Tag: Udoma Udo Udoma

  • Fed Govt plans more revenue sources, says minister

    The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma,  has said the Federal Government is determined to improve its revenue generation this year and has already taken a number of steps to achieve the plan.

    He spoke at the House of Representatives Joint Committee on Finance, Appropriation, Planning and Economic Development on the 2019 revenue and expenditure projections as contained in the Medium Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF/FSP) 2019-2021).

    He said  that one of the reasons it could not realize its revenue target for 2018 was that some one-off items listed for implementation in the fiscal year were not actualized.

    But he said those items which include the N710 billion from Oil Joint Venture Asset Restructuring and N320 billion from revision of the Oil Production Sharing Contract Legislation/terms have been rolled over to 2019.

    Read also: Returning the lost glory of palm oil farming in the Niger Delta

    Among other initiatives aimed at expanding the fiscal space, the Minister indicated that the Federal Government will intensify efforts to improve public financial management through the comprehensive implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA), the Government Integrated Financial Management Information System (GIFMIS) and the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS).

    Also the Department of Petroleum Resources has been directed to, within three months, complete the collection of past-due oil license and royalty charges, including those due from Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) (a subsidiary of NNPC), which it had agreed to pay since 2017.

    Udoma said the Ministry of Finance, working with all the relevant authorities, has been authorized to take action to liquidate all recovered, unencumbered assets within six months.

    Amongst other revenue generating initiatives, he said the President has directed that work should be immediately concluded on the deployment of the National Trade Window and other technologies to enhance customs collections efficiency from the current 64 percent to up to 90 percent over the next few years.

    He indicated that in spite of the challenges that militated against the realisation of targeted revenues, the revenues generated in 2018 showed a significant improvement over 2017.

     

     

  • FEC okays N5.5 billion to create 60,000 jobs

    The Federal Executive Council ( FEC ) on Wednesday approved N5.5 billion towards creating 60,000 jobs in the country.

    The contract, under the N-Power Knowledge Multipack project, target to train 12,000 youths between 18 and 25 years old.

    The 12,000 youths will in turn be empowered to train additional youths, bringing the total beneficiaries to 60,000.

    The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma, briefed State House correspondents at the end of FEC meeting chaired by President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Read Also: FEC approves N1.4b for DPR building design

    According to him, the contract, which was awarded under the Social Investment Programmes, will make provision of N259, 000 each for training the youths and N207, 000 each for their tools.

    The Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed disclosed that $6.8 million loan was approved for rebuilding of school in the North East.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, said that 20 new ecological projects have been completed across the country.

     

     

  • Fed Govt adjusts 2019 MTEF

    Budget and National Planning Minister, Udoma Udo Udoma yesterday told the Senate Committee on Finance that some slight adjustments had been effected on the 2019 Medium Term Fiscal Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF/FSP).

    The adjustments came between when it was approved by the Federal Executive Council and the finalization of the 2019 budget proposals.

    The minister who was briefing the Committee on the 2019 revenue and expenditure projections said the adjustment only affected the expenditure levels as it was done to reflect some unanticipated expenditure items and the consequences of those adjustments.

    The key assumptions and macro-framework of the 2019 Budget targets 2.3 million barrels per day of oil production at an oil benchmark price of $60 per barrel; exchange rate of N305/$, Inflation rate at 9.98 per cent, Nominal consumption of N119.28 trillion, Nominal Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at N139.65 trillion and GDP growth rate of 3.01 per cent.

    Before giving an overview of the 2019 Expenditure Framework, the Minister briefed the Committee on the 2018 expenditure out turns. He stated that of the total appropriation of N9.12 trillion, N7.24 trillion had been spent as at December 31, 2018; representing 79 per cent performance. He indicated that Debt Service and the implementation of Non-debt Recurrent Expenditure, including payment of workers’ salaries and pensions, were on track.

    He explained that Capital releases only commenced after the signing of the 2018 budget on June 20, 2018; and as at January 11, 2019, a total of N1.226 trillion had been released for capital projects.

     

    Spending on Capital, he explained further, was prioritised in favour of critical ongoing infrastructural projects in the power, roads, rail and agriculture sectors. “Implementation of the 2018 Capital Budget will continue into 2019 until the 2019 Budget is passed into law,” he pointed out.

