2013 Budget Ready for Presentation to National Assembly
14 Sep 2012
Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Ndubuisi Francis
In keeping with its promise to present the 2013 budget to the National
Assembly in September, the executive arm of government has said that the
budget is ready for presentation as soon as the lawmakers return from
recess.
This was confirmed yesterday by the Director General of the Budget Office of the Federation, Dr. Bright Okogu, in a phone chat with THISDAY.
This was confirmed yesterday by the Director General of the Budget Office of the Federation, Dr. Bright Okogu, in a phone chat with THISDAY.
Okogu disclosed that as promised by the Coordinating Minister for the
Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the budget has
been concluded.
He said the National Assembly is expected to resume next week and that
as soon as the lawmakers settle down for legislative duties, the budget
would be presented to them.
If this happens, the nation may mark a return to the normal budget
cycle of January 1 to December 31 as opposed to the current cycle, which
owing to delays in the budget’s passage in previous years,
realistically runs from April 1 to March 31 the next year.
In order to ensure that the 2013 Appropriation Bill is presented to the
National Assembly as promised, the Federal Government had at the
Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting on August 7, approved the 2013
fiscal framework, which had projected a revenue target of N3.891
trillion and N4.929 trillion as expenditure.
Recurrent expenditure in the 2013 budget was reduced from 71.47 per
cent in the 2012 budget to 68.66 per cent, while capital expenditure
rose from 28.53 per cent in 2012 to 31.34 per cent in 2013.
FEC had also agreed that the fiscal framework should be submitted to
the National Assembly before the end of September when the 2013 budget
will be made available to the lawmakers.
FEC had considered a memorandum on the 2013-2015 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP), which set the broad framework and priorities of the budget.
FEC had considered a memorandum on the 2013-2015 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP), which set the broad framework and priorities of the budget.
The highlights of the 2013 budget, captioned “Budget of Fiscal
Consolidation with Growth” is predicated on a crude oil production
projection of 2.53 million barrels a day, against 2.48 million barrels a
day in 2012 and benchmark price of $75 a barrel against $72 a barrel in
2012.
“Everybody has agreed that the work for 2013 budget must start early
this year; that is why we have the fiscal strategy paper this early.
Once we finish here, we are going to transmit the document to the
National Assembly.
“So at the same time you are holding the budget tight, you are loading
the resources into key sectors like infrastructure – power, roads,
railway – that is, physical infrastructure, and also into human capacity
areas like education and health,” Okonjo-Iweala said recently.
She also disclosed that the 2013 budget would adopt a new approach to
managing the country’s domestic debt profile, adding: “We have always
told you that we have been managing to bring down the yearly domestic
borrowings from N852 billion in 2011 to N744 billion in 2012 and we are
projecting N727 billion in 2013.
“By 2015, we want to bring the yearly borrowing down to N500 billion,
not the entire debt stock. This will be achieved through the sinking
fund with Mr. President's approval.
“We will be devoting about N25 billion into a sinking fund because we
must start putting aside money to retire the debt that we have been
building up. We will also put aside N75 billion to help retire a bond
that will be due in February 2013,” she added.
SOURCE: ThisDay, 14 September 2012. http://www.thisdaylive.com
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