Tag: 2026 Budget

  • Reps pass N58.472 trillion 2026 budget for second reading, adjourn plenary for budget defence

    Reps pass N58.472 trillion 2026 budget for second reading, adjourn plenary for budget defence

    The House of Representatives on Thursday passed for second reading the 2026 appropriation bill presented to the National Assembly by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on December 19, 2025, while adjourning plenary for two weeks to allow for budget defence by MDAs.

    The appropriation bill, which was scheduled for debate on Wednesday but was deferred to Thursday, was unanimously passed by the House after an executive session by members.

    The only debate on the document was presented by the House Leader, Prof. Julius Ihonvbere, who echoed the words of the President, who described it as a defining moment in the national journey, a journey to peace, growth, stability, and sustainable development.

    Ihonvbere said, “Development that is not sustainable is only temporary, it’s not development at all, and you cannot have development without growth. The process of promoting growth is very challenging, difficult, and painful.

    “That is what we are going through. It can be more painful if we inherited distorted and disarticulated institutions and structures of our politics and economy, which was exactly the case with the present administration.

    “Nobody has ever promised that the journey of restructuring, repositioning, and refocusing our political economy will not be painless. Nobody has ever made that promise. Nobody assumed that the present administration went to space to bring a new set of Nigerians to join it in making Nigeria a better place. It is the same Nigerians who have been here since Shagari, Obasanjo, Jonathan, and Buhari, who precipitated the situation that was inherited.

    “So it’s a challenge, and I’m saying this so that we all put ourselves in the shoes of those trying to manage the economy. I’m not saying they are saints or that they are perfect. It is our job as a national assembly, representing 360 constituencies, fully elected by the people, to guide them to do the right things at all times.

    “Statistics can be good. Sometimes they can mislead, and sometimes they may not reflect our dreams and hopes. But we can’t run away from statistics. We say that the economy before the 2026 budget grew by 3.98 percent. A decent figure compared to many other developing countries.

    That inflation is down to 14.45 percent from about 25 percent, all revenues increased, exports grew, and direct foreign investment expanded. I think we all see the activities of the president. From one country to another, in the midst of winter, trying to sign this rich understanding with other countries. The recent visit to Turkey is an example.

    “I will encourage my colleagues to Google Turkey, and you will discover it’s one of the most developed countries in Europe. But it doesn’t get credit. It gets more international visitors and more international investment than many countries in Europe, including Britain, France, and Belgium.

    “So Turkey is a good country that we can partner with in many ways to move our world forward. The Dollar has remained stable. We promised in the last budget to bring it down to 1,400 from over 1,800. We have not printed a single Naira since this government came into office.

    “It has helped us to stabilise. Our external reserve is at a seven-year high of 47 billion US dollars, sufficient to provide over 10 months of aid.

    This is the background of the 2026 budget. But what are the promises that will be made? To give us a stronger discipline in budget execution and to improve revenue performance.

    We all join hands to give them the new tax laws to ensure revenue generation. We block leakages and generate revenue enough to support their budget and consolidate macroeconomic stability.

    Read Also: Reps seek govt’s intervention in Ondo, Ogun communities’ oil field dispute

    “I know the President is committed. I know that many in his team are committed. I also know that those of us in the National Assembly, especially the House of Representatives, are committed to ensuring that these promises are implemented.

    “What then are our expectations of the 2026 budget as presented? Total revenue expectation is N34.33 trillion from the total expenditure of N58.18 trillion, with a deficit of N23.85 trillion and recurrent non-debt of N15.25 trillion, while capital expenditure will be N26.08 trillion.

    “I think this is a mark of commitment to sustainable development, where your capital is higher than recurrent. But what you find in many instances is that recurrent outweighs capital expenditure. Most of the money goes into salaries and allowances and other costs, whereas capital is not. We have put the oil benchmark at 64.85 dollars. Oil production is at 1.84 million barrels per day.

    “The government has prioritised security and defence, and with the current cooperation with other countries, from the EU to the United States, we can rest assured that we will have a whole new era and approach to tackling the issue of security.

    “I believe that this administration is committed to ensuring that if we all work together, put ideas together, we commit to a better Nigeria, we build a kind of socio-political economic environment that will encourage Nigerians, in their respective constituencies and communities, to reach the highest points of their creative and productive abilities. Nigeria will be a better place, not just for us, but for generations to come.

    “It also encourages those who will come into power well into the future to build on the achievements of the present government, legislators, businessmen, women, and prioritise the welfare, security, and bedrock of the United States.”

    Speaker of the House, Abbas Tajudeen, said about 70% of the budget has already been debated earlier, in 2025, adding that “there is very little that is new. If we are comfortable with the professorial introduction of this budget, we can go ahead and ask the question.”

  • How to budget for 2026

    How to budget for 2026

    January is that month when we all look at our bank alerts and wonder where the money went. Between the “Detty December” fun and the school fees or rent waiting in January, things can get scary.

    But here is the truth: Budgeting is not about suffering. It is just about telling your money where to go, instead of wondering where it went. Here is how to handle your finances in 2026 without the headache.

    1. Know your “Why”: If you do not have a reason to save, you will spend everything on shawarma and data. Period. Are you saving for a new phone? A wedding? Or just to make sure “sapa” does not catch you in June? Write that goal down. When you want to buy what you do not need, remember that goal.

    2. Watch the “Small” Spend: It is rarely the big things that make us broke, it is the small ones. The 5k here for a quick snack, the 2k for extra data, the “urgent 2k” for a friend. For just one month, track every single naira you spend. You will be shocked at how much is leaking out of your pocket through things you do not even remember.

    READ ALSO: Ibadan Bodija explosion victims urge Makinde to use N30bn FG support for compensation

    3. Use the “Survival” Rule Split your money into three simple piles:

    • The Must-Haves (50%): Food, rent, transport, and electricity.
    • The Joy (30%): Going out, clothes, and “chopping life.”
    • The Future (20%): Savings, investments, and your emergency fund.

    Tip: Because prices change fast these days, try to keep a small “Price Hike” buffer in your Must-Haves.

    4. Do Not Trust Yourself (Automate It): Do not say “I will save whatever is left at the end of the month.” There will be nothing left. Use apps like PiggyVest or Cowrywise to take your savings the moment your salary or payment hits your account. If you do not see it, you will not spend it.

    5. Keep a “Black Tax” Folder: In Nigeria, family will always call. If you do not plan for it, your budget will always fail. Set aside a small amount every month for “Family/Emergency.” If nobody calls for help that month, great! That money stays in your savings.

    6. Do Not Kill Yourself: The biggest reason budgets fail is because people try to be too strict. If you love suya, put “suya money” in your budget. If you do not allow yourself some fun, you will eventually get frustrated and blow all your savings in one day. Plan for the fun so you do not feel like you are in a financial prison.

    The Bottom Line:  A budget is not a set of handcuffs; it is a map. It shows you how to get to the life you actually want. Start today, be honest with yourself, and remember that every 1,000 Naira you save today is a gift to your future self.

  • How to make N58.47tr 2026 budget more meaningful, by experts

    How to make N58.47tr 2026 budget more meaningful, by experts

    The Federal Government needs to optimize revenue generation, scale down and redirect borrowings and implement effective project-based assessments in order to achieve the overall developmental goals of the 2026 budget.

    President Bola Tinubu had at the weekend presented a N58.47 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill to the National Assembly with a promise that the new fiscal year would usher in a new era of discipline, accountability and results-driven public spending.

    The 2026 Appropriation Bill projected total revenue of N34.33 trillion, total expenditure of N58.18 trillion, including N15.52 trillion for debt servicing, recurrent non‑debt expenditure of N15.25 trillion, capital expenditure of N26.08 trillion and budget deficit of N23.85 trillion, representing 4.28 per cent of GDP.

    The budget was premised on crude oil benchmark of $64.85 per barrel, crude oil production of 1.84 million barrels per day; and exchange rate of N1, 400 per dollar.

    Key sectoral allocations included defence and security, N5.41 trillion; infrastructure, N3.56 trillion; education, N3.52 trillion and health, which got N2.48 trillion.

    Finance and economy experts yesterday said the government must review its implementation strategy, strengthen inclusive budget alignments across all tiers, drive revenue in non-inflationary way and reduce budget deficit and borrowings.

    Experts who spoke included Chief Executive Officer, Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprises (CPPE), Dr Muda Yusuf; Managing Director, Arthur Steven Asset Management, Mr Olatunde Amolegbe; Managing Director, AIICO Capital, Dr Femi Ademola and Managing Director, HighCap Securities, Mr David Adonri.

    Yusuf said the 2026 budget appeared more realistic but the government should consider adopting more conservative stance.