     

  • FG earmarks N43.5bn for immunisation in 2019

    The federal government has earmarked N43.5 billion for routine immunisation programme in 2019.

    The Director General Budget Office of the Federation Ben Akabueze made this disclosure in Abuja at the Nigeria Value for Money in the Health Sector Workshop.

    In his presentation, the DG budget said there was a need to scale-up allocation to primary health care and also called for equity in the allocation of funds to different areas in the health sector.

    Akabueze explained because Nigeria was operating a deficit budget, it has become very difficult for the country to further borrow to fund projects in the health sector.

    According to him, this has placed a limitation on “how much we can borrow.”

    To change things, he said Nigeria must seek ways to attract other sources of funding.

    READ ALSO: Fed Govt, Gates Foundation sign $75m funding pact on immunisation

    Minister for Budget and National Planning Senator Udoma Udo Udoma assured the federal government will prioritise health expenditures in the 2019 budget cycle.

    The Minister also disclosed the government was working to improve the country’s mortality rate which is among the lowest in the continent.

    The interest in allocating more funds to health was triggered by “the constrained fiscal space occasioned by drop in oil price and disruption to crude production continues to reflect on revenues.

    “The present administration came to meet a very constrained fiscal space. Revenue dropped from N10.07 trillion in 2014 fiscal year to as low as N5.68 trillion in 2016.

    “Even though it recovered somewhat to N7.17 trillion and N9.17 trillion in 2019 and 2018, it is still low compared to the amount in 2014,” Udoma said.

    He also lamented “dwindling donor funding has further compounded the matters with the country’s transition from the status of a poor country to a developing economy.”

    He noted that notwithstanding government’s tight revenue inflow, “there is need to increase expenditure in the health sector and collaborate with governments at all levels on the need to maximise value for allocation to the sector.

  • Economy on the path of growth, says minister

    Nigeria’s economy has turned the corner and is now firmly on the path of growth, Budget and National Planning Minister, Udoma Udo Udoma has said.

    Pointing to the recently released fourth quarter numbers by the National Bureau of Statistics, the Minister told a gathering of media practitioners at the Nigeria Union of Journalists Press Centre, that the report shows the strongest performance since the economy emerged from recession.

    “It shows that 39 out of 46 economic activities are now growing. Agriculture is growing; Manufacturing is growing, and Services has recorded its best performance in 11 quarters. Particularly notable is the fact that the growth is driven by the non-oil sector which has recorded its strongest growth since the fourth quarter of 2015. In short, we have turned the corner and are now firmly on the path of growth, he said”

    Senator Udoma said the current real GDP growth performance is most encouraging and shows a movement in a very positive direction, especially with regard to the non-oil sector performance; and assured that with the Buhari Administration’s continuing commitment to the implementation of the ERGP, the economy is expected to further strengthen in 2019, and over the medium term.

    He explained that at inception the administration faced real crisis in the economy which included a sharp drop in oil revenues with consequent fiscal challenges as the Federal Government had to struggle to meet its commitments while many states were unable to pay salaries on a regular basis.

    Investors and businessmen complained about the difficulties they encountered in doing business in Nigeria; Foreign reserves had dropped from $37.33 billion in June 2014 to $23.81 billion in September 2016 and inflation had risen from 9.2 per cent in June 2015 and peaked at 18.5 per cent in December 2016 coupled with exchange rate instability as the Naira lost value in the parallel market, ultimately falling to as low as N520/$.

    These, he further explained, led to the economy dipping into recession by the second quarter of 2016 registering GDP contraction of -1.49 per cent from where it dipped further to -2.34 per cent by the third quarter. Government had to take immediate steps to stop the economic drift and reverse the collapse, he added.

    He enumerated the steps to include the introduction of an expansionary budget in 2016 christened the Budget of Change, because once an economy begins to decline and goes into recession, the private sector is usually reluctant to invest.

  • FG, Gates Foundation agree on new health financing

    The Federal Government has entered into a new financing agreement with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation aimed at strengthening routine immunisation (RI) and broader primary healthcare (PHC) services.

