FG Slashes Budget By N1.5tn, Reduces Benchmark To $30

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Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs Zainab Ahmed.

Federal Government has on March 18 announced a slash in the 2020 budget by N1.5tn as part of measures to respond to the impact of coronavirus on the economy.

Also included in the N1.5tn is over N457bn the government spends on fuel importation under the name of “under-recovery.”

A government’s panel set up to assess the impact of coronavirus on the economy made the recommendation, already approved by the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.).

It confirmed in an exclusive report by The PUNCH that the government would slash the budget by over N1tn.

Last week Monday, President Buhari had handed the assignment to the committee.

The committee is chaired by the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs Zainab Ahmed.

Other members are the Minister of State, Petroleum Resources, Mr Timipre Sylva, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Godwin Emefiele; and the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr Mele Kyari.

Speaking with State House correspondents on March 18 after the Federal Executive Council meeting in Abuja, Ahmed expressed hope that the measures would help stabilise the economy.

She said the recurrent expenditure would be cut by 25 percent across all the Federal Government’s agencies, while the capital budget would drop by 20 percent.

She stated;

What we have done is that we have written every ministry and given them guidelines on how these adjustments will be made to enable us to have detailed input from the ministries.

But, I can just say that the budget cut is about N1.5tn; the reduction in the budget’s size. This includes the N457bn from the PMS under-recovery.

She added that;

On how much it will affect the federally funded upstream projects; it is about 25 percent cut. The exact amount, we will work out when we get input from the ministries, departments and agencies.

It could be recalled that the N10.59tn budget, which was signed by Buhari in December, came with a deficit of over N1.8tn.

It had a provision of N56.4bn for statutory transfers; debt servicing, N2.7tn; recurrent expenditure, N4.84tn; and capital expenditure, N2.46tn.

For the government to respond to the oil price crash, she said the new benchmark was $30 per barrel, down from the budgeted $57.

Other measures are the suspension of the funding of upstream projects by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation; the reduction in the revenue projection of the Nigeria Customs Service by N1.5tn; and the suspension of all ongoing recruitment by the MDAs.

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