    He said: “We should have a much better budget in 2026 than the previous one. The assumptions on which the budget was based looked to be a lot more realistic, a lot more conservative as compared to what we had in 2025. But it will not be a bad idea to further review the assumptions, $64 per barrel is still a bit on the optimistic side. If it can come down to $60, that will not be a bad idea. And the oil output of 1.8 mbpd, given the historical level of performance, 1.8 mbpd is also a bit on the optimistic side. Those assumptions are much more realistic, but they can be even more realistic. So I would rather suggest that we have a further review of those assumptions”.

    He said the National Assembly should avoid the temptation to arbitrarily review the budget upward as a result of constituency projects.

    “We should not allow that kind of thing to happen this year. Because the beauty of a budget is in the credibility of the budget. If we continue to have budgets that are poorly implemented, the budget itself will lose credibility, and it will lose trust. And I think the President alluded to that even in his speech to members of the National Assembly. So we have to be careful about throwing in all manner of projects into the budget in a way that will now create huge expenditure expectations that will not be met,” Yusuf said.

    Read Also: Group faults southwest govs over poor budgetary allocation for PWDs

    He expressed concerns over revenue shortfalls, urging government to review its strategies on revenue generation from generating agencies, especially non-tax revenue.

    He said: “I think we need to optimise that, and I think again the President emphasised that, and that firm steps will be taken to ensure that we optimise the non-tax revenue, that is from agencies of government that are generating revenue. So if we put all of this together, I think that will improve the fiscal consolidation.

    “But we need to worry about the burden of debt service. It underscores the need for us to review our debt management strategy, for the need for us to also moderate the level or the rate of debt accumulation. Because debt servicing costs, even in this budget, are almost 50 per cent of revenue. I mean that cannot continue in that way because that is shrinking the fiscal space. It’s also one of the factors affecting budget implementation”.

    He stressed the need for all tiers of government to collectively work to address structural pain points hindering the development of the economy.

    “We also need to underscore the point that fixing the structural issues in the economy is not only the function of the federal government. So as we have conversations around the federal budget, we should be having conversations around the budget of the sub-nationals. Most of them have, in fact, practically all of them have more revenue now. So they should also come with impactful projects on health, on education, on roads, on rural development, on agriculture.

    “They also have a major role to play. There is a general tendency around the country that when we are having conversations around the budget, we focus only on the federal budget. I think that mindset needs to change. We need to recognize that the states also have their own budgets. The local governments also have their own budgets, and they should be equally held accountable for what they do with these budgets. We now see states, many of them, having budgets of close to a trillion naira, even more than that. That is quite significant. So we need to equally track all those budgets of the sub-nationals,” Yusuf said.

    Amolegbe said there was need to continue to grow the budget size to reflect the population size.

    “Our budget is yet to get to the level that has the potential to get a significant number of people out of poverty. It’s also critical that the level of implementation needs to improve in order to achieve effectiveness. We also need to pay attention to our debt to revenue level,” Amolegbe, a former president of Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS) said.

    Ademola said the 2026 budget proposal was not totally unexpected as with a progressive administration that has a centre left ideology, the expanded budget, focus on infrastructure and on borrowing are not out of place.

    He however expressed concerns that with the experience of the past years, especially since 2024, it is surprising that the government is still operating a high budget deficit.

    He said: “From the speech, the President confirmed that the country under-achieved its budgets for 2024 and 2025 due to revenue shortages. It is therefore confusing that we are still having an expanded budget despite the possibility of revenue shortage.

    “For instance, only N5.33 trillion was spent in 2025 to execute the capital expenditure for 2024 and 2025. It is therefore unclear why we are still budgeting over N26 trillion in 2026. I am also worried that we are not working towards balancing our budget in view of revenue challenges.

    “While the expected increased revenue from taxes may cover the gap, I would have loved to see the implications of the tax laws especially with regards to revenue generation before we start to plan how to spend it.

    “The good thing is that the budget estimates with regards to oil productions, exchange rate and oil prices assumptions are reasonable. Hence the revenue expectation may be achieved. However, it would be good to reduce expenditure so that budget deficit is significantly reduced”.

    Adonri noted that if the 2026 budget can consolidate the unimplemented portions of previous budgets, it would be great relief.

    He also expressed concerns that the “deficit content of the proposed budget remains astronomical”.

    “This expansionary fiscal policy will fuel inflation. With the precarious state of the global crude oil market and ravaging insecurity, a more conservative approach to expenditure would have been more appropriate. If the country is truly in a state of emergency, over 50 per cent of all available resources ought to be mobilised to restore firm order. If insecurity is not eliminated, all the grandiose programmes of agricultural and industrial development may be a mirage. I am not convinced that this budget is philosophically sound and strategically constructed to usher in enduring peace and prosperity,” Adonri said.

    Addressing a joint session of the National Assembly in Abuja, President Tinubu had said he had already issued firm instructions to key economic managers of government to ensure that the 2026 budget is implemented strictly in line with approved details and timelines, warning that Nigeria could no longer afford fiscal indiscipline, leakages and underperformance across its institutions.

    “I have issued directives to the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, the Accountant-General of the Federation, and the Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation to ensure that the 2026 Budget is implemented strictly in line with the appropriated details and timelines,” Tinubu said.

    He said the 2026 budget, christened “Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity,” would be financed largely through stronger revenue performance arising from the recently enacted National Tax Acts and far-reaching reforms in the oil and gas sector, which he said were designed to deliver transparency, efficiency, fairness and long-term fiscal value.

    According to him, the reforms underway were not merely revenue-raising tools, but structural changes aimed at rebuilding Nigeria’s fiscal architecture and restoring confidence in public finance management.

    To meet the funding requirements of the budget, Tinubu directed all heads of Government Owned Enterprises to meet their assigned revenue targets, stressing that remittances to the Federation Account would no longer be treated as optional.

    He said: “To support this, we will deploy end-to-end digitisation of revenue mobilisation—standardised e-collections, interoperable payment rails, automated reconciliation, data-driven risk profiling, and real-time performance dashboards—so leakages are sealed, compliance is verifiable, and remittances are prompt”.

    He added that revenue performance would now be central to institutional assessments, noting that the era of weak accountability had come to an end.

    “These targets will form core components of performance evaluations and institutional scorecards. Nigeria can no longer afford leakages, inefficiencies, or underperformance in strategic agencies. Every institution must play its part,” Tinubu said.

    He said the 2026 budget was anchored on four broad objectives: consolidating macroeconomic stability, improving the business and investment climate, promoting job-rich growth, while reducing poverty, and strengthening human capital with deliberate protection for the most vulnerable citizens.

    He said: “In short, we will spend with purpose, manage debt with discipline, and pursue growth that is broad-based—not narrow—and sustainable—not temporary”.

    Presenting the fiscal framework, the President said the budget was built on realism, prudence and a growth-oriented outlook. He disclosed that expected total revenue for 2026 stood at N34.33 trillion, while projected expenditure was N58.18 trillion, including N15.52 trillion earmarked for debt servicing. Recurrent non-debt spending was projected at N15.25 trillion, while capital expenditure was put at N26.08 trillion.

    The budget deficit of N23.85 trillion, representing 4.28 per cent of Gross Domestic Product, he said, remained within manageable limits.

    “These numbers are not just accounting lines. They are a statement of national priorities. We remain firmly committed to fiscal sustainability, debt transparency, and value-for-money spending,” Tinubu said.

    He explained that the projections were guided by the 2026–2028 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper, based on a conservative crude oil benchmark of $64.85 per barrel, oil production of 1.84 million barrels per day and an exchange rate assumption of N1,400 to the dollar.

    He assured that government would continue to reduce waste, strengthen controls and ensure that every naira borrowed or spent delivers measurable public value, particularly in infrastructure, human capital development and national security.

    On sectoral priorities, Tinubu said the allocations reflected the practical needs of Nigerians under the Renewed Hope Agenda. Defence and security received N5.41 trillion, infrastructure N3.56 trillion, education N3.52 trillion and health N2.48 trillion.

    He said: “These priorities are interlinked. Without security, investment will not thrive. Without educated and healthy citizens, productivity will not rise. Without infrastructure, jobs and enterprise will not scale. This is why the Budget is designed as one coherent programme of national renewal”.

    He devoted a significant portion of his address to national security, delivering a forceful warning to terrorists, bandits and criminal networks operating across the country. He said security spending would now be tied to clear outcomes, insisting that public funds must translate into safer communities.

    “We will invest in security with clear accountability for outcomes—because security spending must deliver security results,” Tinubu said.

