Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala |
A cash shortage caused by low oil prices has forced Nigeria
to borrow heavily through the early part of 2015, with the government
struggling to pay public workers, officials said Wednesday.
"We have serious
challenges. Things have been tough since the beginning of the year and they are
likely to remain so till the end of the year," said Finance Minister Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, adding that more than half of this year's borrowing allowance
had already been exhausted.
AFP report continues:
Nigeria, Africa's top
economy and largest oil producer, has been hammered by the 50 percent fall in
oil prices as crude sales account for more than 70 percent of government
revenue.
"As it stands today,
most states of the federation have not been able to pay salaries and even the
federal government has not paid (April) salary and that is very
worrisome," said Imo state Governor Rochas Okorocha.
Okonjo-Iweala said the
federal government had a projected borrowing allowance for 2015 of 882 billion
naira (US$4.4 billion, 4 billion euros).
But 473 billion naira had
already been used up to meet recurrent expenditures, including salaries of
public employees.
"We have
front-loaded the borrowing programme to manage the cash crunch in the
economy," the minister told reporters.
According to the Central
Bank (CBN), Nigeria currently has US$29.6 billion in foreign reserves, but
analysts said depleting those funds to offset revenue shortfalls could further
undermine global confidence in the country's economy.
The CBN issues letters of
credit to all domestic firms that import foreign goods, a measure which serves
as a guarantee for international companies that have been reluctant to do
business in Nigeria, said Jide Akintunde, editor of the Financial Nigeria
magazine.
The CBN is expected to
maintain reserves covering six months of imports.
"If we do not have
the required level of reserves, imports could start to freeze up,"
Akintunde told AFP.
For Okonjo-Iweala,
accelerated borrowing is the easiest strategy to manage the current shortfalls,
Akintude said, although with a new government set to take power at the end
month, the revenue crunch will soon be someone else's problem.
President-elect Muhammadu
Buhari will be sworn in on May 29 and is not expected to retain any of the key
ministers appointed by outgoing president Goodluck Jonathan.
Government critics have
alleged that Nigeria's revenue crisis was compounded by excessive and wasteful
political spending through last month's general elections.
Leaders of Buhari's All
Progressives Congress (APC) party warned that the incoming administration will
be confronted with serious economic headwinds after taking office.
But Akintunde said the
news is not all bad for Buhari.
The current benchmark oil
price is US$54 per barrel and with crude selling above US$60 this week, Nigeria
should have sufficient revenue to meet costs and invest in public projects, he
said.
"What the Buhari
government will have to do is show a lot of discipline," Akintude added, criticizing
the outgoing government for a failure to honour a series of austerity promises
and pledges to tackle graft.
Okonjo-Iweala has
defended the government's performance, noting the economy was projected to grow
at 4.8 percent this year and Nigeria was therefore "doing much better than
many other oil producing countries," similarly hit by the collapse in
crude prices.
But, as Jonathan leaves
office with the government's finances in tatters, observers will likely note
his administration's inability to save for a rainy day.
Nigeria has previously
set its benchmark crude price between US$75 and US$80, and was supposed to
deposit excess revenue in a savings account.
But even when crude was
selling above US$100 last year Jonathan's administration struggled to build
savings, partly because the excess crude account has been repeatedly raided by
powerful political actors.
But analysts note that the APC is partly to blame for the failure to pay salaries at the state level, with pro-Buhari governors suspected of spending state funds to support his presidential campaign.
But analysts note that the APC is partly to blame for the failure to pay salaries at the state level, with pro-Buhari governors suspected of spending state funds to support his presidential campaign.
No comments:
Post a Comment