    Under the agreement, Nigeria will receive incentive financing of up to US$75 million over five years from the Gates Foundation as the government meets existing commitments to increase domestic funding of its RI programme.

    Nigeria will be represented jointly by the Ministers of Budget and National Planning, Finance, and Health.

    A statement from the federal ministry of finance on Tuesday explained “the incentive financing will be directly invested in Nigeria’s Basic Healthcare Provision Fund (BHCPF), and used in strengthening RI financing and other PHC services for the poorest.”

    Coming at a time when the nation’s revenue generation is constrained, the statement added  “the deal will direct new funds to Nigeria’s broader health sector even as more domestic resources are dedicated to critical childhood vaccines specifically—creating a win-win opportunity for essential PHC services to grow in tandem.”

    It added: “Childhood immunisation is one of the most effective and cost-effective health interventions, and I can think of few better long-term investments in Nigeria’s human capital and future prosperity,” said Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, the Minister of Budget and National Planning.

    Last April, the Federal Government—through the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency—finalised its Nigeria Strategy for Immunisation and PHC System Strengthening, 2018-2028 (NSIPSS), which outlined plans to spend US$1.95 billion on immunisation services over ten years via the national budget and some World Bank loan financing.

    In June, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, committed to supporting the NSIPSS with extended donor financing as domestic resources scale up.

    During this extended transition window, international donors via Gavi will provide Nigeria with US$1 billion, in addition to the US$1.95 billion domestic commitment.

    Together these funds will cover procurement of vaccines—the lion’s share of the costs—as well as operational costs for routine and supplementary immunisation activities, and PHC system support.

    However, even with the additional Gavi support and loan options, the NSIPSS financing strategy requires significant annual increases in funding for vaccines until the government assumes full responsibility after 2028.

    The statement noted: “While Federal Government planning accounts for this, the incentive financing with the Gates Foundation will help reduce the pressure this creates on the overall health budget by providing new grant financing for PHC each year as domestic vaccine financing commitments are met.”

    Minister of Finance Mrs. Zainab Ahmed stated: “There’s no question that immunisation is an all-around ‘best buy’ for Nigeria and extremely high value-for-money but we still have limited resources.

    “This innovative financing will allow us to limit trade-offs in the health sector by ensuring that every additional Naira released for vaccines unlocks additional resources for broader PHC improvements.”

  • Budget minister seeks more revenue for wage raise

    The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma, has asked the Technical Committee on the Implementation of a new Minimum Wage to identify additional sources of revenue for the success of the planned wage increase.

    He explained that  whenever new minimum wage bill is enacted, there are demands for wage increases even from those already earning more than the new minimum wage. All these salary increases will impose additional costs on government.

    He said the committee is expected to make suggestions as to how government can raise additional revenue to ensure that government can still meet its expenditure on other services such as education, health, infrastructure and other important functions of government, after paying the increased salaries.

    “The committee is expected to, amongst other things, look at how to get additional revenues so that as our wage bill goes up, we are able to increase our revenues to ensure that our spending on capital projects, our spending on basic infrastructure, our spending on health, our spending on education and others is not reduced. In short, the committee is to advise on ways to ensure that notwithstanding the increase in payroll costs, there continues to be adequate funding for other government activities. This is not just for the 2019 fiscal year, but going forward, thereafter,” he said.

    On the issue of the budget deficit, the minister said government is proposing to bring it down slightly from the N1.95 trillion projected for 2018 to N1.895 trillion in 2019. This, he said, is 1.3 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), well within the three per cent limit set by the Fiscal Responsibility Act.

    As regards the debt service to revenue ratio, he assured that as our revenue situation improves that ratio will come down.

    As the minister emphasised “Nigeria does not have a debt problem, as such. Our debt is within prudent limits. However, we need to optimise our revenue generating potential. This will bring down our debt service to revenue ratio. Given the size of our economy we can, and should, be doing better, in revenue generation. This explains our focus as a government on revenues and revenue generation.”

  • 2019 Budget: ‘Atiku’s criticism high on rhetoric, low on real solutions’

    The Presidency on Thursday declared that former Vice President and Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar’s criticism of 2019 Budget proposal was high on rhetoric and low on real solutions.