    He explained that the government would increase the fighting capacity of the armed forces and other security agencies through improved personnel strength and the acquisition of advanced platforms and hardware. He also announced a comprehensive reset of Nigeria’s national security architecture, including the introduction of a new national counterterrorism doctrine.

    He said: “Our administration is resetting the national security architecture and establishing a new national counterterrorism doctrine—a holistic redesign anchored on unified command, intelligence, community stability, and counter-insurgency”.

    Under the new doctrine, the President declared that any armed group operating outside state authority would be classified as terrorists.

    “Henceforth, and under this new architecture, any armed group or gun-wielding non-state actors operating outside state authority will be regarded as terrorists,” Tinubu said, listing bandits, militias, armed gangs, criminal networks, violent cult groups, forest-based armed collectives and foreign-linked mercenaries among those covered.

    He extended the classification to financiers, informants, ransom negotiators, political protectors, arms suppliers and community leaders who facilitate violent acts, stating that anyone enabling terrorism would be treated as a terrorist.

    Turning to human capital development, the President said no nation could grow beyond the quality of its people, adding that the 2026 budget strengthened investments in education, healthcare, skills acquisition and social protection.

    He disclosed that over 418,000 students had already benefited from the Nigerian Education Loan Fund in partnership with 229 tertiary institutions nationwide. He added that healthcare spending accounted for six per cent of the total budget size, net of liabilities.

    Tinubu also announced that recent engagements with the United States government had opened the door to over $500 million in grant funding for targeted health interventions across Nigeria.

    “We welcome this partnership and assure Nigerians that these resources will be deployed transparently and effectively,” he said.

    On infrastructure and economic productivity, the President said projects under the Renewed Hope Agenda were moving steadily from vision to execution, covering transport, energy, ports, agriculture and strategic investments capable of unlocking private capital.

    He said food security remained a national security issue, noting that the 2026 budget prioritised input financing, mechanisation, irrigation, climate-resilient farming, storage, processing and agro-value chains to reduce post-harvest losses and improve rural incomes.

    As he concluded, Tinubu told lawmakers and Nigerians that the true measure of a budget lay not in its announcement but in its delivery.

    “The greatest budget is not the one we announce. It is the one we deliver,” he said.

    He pledged better revenue mobilisation, better spending discipline and stronger accountability as the three guiding commitments for 2026, adding that trust would only be built by matching words with results.

    “The 2026 Budget is not a budget of promises; it is a Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity,” Tinubu said, formally laying the Appropriation Bill before the National Assembly.

    So those are the things that we need to look at. Generally, it’s a good budget, but we need to look at these areas that I’ve just mentioned. And of course, the President recently re-enacted the 2025 budget, authorizing the release of about 43 tr  from the consolidated revenue account.

    Now, that has just been sent to the National Assembly in the form of another appropriation act. So we need some clarity as to how we are going to reconcile the new budget and the one that the President recently sent to the National Assembly. I’m talking about the enactment of the 2025 appropriation act.

    A bit of projects were done and according to the finance minister, I think 30 per centof the releases have been made. It remains 70 per cent. So that, of course, has affected the capacity of the project to impact on productivity and quite a number of projects, of course, were not able to be implemented as a result of those challenges.

    So the steps that have been taken, hopefully, will help to avoid a repeat of that experience that we had with respect to the 2025 budget. But in all of this, we also need to realize or underscore the fact that the current parts of the budget were almost fully implemented. So when we talk about poor implementation, it is essentially around the capital budget implementation. I think that clarity is important.  

  • 2026 budget: Discipline as doctrine, boldness as signal, security as core

    2026 budget: Discipline as doctrine, boldness as signal, security as core

    • By Sunday Dare

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s 2026 Budget Speech is remarkable, not only for its rhetorical flourish, it is remarkable, for something far more consequential in Nigerian public finance management: authority, realism, and enforcement intent.

    This budget  indicates where Nigeria is coming from, where it is, and—critically—what must now change.

    1. A President Owning the Hard Truths,Powering Forward

    The first strength of the speech lies in what it does not evade. The President openly acknowledges that:

    •budget execution must be stronger,firm

    •revenue assumptions were optimistic,

    •and fiscal reality eventually caught up with projections.

    This candour is rare in budget presentations, which often prefer abstraction over admission. By naming the problem plainly, the President establishes credibility and signals a shift from excuse-making to corrective action.

    The clarification that the additional three months for 2025 budget execution is legal housekeeping, not fiscal indiscipline, further reinforces a leader who understands constitutional boundaries and chooses to explain them, not hide behind them.

    2. The Boldest Line in the Speech: Command, Not Consultation

    The speech reaches its most consequential moment at Paragraph 12:

     “Let me be clear: 2026 will be a year of stronger discipline in budget execution.”

    This is not rhetorical emphasis; it is executive instruction. Naming the Minister of Finance, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, the Accountant-General, and the Director-General of the Budget Office is deliberate. It does three things at once:

    •fixes responsibility,

    • removes ambiguity,

    •and collapses bureaucratic distance.

    This is presidential authority exercised without apology. It sends a clear signal that 2026 is not a negotiating year for fiscal laxity.

    3. From Reform Rhetoric to Enforcement Architecture

    The speech’s boldness deepens in its treatment of Government-Owned Enterprises (GOEs). The language shifts from encouragement to performance compulsion:

    •assigned revenue targets

    •digitised end-to-end collections

    * interoperable payment rails

    * eeal-time dashboards,

    * performance scorecards tied to evaluations.

    This is not merely reform language; it is institutional redesign. The President is explicit that underperformance will no longer be masked by opacity or manual processes. The subtext is unmistakable: systems will now remember who performed and who did not.

    Read Also: CBN asks banks to configure ATMs, POS terminals for foreign card transactions

    4. Security Doctrine: No Moral Grey Zones

    On national security, the speech abandons euphemism entirely. The declaration that any armed group operating outside state authority will be regarded as terrorists is a doctrinal reset. It removes political, ethnic, or semantic cover from violent non-state actors.

    This is bold because it narrows discretion and widens accountability. It also signals to security agencies that ambiguity will no longer be an operational excuse.

    5. Fiscal Numbers as Political Statement

    The budget aggregates are presented not as defensive explanations, but as choices:

    •a conservative oil benchmark

    •realistic production assumptions

    •a deficit framed within sustainability, not denial.

    The repeated insistence that “these numbers are not mere accounting lines” reinforces the President’s framing of the budget as an instrument of national priority, not legislative ritual.

    6. A Quiet but Firm Philosophy Shift

    Perhaps the most important feature of the peesentation is its philosophical undertone:

    Nigeria is moving from expansion without discipline to consolidation with enforcement.

    The closing line captures it succinctly:

     “The most significant budget is not the one we announce. It is the one we deliver.”

    That sentence alone separates this speech from many of its predecessors.

    Why This Budget Matters

    This budget speech is bold not because it promises miracles, but because it sets consequences. It does not sell optimism cheaply; it conditions optimism on discipline, systems, and performance.

    In tone, structure, and substance, it signals a presidency that is no longer merely reform-minded, but execution-driven. If followed through, it marks a transition point: from reform as intent to reform as enforcement.

    In that sense, this budget is less a fiscal document and more a governance marker—and its boldness lies precisely there.

  • 2026 Budget: APC commends ample allocation to security, says Tinubu governing with purpose

    2026 Budget: APC commends ample allocation to security, says Tinubu governing with purpose

    The Lagos State Chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC), on Saturday, commended President Bola Tinubu for making ample provision for security in the 2026 budget.

    The party, in a statement on Saturday, signed by the spokesman of its Lagos chapter, Seye Oladejo, said the structure and priorities of the budget reflected deliberate planning and aimed at ensuring stability and long-term national renewal.

     Oladejo, reports the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said the proposed N5.41 trillion allocation to the security sector in the 2026 fiscal framework shows the government is committed to addressing security challenges.

    “The Lagos APC urges all Nigerians, stakeholders, and the National Assembly to view the 2026 Budget through the prism of national interest rather than partisan cynicism.

    Read Also: Tinubu lauds Zulum’s development drive during Borno visit

    “This is not a budget of rhetoric, but of resolve. It is a statement of purpose from a President who appreciates the weight of history and the urgency of now.

     “We commend President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for his foresight, courage, and clarity of purpose. Nigeria is steadily moving from emergency responses to structured, forward-looking solutions.

    “The 2026 Budget is yet another affirmation that this administration is not governing by chance, but by design,” Oladejo said.

    He said the lion’s share earmarked for security proves that the present administration is clear-eyed about Nigeria’s present realities and firmly focused on securing its future.

      According to him, security, as the foremost responsibility of government, has been given deserved attention beyond reactionary measures.

