Senator Mohammed Danjuma Goje |
The National Assembly
yesterday raised concern about the implementation of the ₦500 billion special
intervention fund, a cardinal programme of the Buhari administration.
The
Nation report continues:
The
lawmakers were categorical that though the plan by the Federal Government to
spend ₦500 billion on vulnerable Nigerians is laudable, its implementation will
pose problems.
Chairman,
Senate Committee on Appropriation, Senator Mohammed Danjuma Goje, who raised
the issue suggested the suspension the plan in this year’s budget.
Goje
spoke at a joint session of the Senate and House of Representatives Committee
on Appropriation meeting with Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator
Udoma Udo Udoma, Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun and top officials of the Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
Goje
noted that the meeting became necessary because members of the National
Assembly had given March 17th deadline to pass the budget.
He
said Udo Udoma, Adeosun and others were invited to get their final input before
the budget is passed.
He
also the lawmakers want to pass an implementable budget.
He
said the ₦500 billion special intervention fund’s implementation is not clearly
stated in the budget.
Goje,
an APC senator from Gombe and a former governor of the state on Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) platform, said how would the beneficiaries of the
programme be selected.
He
added that there was no doubt that it would turn into a political jamboree for political
office holders.
Goje
who noted that market women were listed as part of those who would benefit from
the fund wondered how market women would be selected.
He
said that in his home state of Gombe, there are no market women but market men.
The
lawmaker also declared the school feeding initiative planned by the government
as un-implementable.
Insisting
that school feeding programme is largely unsustainable, he wondered how
billions of naira would be spent on feeding pupils when most of them study under
trees due to lack of class rooms.
The
government, he said, should take a second look at the programmes, fine tune
them and leave the implementation for the 2017 fiscal year.
But
Udo Udoma said the programmes were political promises that should be implemented
in the interest of the people.
The
minister added that he would take back the concerns raised by the lawmakers to
the government.
He
said the programmes were commitments that must be done.
On
recovered funds, Udoma said only established recovered funds could be put in
the budget.
He
denied knowledge of a circular directing MDAs to implement only the budget as
presented by President Muhammadu Buhari saying “I don’t think that the National
Assembly will give us back the budget the way it came.”
Udo
Udoma also insisted that the template of the 2016 budget is zero budgeting.
He
added however that “zero budgeting does not mean that we don’t have a limit.”
The
minister admitted that the implementation of the budget would be difficult
especially with falling oil price in the international market.
He
noted that though the price of oil is dwindling, the cost of production
remained the same, describing the development as a major challenge.
Udoma
told the lawmakers not to increase the size of the budget in order not to make
its implementation more difficult.
On
the sources of funding the budget, he said the government planned to borrow ₦1.8
trillion half of which would be foreign loan.
He
said the government was now being forced to look inward to raise funds to implement
the budget.
The
minister said the government is expecting more revenue from non-oil sector of
the economy including broadening the tax base.
On
oil benchmark of US$38 pb, he said that benchmark will still be retained
despite falling oil price.
The
benchmark, he said, was arrived at after wide consultation.
He
said that the personnel cost component of the budget is another major challenge
for the government.
He
noted that though government does not plan to retrench workers, “Government is
trying to use technology to ensure that salaries actually go to people who are
working.
Mrs
Adeosun spoke on how to fund the budget.
The
minister told the lawmakers that independently-generated revenue would largely
be used to fund the budget.
She
noted that cost-saving would be another means to fund the budget.
The lawmakers also drew Udo
Udoma’s attention to the concern of some Civil Society Organizations of about ₦668
billion frivolous provisions in the budget.
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