    Atiku Abubakar had last weekend issued a statement in which he described President Muhammadu Buhari’s 2019 budget proposal as fundamentally flawed and failing to address current realities.

    A statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, pointed out that the “current realities” identified by Atiku were issues already highlighted in President Buhari’s budget speech and further amplified in the detailed presentation by the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma.

    According to him, Atiku Abubakar regrettably didn’t offer substantive and workable solution to the identified “realities”.

    He said “Atiku describes the underlying assumptions of the budget as generous, wild and untenable but does not propose alternative assumptions that would have been more appropriate.

    “He argues that the economy is yet to recover from the 2016/2017 recession. Unfortunately, he cannot create his own definition of an economic recession, which is a technical term with a universally applicable meaning. When an economy experiences two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, it is said to be in recession and whenever it returns to positive GDP growth of whatever rate, it is said to have exited recession. It is doubtful if he understands the simple meaning of recession.

    “Atiku attributes the sustained accretion to foreign reserves to “increases in international prices of Brent Crude and foreign borrowing”. But he conveniently forgets that under the immediate past federal administration oil prices were at an all-time high with substantial growth in foreign borrowings, and yet foreign reserves nose-dived from a peak of $62billion to as low as $24 billion.

    “His repeated reference to the price of Brent Crude throughout his statement may be indicative of his lack of knowledge that Nigeria’s Bonny Light Crude trades at a premium of at least $2 per barrel over the price of Brent; just as his reference to Nigeria’s OPEC quota may also suggest that he does not know that Condensates do not count in measuring compliance with the quota.

    “The PDP Presidential candidate faults the provision of N305 billion for NNPC’s cost under-recovery on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) but does not say exactly what he would do about PMS pricing.

    “If however we are to go by an earlier statement from his campaign organisation, which promised to reduce the price of petrol to N87, then we can expect a much higher subsidy provision from an Atiku government; because he is not going to perform magic to get the refineries working at peak capacity immediately.

    “He describes the 2019 budget as being very small, but does not offer any implementable options for improving domestic resource mobilization, which is the only sustainable means to achieving larger budgets. It does seem that he does not understand or is just feigning ignorance about the critical role of revenue in budget preparation.

    “A careful look at Atiku’s statement would show that there is nothing original about his identified “realities.” These are areas President Buhari had already identified in his speech. For instance, the President recognised that the revenue performance of the Federal Government up till September 2018 has been less than spectacular.

    “Leaving aside for a moment the fact that there has been a remarkable increase in Federal Account receipts in the last three months, a look at the budget speech will show that the President specified a number of actions to tackle revenue weakness including strengthening on-going efforts at tax collection, liquidation of recovered assets, immediate recovery of past due oil royalties charges and deployment of the National Trade Window to improve customs collections.

    “His most laughable criticism perhaps was his claim that “there is little evidence to show that increased investment in agriculture has yielded positive results”. Even the worst adversary of the Buhari administration would acknowledge that significant progress has been made in the agriculture sector.” he added

    He said that in Atiku’s often desperate attempt to rubbish the 2019 budget, he confused foreign direct investment with capital inflows.

    This, he said, is wrong as capital inflows covers foreign direct investment, foreign portfolio investments, international borrowing and short-term deposits in money market instruments.

    He went on “He complains about movements in foreign portfolio investment which are often volatile and reflect monetary policy normalization in the United States, meanwhile he is silent on the positive trade surplus mentioned in the budget speech which truly reflects living within our means as a nation.

    Read Also: Atiku to Buhari: Don’t blame the system for your failure

    “Atiku also calculates the budget deficit as a percentage of current revenue rather than as a ratio of gross domestic product which is the preferred standard for inter-temporal measures of the deficit. Using this more appropriate measure the national fiscal deficit is 1.3% of GDP which is well below the 3% specified in the Fiscal Responsibility Act and well within the best global norms. So much for those who claim they have the magic wand to grow the economy.

    “A most glaring weakness in the statement by Atiku is that he does not take a stance on issues of public interest in the budget, which is utterly regrettable from someone who aspires to lead Nigeria.