    “Security is treated as a strategic investment in national stability, economic confidence and social cohesion,” Oladejo said.

    He explained that the primary intent of the 2026 Budget is to consolidate security gains and protect lives and property nationwide.

    Oladejo added that the budget also aims to create a stable environment for economic recovery and sustainable growth.

    “The President clearly understands that no meaningful development can thrive without peace and safety,” he said.

    He said the N5.41 trillion sectoral allocation targets capacity enhancement for the Armed Forces and other security agencies.

    According to him, this will improve intelligence gathering, inter-agency collaboration and operational effectiveness.

     Oladejo said modernisation of equipment and logistics is also prioritised in the security allocation.

    He added that the welfare and motivation of security personnel are central to the President’s security strategy.

    “This leadership understands that security spending is not consumption but protection of national assets, human and material,” he said.

    He noted that restoring investor confidence remains a key objective, as investors prefer stable and secure environments.

    According to him, the budget also safeguards ongoing economic reforms from being undermined by insecurity.

    Oladejo urged ordinary citizens and the National Assembly to assess the budget through the lens of national interest.

     NAN recalls that Tinubu, on Friday, presented the 2026 federal budget of N58.18 trillion, with N5.41 trillion allocated to defence and security, which represents approximately 9.3 per cent of the total expenditure.

    Presenting the budget themed ‘Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity’ to the National Assembly, Tinubu said that without security, investment cannot thrive.

    Leaders should match numbers with impact – Akpoti-Uduaghan

     But while the President’s address to a joint session of the Senate and House of Representatives outlined ambitious plans for economic stabilisation, infrastructure expansion and social welfare, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, representing the Kogi Central Constituency, cautioned that budgets, no matter how historic, are meaningless if they fail to improve daily living conditions.

    The presentation of Nigeria’s record N58.18 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill by President Tinubu thus reignited a familiar but pressing debate in the National Assembly: can big numbers translate into real relief for ordinary Nigerians?

     Reacting to the President’s speech in a statement by her media office in Abuja, the Senator said one line stood out for her amid the lengthy presentation: “It’s not the size of the budget but the quantum of impact felt by Nigerians.”

    According to Akpoti-Uduaghan, the proposed N58.18 trillion budget reflects the scale of Nigeria’s challenges and aspirations, but citizens are more concerned about outcomes than projections.

    “Nigerians are not interested in impressive figures on paper,” she said. “They want to see better living standards, jobs for young people, functional infrastructure, affordable healthcare, quality education and social services that actually work.”

     She stressed that the country’s development problems cannot be solved by allocations alone, warning that weak implementation, poor oversight and lack of transparency have historically undermined even the most ambitious fiscal plans.

     The senator also placed responsibility beyond government, insisting that accountability is a shared duty.

    “Leaders must do better, and citizens must demand accountability,” she declared, urging Nigerians to pay closer attention to how public funds are spent and to hold elected officials to account.

    According to the statement: “Observers at the National Assembly noted that the budget presentation has opened a critical phase of legislative scrutiny, with lawmakers expected to interrogate revenue projections, debt sustainability, sectoral priorities and implementation capacity in the weeks ahead.

    “Akpoti-Uduaghan, a member of the Senate Committee on Finance, has consistently pushed for fiscal discipline, transparency and people-centred budgeting. Her intervention echoed growing public sentiment that governance should be measured by visible impact at the grassroots rather than headline figures.

    “As debates on the 2026 Appropriation Bill begin in earnest, Nigerians will be watching closely to see whether the record-breaking budget will deliver tangible and equitable benefits—ultimately testing the President’s assertion that the true value of a budget lies not in its size, but in its effect on the lives of the people.”

    Budget is people-centred, says Goronyo

     President Tinubu’s emphasis on security and road infrastructure in the 2026 Appropriation Bill has also been described as people-centred and responsive to Nigeria’s most pressing development challenges.

    The Minister of State for Works, Rt. Hon. Bello Goronyo said the President deserves broad commendation, noting that the strong allocation to security in the 2026 budget reflects a clear resolve to safeguard lives and property.

    Goronyo, in a statement on Saturday by his Special Adviser on Media, Abdullahi A. Mohammed, stressed that sustainable development cannot be achieved in an environment undermined by insecurity.

    The Minister said that by prioritising security in the budget, the President has taken a decisive step that will not only protect citizens but also unlock economic opportunities by boosting investor confidence, expanding business activities and reinforcing national stability.

    He also praised the substantial allocation to road infrastructure, saying sustained investment in the construction, rehabilitation and completion of federal highways would ease transportation difficulties and address long-standing mobility challenges.

    Goronyo said improved road networks would significantly reduce travel time, lower vehicle operating costs, and improve access to markets, schools, healthcare facilities and other essential services for millions of Nigerians.

     The Minister said the combined focus on security and infrastructure, alongside ongoing economic reforms, fiscal discipline and investments in education and health, would help ease the hardship currently faced by citizens.

      He said these priorities were critical to job creation, economic growth and improving the overall quality of life across the country.

     Goronyo assured Nigerians that the Federal Ministry of Works would fully implement all road projects approved in the 2026 budget, in line with President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    He also called on stakeholders, including State governments, contractors and host communities, to support the timely execution of road projects nationwide, stressing that collaboration was essential to delivering the expected benefits of the budget to Nigerians.

    PDP faults proposal

     The PDP said the budget proposal falls short in tackling widespread poverty, rising living costs, and insecurity.

     The Peoples Democratic Party has faulted President Bola Tinubu’s 2026 budget proposal, describing it as a “Budget of Consolidated Renewed Sufferings.”

     While President Tinubu projected a cautiously improving economy and promised stricter budgetary discipline, the PDP, in a statement on Friday, by its spokesman, Ini Ememobong, said the budget falls short in tackling widespread poverty, rising living costs, and insecurity.

     “We see it rather as a budget of consolidated renewed sufferings, because what Nigerians have witnessed since the birth of this administration is nothing but unmitigated hardship on the people, while the governing class relishes in affluence.

     “President Tinubu cited a 3.98% GDP growth rate as evidence of economic stabilisation under his administration,” he stated.

    “According to the 2025 World Bank Poverty & Equity Brief, more than 30.9% of Nigerians live below the international extreme poverty line. This shows that there is growth without prosperity for our citizens, meaning that despite GDP growth, poverty remains endemic. This clearly indicates that whatever economic gains exist are not reaching the majority of Nigerians.

     The PDP said, “The President stated that the economy under his watch grew by 3.98% without stating the sectors that stimulated the growth or identifying those who benefited from it.

     “This figure reflects the economic decline the nation has suffered under the leadership of the APC-led Federal Government when compared to the growth rate of 6.87% recorded in 2013 (same period under the last PDP administration), which was driven largely by non-oil sectors such as agriculture and trade.”

     Ememobong called for transparent and effective use of security funds to provide modern equipment, sufficient ammunition, better intelligence, and improved welfare for personnel facing well-armed criminal groups.

  • 2026 Budget reflects Tinubu’s resolve on security, road development – Goronyo

    2026 Budget reflects Tinubu’s resolve on security, road development – Goronyo

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s emphasis on security and road infrastructure in the 2026 Appropriation Bill has been described as people centred and responsive to Nigeria’s most pressing development challenges.

    The Minister of State for Works, Rt. Hon. Bello Goronyo, said the President deserves broad commendation, noting that the strong allocation to security in the 2026 budget reflects a clear resolve to safeguard lives and property. 

    Goronyo, in a statement on Saturday by his Special Adviser on Media, Abdullahi A. Mohammed, stressed that sustainable development cannot be achieved in an environment undermined by insecurity.

    The Minister said that by prioritising security in the budget, the President has taken a decisive step that will not only protect citizens but also unlock economic opportunities by boosting investor confidence, expanding business activities and reinforcing national stability.

    He also praised the substantial allocation to road infrastructure, saying sustained investment in the construction, rehabilitation and completion of federal highways would ease transportation difficulties and address long standing mobility challenges.

    Goronyo said improved road networks would significantly reduce travel time, lower vehicle operating costs and improve access to markets, schools, healthcare facilities and other essential services for millions of Nigerians.

    The Minister said the combined focus on security and infrastructure, alongside ongoing economic reforms, fiscal discipline and investments in education and health, would help ease the hardship currently faced by citizens.

    He said these priorities were critical to job creation, economic growth and improving the overall quality of life across the country.

    Goronyo assured Nigerians that the Federal Ministry of Works would fully implement all road projects approved in the 2026 budget, in line with President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    He also called on stakeholders, including State governments, contractors and host communities, to support the timely execution of road projects nationwide, stressing that collaboration was essential to delivering the expected benefits of the budget to Nigerians.

