Kemi Adeosun said that with
a huge monthly personnel expenditure of about N210bn, coupled with additional
debt service burden of N120bn,making a total of N330bn every month, it had
become difficult with the low receipts from oil to generate enough revenue to
meet these obligations as well as fund capital projects.
The Minister of Finance,
Mrs Kemi Adeosun, on Thursday said that the inability of the Federal Government
to generate enough revenue to meet its obligations had left it with no other
choice than to turn to international financial institutions for loans to
finance critical infrastructure projects.
The minister stated these
in Abuja at the 14th Daily Trust Dialogue, which had as its theme: ‘Beyond
recession: Towards a resilient economy’.
The Senate had on November
1, 2016 unanimously rejected President Muhammadu Buhari’s 2016-2018 external
borrowing rolling plan through which the sum of $29.9bn was requested. It asked
the executive to provide further details on it.
The budget has a huge
deficit of N2.36tn (or 2.18 per cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product),
a figure the President said would be financed through borrowing.
While a lot of people have
faulted the borrowing plan, which seeks to borrow the sum of $29.9bn from
foreign sources, the Finance minister said the realities on ground had made it
imperative for Nigeria to get the loan if it must survive the economic crisis.
She said, “Where are we
today and what’s the problem? This is my requirement every month: salaries,
statutory transfers every month, I need N210bn every month. Debt, not the debt
that we are planning to take, but the inherited debt; I need N120bn just to
service it. So, every month, I need N330bn
“Just to give you an idea
of where we are today, last month’s FAAC allocation was N310bn. So, the Federal
Government got about N140bn; but I must cover N330bn a month before we can do a
single capital project.
“So, when we start the
argument, should we borrow, should we not? The truth is that we have no choice.
If you are waiting for the oil price to recover, the prognosis is that it’s not
going to go back to $110 per barrel any time soon.”
Adeosun added, “So, to get
the economy growing, we have no choice but to look for low-cost funds and put
that infrastructure in place, because it is the infrastructure that will unlock
the economy.
“It is the infrastructure
that will allow us to, rather than importing powdered milk, have the cows in
Taraba State with huge potential.”
The minister lamented that
if the country had adopted the steps being taken now to reduce expenditure
through efficiency in spending when oil price was $110 per barrel, Nigeria
would not have slipped into recession.
She said apart from
borrowing, part of the survival strategies of the government was to make sure
that revenue generating agencies remitted their operating surpluses to the
coffers of the government.
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