    “As President Buhari explained, the subsidy/under-recovery has been retained to reduce the burden on ordinary Nigerians at a time of weak purchasing power in a manner that avoids the abuses of the past. The truth is that contrary to the belief of people like Atiku that low fuel prices only benefit the rich, a large number of ordinary Nigerians rely on PMS to operate ‘keke’, ‘okada’, taxi, and ‘danfo’.

    “A lot of the generators used by small businesses also use PMS.  Indeed, it is amazing that a man who has promised N87 per litre of PMS can criticize a process of under-recovery/subsidy that is not being abused as it was in the past.

    “To further show Atiku’s lack of knowledge about basic issues in the petroleum market, he contradicts himself in his quest to make a non-existent point. He complains about the benchmark price of $60 per barrel used for crude oil exports in the budget and tries hard to show understanding of the dynamics of the global oil market by referring to US shale oil production and pressures on the Saudi regime. Yet Atiku expects that OPEC quotas will come into force, in which case the price of crude oil may rise in international markets. What is obvious is the fact that low oil prices impact negatively on shale oil production.

    “For instance, recent reports from a Permian producer show that with West Texas Intermediate at near $45 per barrel, they have already cut back on rig count and use of completion crews.  There is more over the demand side which remains extremely strong in the United States, while large economies like China and India will continue to grow at over 6% and 7% respectively in 2019, which will also impact on crude oil prices.

    “Finally, Atiku moans about the capital budget without acknowledging the historically high capital expenditure over the past two budget cycles continuing into the current 2018 budget cycle.

    “Apart from the fact that the Federal Government has kept to its promise to keep capital expenditure at 30% of the budget, the PDP Presidential candidate is quiet about his plans to raise capital expenditure and reduce recurrent spending. The reality is that it can only be done by retrenching public sector workers and by not increasing the minimum wage to which this government is fully committed.”

    He said that it was obvious that Atiku’s statement on the budget was a poor attempt at playing to the gallery.

    “Without a doubt, the country faces significant fiscal challenges. The administration of President Buhari understands these challenges, as well as workable solutions thereto.

    “The implementation of some of the solutions however needs to be paced and well-timed to avoid dislocating the growth trajectory of the economy. Atiku’s criticism of the 2019 budget proposal can best be described as high on populist rhetoric but low on any real solutions to the identified challenges.” he stated

  • 2019 Budget: FG liaises with NASS on presentation date

    The Federal Government is liaising with the National Assembly on a date for the presentation of the 2019 budget estimates to the Legislature.

    The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Sen. Udoma Udo Udoma, disclosed this in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Communication, Mr Akpandem James, on Thursday in Abuja.

    The minister said that it was the procedure when the budget is ready for the Executive to liaise with the Legislature for a date for presentation.

    He said a date would be given by the Legislature for the Budget to be laid before the joint session of the National Assembly.

    Udoma, however, refuted that he blamed the National Assembly over delay in presentation of 2019 Budget estimates as reported by some news media.

    He said it was obvious that some of the reporters misconstrued his response while responding to the question on when the Budget would be submitted to the Legislature after the weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC).

    The minister said there was no time throughout the interaction with the media did he blamed the National Assembly for the delay in the presentation.

    He also said he did not give any impression that there was any issue between the two arms of government over the Budget.

    Read Also: 2019: INEC tasks staff on productivity, credible elections

    The FEC had on Oct. 24 approved the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP) for the 2019-2021 to provide template for the 2019 budget.

    In the MTF/FSP, N8.73 trillion was estimated for the 2019 budget which is N400 billion lower than that of 2018.

    The price of crude oil per barrel was pegged at 60 dollars and exchange rate at 305 dollars.

    The MTEF/FSP was designed to translate strategic development objective of the economic recovery and growth plan into a realistic and implementable budget framework.

  • 2019 Budget proposal ready for presentation 

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting on Friday approved the 2019 Budget proposal for onward transmission to the National Assembly.

    The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma briefed State House correspondents at the end of the special FEC session chaired by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Read Also:2019 budget: Special FEC session to hold Friday

    He was with the Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed.

    According to him, it is now left for the National Assembly to agree on a date when President Muhammadu Buhari can present the document to the two chambers of the National Assembly.

    Details Later…