  • Defence, security top priorities in N58.18tr 2026 budget

    Defence, security top priorities in N58.18tr 2026 budget

    • President vows to cut waste, manage debt with discipline
    • Seeks extension of 2025 budget implementation to March 2026
    • Experts: Budget provides clear economic direction

    Reflecting growing concerns about insecurity in the country, defence, and security emerged top priorities   in  the 2026 budget presented by  President Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday. A massive N5.41 trillion was allocated to the sectors.

    The President  presented a N58.18 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill to the National Assembly, declaring that the coming fiscal year would mark a decisive break from what he described as the dismal execution record of the 2025 budget and usher in a new era of discipline, accountability and results-driven public spending.

    Aside defence and security, other  top priorities are infrastructure, education  and health. They  received N3.56 trillion, N3.52 trillion N2.48 trillion respectively.

    Addressing a joint sitting of the Senate and the House of Representatives in Abuja, the President said he had already issued firm instructions to key economic managers of government to ensure that the 2026 budget is implemented strictly in line with approved details and timelines, warning that Nigeria could no longer afford fiscal indiscipline, leakages and underperformance across its institutions.

     “I have issued directives to the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, the Accountant-General of the Federation, and the Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation to ensure that the 2026 Budget is implemented strictly in line with the appropriated details and timelines,” Tinubu told lawmakers.

    He said the 2026 budget, christened “Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity,” would be financed largely through stronger revenue performance arising from the recently enacted National Tax Acts and far-reaching reforms in the oil and gas sector, which he said were designed to deliver transparency, efficiency, fairness and long-term fiscal value.

    According to the President, the reforms underway were not merely revenue-raising tools but structural changes aimed at rebuilding Nigeria’s fiscal architecture and restoring confidence in public finance management.

     To meet the funding requirements of the budget, Tinubu directed all heads of government owned enterprises to meet their assigned revenue targets, stressing that remittances to the federation account would no longer be treated as optional.

    “To support this, we will deploy end-to-end digitisation of revenue mobilisation—standardised e-collections, interoperable payment rails, automated reconciliation, data-driven risk profiling, and real-time performance dashboards—so leakages are sealed, compliance is verifiable, and remittances are prompt,” he said.

     He added that revenue performance would now be central to institutional assessments, noting that the era of weak accountability had come to an end.

    Read Also: Collective effort key to security success, says Defence Minister Musa

     “These targets will form core components of performance evaluations and institutional scorecards. Nigeria can no longer afford leakages, inefficiencies, or underperformance in strategic agencies. Every institution must play its part,” the President declared.

    Tinubu said the 2026 budget was anchored on four broad objectives: consolidating macroeconomic stability, improving the business and investment climate, promoting job-rich growth while reducing poverty, and strengthening human capital with deliberate protection for the most vulnerable citizens.

     “In short, we will spend with purpose, manage debt with discipline, and pursue growth that is broad-based—not narrow—and sustainable—not temporary,” he said.

     Presenting the fiscal framework, the President said the budget was built on realism, prudence and a growth-oriented outlook. He disclosed that expected total revenue for 2026 stood at N34.33 trillion, while projected expenditure was N58.18 trillion, including N15.52 trillion earmarked for debt servicing. Recurrent non-debt spending was projected at N15.25 trillion, while capital expenditure was put at N26.08 trillion.

     The budget deficit of N23.85 trillion, representing 4.28 per cent of Gross Domestic Product, he said, remained within manageable limits.

     “These numbers are not just accounting lines. They are a statement of national priorities. We remain firmly committed to fiscal sustainability, debt transparency, and value-for-money spending,” Tinubu told the lawmakers.

     He explained that the projections were guided by the 2026–2028 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper, based on a conservative crude oil benchmark of $64.85 per barrel, oil production of 1.84 million barrels per day and an exchange rate assumption of N1,400 to the dollar.

     The President assured that government would continue to reduce waste, strengthen controls and ensure that every naira borrowed or spent delivers measurable public value, particularly in infrastructure, human capital development and national security.

     On sectoral priorities, Tinubu said the allocations reflected the practical needs of Nigerians under the Renewed Hope Agenda. Defence and security received N5.41 trillion, infrastructure N3.56 trillion, education N3.52 trillion and health N2.48 trillion.

    “These priorities are interlinked. Without security, investment will not thrive. Without educated and healthy citizens, productivity will not rise. Without infrastructure, jobs and enterprise will not scale. This is why the Budget is designed as one coherent programme of national renewal,” he said.

     The President devoted a significant portion of his address to national security, delivering a forceful warning to terrorists, bandits and criminal networks operating across the country. He said security spending would now be tied to clear outcomes, insisting that public funds must translate into safer communities.

     “We will invest in security with clear accountability for outcomes—because security spending must deliver security results,” Tinubu said.

    He explained that the government would increase the fighting capacity of the armed forces and other security agencies through improved personnel strength and the acquisition of advanced platforms and hardware. He also announced a comprehensive reset of Nigeria’s national security architecture, including the introduction of a new national counterterrorism doctrine.

     “Our administration is resetting the national security architecture and establishing a new national counterterrorism doctrine—a holistic redesign anchored on unified command, intelligence, community stability, and counter-insurgency,” he said.

    Under the new doctrine, the President declared that any armed group operating outside state authority would be classified as terrorists.

     “Henceforth, and under this new architecture, any armed group or gun-wielding non-state actors operating outside state authority will be regarded as terrorists,” Tinubu said, listing bandits, militias, armed gangs, criminal networks, violent cult groups, forest-based armed collectives and foreign-linked mercenaries among those covered.

    He extended the classification to financiers, informants, ransom negotiators, political protectors, arms suppliers and community leaders who facilitate violent acts, stating that anyone enabling terrorism would be treated as a terrorist.

     Turning to human capital development, the President said no nation could grow beyond the quality of its people, adding that the 2026 budget strengthened investments in education, healthcare, skills acquisition and social protection.

     He disclosed that over 418,000 students had already benefited from the Nigerian Education Loan Fund in partnership with 229 tertiary institutions nationwide. He added that healthcare spending accounted for six per cent of the total budget size, net of liabilities.

    Tinubu also announced that recent engagements with the United States government had opened the door to over $500 million in grant funding for targeted health interventions across Nigeria.

     “We welcome this partnership and assure Nigerians that these resources will be deployed transparently and effectively,” he said.

    On infrastructure and economic productivity, the President said projects under the Renewed Hope Agenda were moving steadily from vision to execution, covering transport, energy, ports, agriculture and strategic investments capable of unlocking private capital.

    He said food security remained a national security issue, noting that the 2026 budget prioritised input financing, mechanisation, irrigation, climate-resilient farming, storage, processing and agro-value chains to reduce post-harvest losses and improve rural incomes.

     As he concluded, Tinubu told lawmakers and Nigerians that the true measure of a budget lay not in its announcement but in its delivery.

     “The greatest budget is not the one we announce. It is the one we deliver,” he said.

     He pledged better revenue mobilisation, better spending discipline and stronger accountability as the three guiding commitments for 2026, adding that trust would only be built by matching words with results.

     “The 2026 Budget is not a budget of promises; it is a Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity,” Tinubu said, formally laying the Appropriation Bill before the National Assembly.

    FEC approves N58.47trn 2026 Budget, amends MTEF

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) had earlier  approved the ₦58.47 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill, alongside an amendment to the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) earlier passed by the two chambers of the National Assembly.

    The FEC approval cleared the way for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to present the budget proposal to a joint session of the Senate and the House of Representatives.

    President Tinubu convened an emergency meeting of the Council at the State House, Abuja, to consider a single-item memorandum on the 2026 budget estimates ahead of their formal presentation to the National Assembly.

    Briefing journalists after the meeting, the Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation, Dr Tanimu Yakubu, said the approved 2026 budget has an aggregate expenditure of N58.47 trillion, representing a six percent increase over the 2025 budget estimate.

    According to Yakubu, the total expenditure framework includes projected spending by government-owned enterprises (GOEs) amounting to N4.98 trillion, as well as N1.37 trillion earmarked for grants and donor-funded projects.

    Statutory transfers are estimated at N4.1 trillion, while debt service obligations are projected at N15.52 trillion, including N3.39 trillion set aside for the sinking fund to retire maturing local debts owed to contractors and other creditors.

    Personnel costs, including pensions, are projected at ₦10.75 trillion, representing a seven per cent increase over the 2025 provision.

    This figure includes ₦1.02 trillion allocated to government-owned enterprises. Overhead costs are estimated at ₦2.22 trillion.

    The budget proposes a capital expenditure of ₦25.68 trillion, which is 1.8 per cent lower than the 2025 capital provision.

