She added that there was a decline in the proportion of the budget allocated to recurrent expenditure.
Adeosun said that from 60 per cent in 1990 to 36 per cent in 1998, the
budget increased to 80 per cent in 2003 but dropped to 74 per cent in
2016.
She said that the rising cost of governance had been a vexed issue in economic discourse in Nigeria.
She said, “Reasons for rising cost of governance in Nigeria are issue of
inflation, misuse of public funds and corruption, increase in
population, extra-large NASS, extra-large public bureaucracy and need
for accelerated growth and development.
“Others are lack of economic efficiency and lack of well-defined rules and regulations.”
She said it showed that all tiers of government in Nigeria spent far
more than they earned such that between 2011 and 2015 Nigeria had a
consistent annual deficit of over one trillion naira in budget
execution.
Adeosun also said that the country’s external and domestic debts
amounted to over 30 per cent of national revenue during the period.
In an address of welcome, Mr Victor Muruako, Acting Chairman, Fiscal
Responsibility Commission, said the forum was the outcome of a very
critical review of the financial management framework of Nigeria.
Muruako said the country had failed to address critical issues, such as
infrastructure challenges, as well as failure to set priorities right in
the face of dwindling revenues.
Muruako said that the continued high expenditure on overhead cost against capital expenditure was unacceptable.
He said that the idea of managing public income and expenditure in a
responsible and responsive way in the larger interest of the country was
the sole responsibility of the commission.
“It is indeed about prudent management of resources based on fundamental
rules of action that provides the framework for evidence based
budgeting,’’ Muruako said.
He said in the past budgets were prepared not for the necessity and
solutions required in the system but in such ‘’careless manner’’ that
agencies only fixed figures on paper.
He said, “This is why we support the zero based budget which is
replacing the incremental budget where no critical effort is made to
look at issues.”
NAN
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