Budget 2019 and Economic Prospects for the Coming Year
On Friday 21
December, just two days before their recess, President Muhammadu Buhari
presented Budget 2019 before a joint session of the National Assembly. The bedlam was exceptional, if not
unexpected. The president was interrupted several times by booing and heckling
from the floor. It was such an unseemly spectacle. Senate President was later
to dismiss Budget 2019 as “hopeless”.
Let’s look at the
figures first.
The total figure
for Budget 2019 estimates is N8.833 trillion. This contrasts with the Budget
2018 figure of N9.120 trillion, representing a -3.1 percent deviation from the
new estimates. The total government revenues accruable, oil as well as non-oil,
are put at N6.970 for 2019, as against N7.166 for the previous year. This
amounts to a decrease of -2.7 percent. Of the ball park figure for 2019,
capital expenditure will consume some N2.031 trillion, as contrasted with the
higher figure of N2.873 for the previous year, representing a whopping fall of
-29.3 percent. Recurrent non-debt expenditure for 2019 stands at N4.400
trillion, as contrasted with N3.513 trillion, representing an increase of 25.2
percent. Debt service costs amount to N2.140 for 2019 as against a marginal
decrease of N2.014 trillion, representing a 6.3 percent improvement. The total
budget deficit for 2019 stands at N1.860 trillion as contrasted with N1.954 for
2018, representing a marginal decrease of -4.8 percent.
The assumptions
underlying Budget 2019 are also quite unrealistic. The oil benchmark is being
pegged at US$60 per barrel, at a time
when Brent crude has gone down to US$52.72 pb from a peak of US$88 pb. Even
though the production benchmark of 2.3 mpb can be said to be fairly
realistic, the exchange rate of N305/US$
and projected growth of 3.01% and inflation expectations of 9.68% may not.
Some of the
notable elements in the new budget estimates include: provisions for fuel price subsidy, Niger-Delta Amnesty programme funding
and minimum wage increase. The administration has set up a committee to advise possible
options for funding the increase in minimum wage without at the same time
incurring additional borrowing. In addition, some N45 billion is being budgeted
for recapitalisation of the Bank of Agriculture to subsidise loans to farmers to
ensure single digit interest rates for agricultural credit.
It is evident that Nigeria's growth prospects
remain quite fragile. Despite the significant increase in global oil prices and
revenues accruable public finances remain in dire straits. For example, some N2
trillion remain hoarded in ministries, agencies and departments of government
(MDAs). As of 31st December 2018, these funds are yet to be remitted
to the federation account as part of the funding for the 2018 budget. As we
enter the New Year, the total implementation for budget 2018 has not exceeded
50 percent.
And here we are, with a much reduced
budget 2019. The reduction of the ball park figure from N9.12 trillion in 2018
to N8.83 trillion for 2019 means that the train is in reverse gear. Our
population increases annually by a rate of 3.1% and with an inflation rate of
more than 11% annually, it means that our actual budget provision has shrivelled
considerably. What is even worse, the fall in capital expenditure to recurrent
expenditure from 27% in 2018 to 23% in 2019 means that growth will reduce while
poverty and unemployment will increase. The most critical elements that make
for growth are capital investments that increase value and expand economic
opportunities.
One of the biggest challenges facing
our country is geopolitical uncertainty. A friend sent me a video clip a few
days ago about the killings in Zamfara. Hundreds of poor defenceless farmers
were mowed down in broad daylight. The trigger-happy killers went over the
dying, moaning people, taunting them to “get up if you man enough”! The gory
sight was too much for me to bear. Zamfara is not alone. People are being
slaughtered in Borno, Adamawa, Birnin Gwari and the Middle Belt.
I am not particularly a great fan of
Amnesty International, even though I was once a student volunteer . But we
would be fools to overlook their recent report on Nigeria. It paints a
frightening, damning picture of what appears to be genocide, with tacit
government connivance, against an unarmed and defenceless people. The
president, during his budget address to national assembly, did not say anything
that persuades me that he is truly bothered.
From what we know about our
electoral-political cycles, such geopolitical tensions are likely to intensify
in the coming two quarters. What that could mean is lower productivity in
agriculture and the real sector, pressure on the exchange rate as the rich dive
for cover by exchanging naira for dollars, capital flight and general
despondency. Domestic and foreign investors will prefer to stay action until
the dark clouds pass.
This will also mean additional
pressure on the exchange rate, which a politically controlled CBN will apply
its reflex action of maintaining or even upping the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR).
There is a deep public distrust of our key economic and financial institutions:
NPA, FIRS, CBN and others. Nobody believe they are any longer working in the
public interest. The government has no credible economists to advise them. They
are all groping in the dark like disembodied spirits wandering about aimlessly
in ancient, haunted cemeteries. Many are
no longer sure that the president that addressed the national assembly and the
nation on Friday 21 December is even the same compassionate and loving man that
we voted for in 2015. It is, clearly, not well with the very soul of our
republic. We should therefore brace ourselves for more storms in 2019.
Be that as it may, I am persuaded
that the long-term prospects for our country are humongous. We need a new crop
of leaders who understand the imperatives of building a trillion dollar
world-class economy that is hooked on to the global knowledge economy. I strongly believe that we are pursuing the
wrong policies and that we don’t even an economic strategy.
We need a new development strategy
for the country anchored on an agriculture-based mass industrial revolution. We
must also design a five-year economic development plan. We must reinvent
government as a developmental servant state driven by a professional and
merit-based civil service. I would advocate having a zero-based budgetary
process that avoids sinking public funds into pork barrels. Rigorous
implementation must be the watchword, linked to accountability for impact and
results. Government must be run as a scientific enterprise – with panache,
passion and creativity. And peace must be its foundation. Nigeria can be made to
work. This is our calling and our destiny.
Happy New Year to you all!
Wonderful commentary Sir, I thank God for the vast knowledge you have on the Nigerian problems, I've never doubted your ability to fix them when the time comes. It's God who appoints Kings and Leaders he will give you the wherewithal to fix Nigeria, the fact that you plan to revisits the five(5) development plan is an indication of a man who knows his onion. No flattery you're but the only Presidential candidate who speak the language of true leadership, you reminds me of Paul Kigame. God bless your knowledge and happy new year!
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