    Yakubu explained that the marginal reduction reflects a more conservative approach to capital planning, with emphasis on completing ongoing projects and ensuring value for money.

    He said capital allocation priorities include ₦11.3 trillion for ministries, departments, and agencies (MDAs), ₦2.05 trillion for multilateral and bilateral loan-funded projects, and ₦1.8 trillion representing the capital component of the development levy.

    Yakubu noted that the 2026 budget was designed to strike a balance between macroeconomic stabilisation and development imperatives within the medium-term fiscal framework.

    He said the underlying assumptions were conservative and realistic, particularly with respect to oil price, exchange rate, and dividends from government-owned enterprises.

    On the revenue outlook, the Budget Office boss said projected revenues are expected to decline year-on-year, but stressed that non-oil revenues now account for about two-thirds of total government receipts, confirming a structural shift away from oil dependence.

    He identified corporate income tax, value-added tax, customs duties, and independent revenues as the main fiscal anchors.

    He added that growth in expenditure is being driven largely by debt servicing, wages, and pensions rather than discretionary expansion, while the projected fiscal deficit reflects structural pressures rather than policy loosening.

    According to Yakubu, financing of the deficit will rely primarily on domestic borrowing, complemented by concessional loans from multilateral development institutions.

    Also speaking after the meeting, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Senator Atiku Bagudu, disclosed that the council simultaneously approved an amendment to the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework, leading to consequential adjustments in the size of the 2026 budget.

    Bagudu said the amendment involved a downward revision of the exchange rate benchmark used in the framework, from N1,512 to N1,400 to the dollar, a change he said had implications for the overall fiscal projections.

    “This afternoon, the Federal Executive Council considered the 2026 Budget proposal that is going to the National Assembly, as well as an amendment to the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF), which we propose — a revision downwards of the exchange rate from N1,512 to N1,400 and the consequential changes in budget size,” the minister said.

    According to him, FEC approved both the amended MTEF parameters and the revised 2026 budget estimates, effectively clearing the way for the formal presentation of the appropriation bill to lawmakers.

    President seeks extension of 2025 budget implementation to March 2026

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu yesterday  wrote to the National Assembly seeking the approval of the lawmakers to extend the life span of the 2025 budget to March 2026.

     The letter dated December 18 and read at plenary on Friday by the Speaker, Abbas Tajudeen, is also seeking permission to consolidate the capital components of the 2024 and 2025.

    The letter came ahead of the planned consideration of the earlier letter on the two budgets by the House, with the President saying in the letter that the new one supersedes the earlier correspondence dated December 16.

     He explained that the request is part of a broader fiscal reform measure aimed at eliminating the overlap of multiple concurrently running budgets, thereby strengthening planning, execution, and accountability across government expenditure circles.

    The letter reads, “I hereby transmit to the House of Representatives the enclosed Appropriation (Repeal and Re-Enactment Bills), 2024 and 2025, for the consideration of the National Assembly, in accordance with the established constitutional and legislative appropriation process.

    “The Bills seek to repeal the 2024 Appropriation Act of N35,055,536,770,218 and re-enact by authorising the issuance from the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation of the total sum of N43,561,041,744,507 comprising N1,742,786,788,150 for Statutory Transfers, N8,270,960,606,831 for Debt Service, N11,268,513,380,853 for Recurrent (Non-Debt) Expenditure, and N22,278,780,968,673 for Capital Expenditure/Development Fund contributions for the year ending 31st’ December 2025 as provided in the Bill).

     “It also seeks to repeal The 2025 Appropriation Act of N54,990,165,355,396 and re-enact by authorising the issuance from the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation of the total sum of N48,316,242,591,785 comprising N3,645,761,358,925 for Statutory Transfers, N14,317,142,689,548 for Debt Service, N13,588,009,682,673 for Recurrent (Non-Debt) Expenditure, and N16,765,328,860,640 for Capital Expenditure/Development Fund contribution, for the year ending 31§t March, 2026 (as provided in the Bill).

      “The House of Representatives is invited to note that the Bills are submitted to cater for all items not previously recognised, while also reflecting a revised capital implementation target of 30%.

    “In addition to this, adjustment aligns with current fiscal realities and execution capacities, while ensuring that budget performance remains credible and transparent. It further seeks to extend the 2025 Budget to March 31st, 2026, to allow for full release of the target 30% for ALL MDAs. 

    “This is part of a broader fiscal reform measure aimed at eliminating the overlap of multiple concurrently running budgets, thereby strengthening planning, execution, and accountability across government expenditure cycles.

     “It further provides a transparent and constitutionally grounded appropriation mechanism and prudent public financial management framework.

     “The Bills also strengthen implementation discipline and accountability by, among other provisions: requiring that appropriated funds are released and applied strictly for the purposes specified in the Schedules; providing that virement may only be effected with prior approval of the National Assembly; setting out conditions for corrigenda where genuine errors may hinder implementation; requiring separate recording of excess revenue and limiting its expenditure to an Act or approval of the National Assembly; and mandating due process compliance and periodic reporting on releases and agency revenues/assistance. 

     “The House of Representatives is invited to note that this letter supersedes my earlier submission vide PRES/134/50/S/ARRENB dated 16″ December, 2025.”

    He appealed to the lawmakers to consider the passage of the Bills in their usual expeditious manner.

    National Assembly pledges full partnership with Tinubu

    The National Assembly yesterday pledged full legislative backing for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration, vowing to work in close constitutional partnership to deliver a realistic, disciplined and people-centred 2026 Budget.

    Speaking at a joint sitting of the National Assembly during the presentation of the 2026 Appropriation Bill by the President, Senate President Godswill Akpabio said cooperation between the Executive and Legislature remained the cornerstone of national development.

    Akpabio described the presentation, titled “Planting the Future Together: Partnership, Reform, and the 2026 Budget,” as more than a constitutional ritual, saying it marked a defining national conversation on priorities, responsibilities and collective resolve.

    “Today, we assemble not merely to fulfill a constitutional requirement, but to engage in a defining national conversation about our priorities as a people and our responsibilities as leaders,” he said.

    The Senate President stressed that sustainable progress was anchored on institutional harmony, citing global examples such as Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal in the United States and Britain’s post-war reconstruction under Clement Attlee. He warned that executive-legislative rivalry often resulted in stagnation and instability.

    According to him, the 2026 Appropriation Bill goes beyond figures, serving as a statement of intent and a roadmap for renewal.

    “Budgets tell a story. This is not just a compilation of numbers, but a reflection of priorities, a record of difficult choices and a pathway to national renewal,” Akpabio said.

    He acknowledged the socio-economic challenges facing Nigerians, including rising living costs, unemployment and insecurity, assuring that the National Assembly would work with the Executive to address them decisively.

    Akpabio also highlighted the legislative achievements of the Tenth Senate, noting the passage of landmark bills on security, economic reform, governance, judicial administration, electoral integrity, infrastructure and social protection.

    “Nation-building is not the work of one man or one institution. It is a collective endeavour,” he said, adding that the National Assembly would ensure that “every naira appropriated serves the people who earned it.”

    Using the metaphor of planting a baobab tree, the Senate President said the reforms being undertaken were investments for future generations.

    “It is not about the applause of today, but the shade of tomorrow. Let us water it together,” he said.

    In his closing remarks and vote of thanks, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas, described the President’s personal presentation of the budget as “democracy at its strongest” and a reaffirmation of partnership-driven governance.

    Reflecting on the outgoing 2025 fiscal year, Abbas said it marked a return to stability and renewed confidence after a difficult adjustment phase, though he acknowledged that global economic pressures exposed weaknesses in some budget assumptions, particularly crude oil price and exchange rate projections.

    He said the challenges reinforced the need for realism, discipline and revenue diversification rather than weakening the reform agenda.

    “The gains of 2025 must be seen as the foundation for a more deliberate, realistic and results-oriented 2026 Budget,” the Speaker said.

    Citing National Bureau of Statistics data, Abbas noted that Nigeria recorded positive growth throughout 2025, with real GDP approaching four per cent, placing the country among stronger-performing economies in sub-Saharan Africa.

    He added that inflationary pressures had eased following the rebasing of the Consumer Price Index, while external indicators showed stronger foreign reserves, resilient remittances, rising export receipts and improved coherence in the foreign exchange market.

    According to him, international institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have acknowledged these trends as signs of restored macroeconomic credibility.

    Looking ahead, Abbas said the task for 2026 was to consolidate reforms and translate growth into jobs, higher incomes and expanded opportunities.

    He commended President Tinubu’s directive on operating one budget and one fiscal framework, saying it signalled reform maturity and restored order to public finance by eliminating parallel budgets and fragmented spending windows.

    On security, the Speaker described it as the foundation of development, noting that the 2026 Budget prioritised security through expanded recruitment, improved welfare, enhanced intelligence coordination and strengthened territorial security.

    He assured that the National Assembly would ensure that funds allocated to security produced measurable improvements nationwide.

    Abbas also highlighted the implementation of new tax laws in 2026, describing them as critical to broadening the tax base, enhancing equity, reducing leakages and strengthening non-oil revenues.

    He pledged that lawmakers would consider the 2026 Appropriation Bill with urgency, diligence and patriotism, while scrutinising spending to ensure accountability and value for money.

    “To Nigerians watching, the message is clear: stability has been restored, confidence rebuilt, fiscal order strengthened and the foundations for shared prosperity firmly laid,” he said.

    The Speaker thanked President Tinubu for his leadership, praised Senate President Akpabio for his statesmanship, and commended lawmakers and Nigerians for their dedication to national service, praying for God’s blessings on the country.

  • Experts: Budget provides clear economic direction

    Experts: Budget provides clear economic direction

    Business and economic experts have applauded the 2026 budget presented by President Bola Tinubu yesterday, describing it as a step in the right direction.

    Reacting to the 2026 Budget Appropriation, Dr. Wahab Balogun, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Ambosit Capital Managers, said the speech provides a clear snapshot of Nigeria’s current fiscal condition while outlining the direction of economic management in the coming year.

    According to Balogun, the budget presentation goes beyond headline figures to offer insight into how the administration intends to balance growth, debt management and public finance reforms. He said the policy direction points to an economy seeking to move away from fiscal strain toward stronger discipline, improved efficiency and medium-term stability.

    Balogun explained that the performance of the 2025 budget offers important context for understanding the 2026 proposals. As of the third quarter of 2025, government revenue stood at N18.6 trillion, representing about 61 per cent of the annual target, while expenditure reached N24.66 trillion, or 60 per cent of projected spending. He noted that these figures reflect a year influenced by transition pressures and competing fiscal demands rather than a breakdown in fiscal planning.

     He observed that while revenue fell short of expectations, expenditure was managed in a way that prevented wider macroeconomic instability. One major outcome of this adjustment, he said, was the slowdown in capital spending. Only N3.10 trillion, or 17.7 per cent of the 2025 capital budget, had been released by the third quarter, largely due to the extension of the 2024 capital budget into 2025. By June 2025, N2.23 trillion had been released to complete outstanding 2024 projects.

    From an economic standpoint, Balogun said this approach reflects a deliberate trade-off between completing existing projects and initiating new ones. While this may dampen short-term growth, he explained that it improves the efficiency of public investment by reducing the stock of abandoned or partially completed infrastructure.

    Read Also: 2026 Budget: Tinubu tightens fiscal discipline

     Balogun described the President’s commitment to stricter discipline in budget execution in 2026 as economically significant. He said strict adherence to appropriated timelines and spending details is essential for fiscal credibility. Predictable budget execution, he added, reduces uncertainty for investors, improves coordination between fiscal and monetary authorities and limits the need for unplanned borrowing. If effectively enforced, this could strengthen confidence in Nigeria’s macroeconomic framework.

     On revenue mobilisation, Balogun said the 2026 outlook places strong emphasis on structural improvements rather than short-term fixes. The expected gains from the National Tax Acts and reforms in the oil and gas sector suggest a focus on broadening the tax base and improving compliance, rather than relying solely on higher tax rates. Such an approach, he noted, would reduce revenue volatility and lower the economy’s exposure to oil price shocks.

    He also pointed to the renewed attention on Government-Owned Enterprises as one of the most important aspects of the budget speech. The directive for GOEs to meet assigned revenue targets, supported by full digitisation of revenue collection and real-time performance monitoring, addresses a longstanding weakness in Nigeria’s public finance system. According to Balogun, weak remittance discipline and inefficiencies within public enterprises have historically imposed hidden fiscal costs. Improved transparency and automation could unlock significant non-oil revenue without increasing pressure on households or small businesses.

     Balogun said the 2026 fiscal framework reflects a careful balance between expansion and restraint. Total expenditure is projected at N58.18 trillion, against expected revenue of N34.33 trillion, resulting in a deficit of N23.85 trillion, equivalent to 4.28 per cent of GDP. While the deficit is expansionary, he said it remains within levels commonly seen in emerging economies undergoing structural reforms. However, he noted that the scale of debt servicing, estimated at N15.52 trillion, continues to limit fiscal flexibility and underscores the urgency of improving revenue performance.

     Capital expenditure of N26.08 trillion, Balogun said, sends a strong growth signal, provided implementation improves. At that scale, capital spending can raise output, stimulate private investment and generate employment across construction, logistics and related services. He cautioned, however, that the actual economic impact will depend on project quality, execution speed and the effectiveness of controls against leakages.

     Assessing the macroeconomic assumptions, Balogun described the crude oil benchmark of $64.85 per barrel as cautious by recent standards, while noting that the production target of 1.84 million barrels per day represents a key risk. He said Nigeria’s fiscal challenges have historically been driven more by production shortfalls than price declines, making oil sector reforms critical to budget stability.

     He added that the sectoral allocations to security, infrastructure, education and health reflect an integrated growth strategy. Improved security, he said, lowers investment risk, while spending on human capital supports productivity gains. Together, these elements align with the objective of job-rich and inclusive growth.

    Overall, Balogun said the 2026 Budget suggests that 2025 functioned largely as a consolidation year shaped by transition costs and fiscal constraints, while 2026 is positioned as a test of execution, credibility and institutional efficiency. He stressed that economic outcomes will depend less on the ambition of the projections and more on the government’s ability to implement reforms, strengthen revenue administration and ensure that public spending delivers measurable value.

     In his view, the broader message of the budget is that Nigeria is attempting to move from reactive fiscal management toward performance-driven public finance, with results ultimately determined by execution on the ground.

    On his part, the President, Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, said the 2026 budget remains ambitious, but called for effective implementation and more dollar liquidity to achieve N1,400 to dollar benchmark. Gwadabe said pegging the naira exchange rate at N1,400 to dollar is achievable, and in indication that the government has so much confidence in key reforms in the financial services sector.

     Gwadabe said although there is so much naira supply in the market, but the possibility of more dollar inflows makes the exchange rate benchmark plausible.

     He said the stock market has been doing great over the stability in exchange rate, which is expected to be sustained in 2026.

     He called on the Central Bank of Nigeria to resume defence of the naira to boost dollar liquidity in the system.

    According to him, the CBN should bring in Bureaux De Change (BDCs) into the FX market, by getting the newly licensed operators to begin operation, and licencing others who have met the recapitalisation deadline.

     He said BDCs have what it takes to ensure that dollar liquidity spreads to the retail end of the FX markets.

  • 2026 Budget: Tinubu tightens fiscal discipline

    2026 Budget: Tinubu tightens fiscal discipline

    • …declares Total War on Terrorism

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Friday presented a N58.47 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill to the National Assembly, declaring that the coming fiscal year would mark a decisive break from what he described as the dismal execution record of the 2025 budget and usher in a new era of discipline, accountability, and results-driven public spending.

    Addressing a joint sitting of the Senate and the House of Representatives in Abuja, the President said he had already issued firm instructions to key economic managers of government to ensure that the 2026 budget is implemented strictly in line with approved details and timelines, warning that Nigeria could no longer afford fiscal indiscipline, leakages, and underperformance across its institutions.

    “I have issued directives to the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, the Accountant-General of the Federation, and the Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation to ensure that the 2026 Budget is implemented strictly in line with the appropriated details and timelines,” Tinubu told lawmakers.

    He said the 2026 budget, christened “Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity,” would be financed largely through stronger revenue performance arising from the recently enacted National Tax Acts and far-reaching reforms in the oil and gas sector, which he said were designed to deliver transparency, efficiency, fairness, and long-term fiscal value.

    According to the President, the reforms underway were not merely revenue-raising tools but structural changes aimed at rebuilding Nigeria’s fiscal architecture and restoring confidence in public finance management.

    To meet the funding requirements of the budget, Tinubu directed all heads of government-owned enterprises to meet their assigned revenue targets, stressing that remittances to the federation account would no longer be treated as optional.

    “To support this, we will deploy end-to-end digitisation of revenue mobilisation—standardised e-collections, interoperable payment rails, automated reconciliation, data-driven risk profiling, and real-time performance dashboards—so leakages are sealed, compliance is verifiable, and remittances are prompt,” he said.

    He added that revenue performance would now be central to institutional assessments, noting that the era of weak accountability had come to an end.

    Read Also: 2026 Budget: National Assembly pledges full partnership with Tinubu

    “These targets will form core components of performance evaluations and institutional scorecards. Nigeria can no longer afford leakages, inefficiencies, or underperformance in strategic agencies. Every institution must play its part,” the President declared.

    Tinubu said the 2026 budget was anchored on four broad objectives: consolidating macroeconomic stability, improving the business and investment climate, promoting job-rich growth while reducing poverty, and strengthening human capital with deliberate protection for the most vulnerable citizens.

    “In short, we will spend with purpose, manage debt with discipline, and pursue growth that is broad-based—not narrow—and sustainable—not temporary,” he said.

    Presenting the fiscal framework, the President said the budget was built on realism, prudence, and a growth-oriented outlook. He disclosed that the expected total revenue for 2026 stood at N34.33 trillion, while projected expenditure was N58.18 trillion, including N15.52 trillion earmarked for debt servicing. Recurrent non-debt spending was projected at N15.25 trillion, while capital expenditure was put at N26.08 trillion.

    The budget deficit of N23.85 trillion, representing 4.28 per cent of Gross Domestic Product, he said, remained within manageable limits.

    “These numbers are not just accounting lines. They are a statement of national priorities. We remain firmly committed to fiscal sustainability, debt transparency, and value-for-money spending,” Tinubu told the lawmakers.

    He explained that the projections were guided by the 2026–2028 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper, based on a conservative crude oil benchmark of $64.85 per barrel, oil production of 1.84 million barrels per day and an exchange rate assumption of N1,400 to the dollar.

    The President assured that the government would continue to reduce waste, strengthen controls, and ensure that every naira borrowed or spent delivers measurable public value, particularly in infrastructure, human capital development, and national security.

    On sectoral priorities, Tinubu said the allocations reflected the practical needs of Nigerians under the Renewed Hope Agenda. Defence and security received N5.41 trillion, infrastructure N3.56 trillion, education N3.52 trillion, and health N2.48 trillion.

    “These priorities are interlinked. Without security, investment will not thrive. Without educated and healthy citizens, productivity will not rise. Without infrastructure, jobs and enterprises will not scale. This is why the Budget is designed as one coherent programme of national renewal,” he said.

    The President devoted a significant portion of his address to national security, delivering a forceful warning to terrorists, bandits, and criminal networks operating across the country. He said security spending would now be tied to clear outcomes, insisting that public funds must translate into safer communities.

    “We will invest in security with clear accountability for outcomes—because security spending must deliver security results,” Tinubu said.

    He explained that the government would increase the fighting capacity of the armed forces and other security agencies through improved personnel strength and the acquisition of advanced platforms and hardware. He also announced a comprehensive reset of Nigeria’s national security architecture, including the introduction of a new national counterterrorism doctrine.

    “Our administration is resetting the national security architecture and establishing a new national counterterrorism doctrine—a holistic redesign anchored on unified command, intelligence, community stability, and counter-insurgency,” he said.

    Under the new doctrine, the President declared that any armed group operating outside state authority would be classified as terrorists.

    “Henceforth, and under this new architecture, any armed group or gun-wielding non-state actors operating outside state authority will be regarded as terrorists,” Tinubu said, listing bandits, militias, armed gangs, criminal networks, violent cult groups, forest-based armed collectives, and foreign-linked mercenaries among those covered.

    He extended the classification to financiers, informants, ransom negotiators, political protectors, arms suppliers, and community leaders who facilitate violent acts, stating that anyone enabling terrorism would be treated as a terrorist.

    Turning to human capital development, the President said no nation could grow beyond the quality of its people, adding that the 2026 budget strengthened investments in education, healthcare, skills acquisition, and social protection.

    He disclosed that over 418,000 students had already benefited from the Nigerian Education Loan Fund in partnership with 229 tertiary institutions nationwide. He added that healthcare spending accounted for six per cent of the total budget size, net of liabilities.

    Tinubu also announced that recent engagements with the United States government had opened the door to over $500 million in grant funding for targeted health interventions across Nigeria.

    “We welcome this partnership and assure Nigerians that these resources will be deployed transparently and effectively,” he said.

    On infrastructure and economic productivity, the President said projects under the Renewed Hope Agenda were moving steadily from vision to execution, covering transport, energy, ports, agriculture, and strategic investments capable of unlocking private capital.

    He said food security remained a national security issue, noting that the 2026 budget prioritised input financing, mechanisation, irrigation, climate-resilient farming, storage, processing, and agro-value chains to reduce post-harvest losses and improve rural incomes.

    As he concluded, Tinubu told lawmakers and Nigerians that the true measure of a budget lay not in its announcement but in its delivery.

    “The greatest budget is not the one we announce. It is the one we deliver,” he said.

    He pledged better revenue mobilisation, better spending discipline, and stronger accountability as the three guiding commitments for 2026, adding that trust would only be built by matching words with results.

    “The 2026 Budget is not a budget of promises; it is a Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity,” Tinubu said, formally laying the Appropriation Bill before the National Assembly.

  • FEC approves ₦58.47trn 2026 Budget, amends MTEF

    FEC approves ₦58.47trn 2026 Budget, amends MTEF

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Friday approved the ₦58.47 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill, alongside an amendment to the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) earlier passed by the two chambers of the National Assembly.

    The FEC approval cleared the way for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to present the budget proposal to a joint session of the Senate and the House of Representatives.

    President Tinubu convened an emergency meeting of the Council at the State House, Abuja, to consider a single-item memorandum on the 2026 budget estimates ahead of their formal presentation to the National Assembly.

    Briefing journalists after the meeting, the Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation, Dr Tanimu Yakubu, said the approved 2026 budget has an aggregate expenditure of ₦58.47 trillion, representing a six percent increase over the 2025 budget estimate.

    According to Yakubu, the total expenditure framework includes projected spending by government-owned enterprises (GOEs) amounting to ₦4.98 trillion, as well as ₦1.37 trillion earmarked for grants and donor-funded projects.

    Statutory transfers are estimated at ₦4.1 trillion, while debt service obligations are projected at ₦15.52 trillion, including ₦3.39 trillion set aside for the sinking fund to retire maturing local debts owed to contractors and other creditors.

    Personnel costs, including pensions, are projected at ₦10.75 trillion, representing a seven per cent increase over the 2025 provision.

    This figure includes ₦1.02 trillion allocated to government-owned enterprises. Overhead costs are estimated at ₦2.22 trillion.

    The budget proposes a capital expenditure of ₦25.68 trillion, which is 1.8 per cent lower than the 2025 capital provision.

    Yakubu explained that the marginal reduction reflects a more conservative approach to capital planning, with emphasis on completing ongoing projects and ensuring value for money.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Tinubu presents ₦58.18trn 2026 budget to National Assembly

    He said capital allocation priorities include ₦11.3 trillion for ministries, departments, and agencies (MDAs), ₦2.05 trillion for multilateral and bilateral loan-funded projects, and ₦1.8 trillion representing the capital component of the development levy.

    Yakubu noted that the 2026 budget was designed to strike a balance between macroeconomic stabilisation and development imperatives within the medium-term fiscal framework.

    He said the underlying assumptions were conservative and realistic, particularly with respect to oil price, exchange rate, and dividends from government-owned enterprises.

    On the revenue outlook, the Budget Office boss said projected revenues are expected to decline year-on-year, but stressed that non-oil revenues now account for about two-thirds of total government receipts, confirming a structural shift away from oil dependence.

    He identified corporate income tax, value-added tax, customs duties, and independent revenues as the main fiscal anchors.

    He added that growth in expenditure is being driven largely by debt servicing, wages, and pensions rather than discretionary expansion, while the projected fiscal deficit reflects structural pressures rather than policy loosening.

    According to Yakubu, financing of the deficit will rely primarily on domestic borrowing, complemented by concessional loans from multilateral development institutions.

    Also speaking after the meeting, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Senator Atiku Bagudu, disclosed that the council simultaneously approved an amendment to the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework, leading to consequential adjustments in the size of the 2026 budget.

    Bagudu said the amendment involved a downward revision of the exchange rate benchmark used in the framework, from ₦1,512 to ₦1,400 to the dollar, a change he said had implications for the overall fiscal projections.

    “This afternoon, the Federal Executive Council considered the 2026 Budget proposal that is going to the National Assembly, as well as an amendment to the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF), which we propose — a revision downwards of the exchange rate from ₦1,512 to ₦1,400 and the consequential changes in budget size,” the minister said.

    According to him, FEC approved both the amended MTEF parameters and the revised 2026 budget estimates, effectively clearing the way for the formal presentation of the appropriation bill to lawmakers.