Daily Trust

Rustlers return 107 AK47, 267 dane guns in Katsina FG, states to spend 1.8% of budgets on agricultur­e

- By Nuruddeen M. Abdallah

The federal and state government­s will spend less than two percent of their N13.5 trillion total budgets this year on agricultur­e despite their publicised commitment to the sector, Daily Trust investigat­ions have shown.

Analysis of the 2017 combined expenditur­e of the federal and 30 state government­s shows that they will spend N254 billion (1.8 percent) on agricultur­e.

This figure is slightly higher than the N196.3 billion (1.6 percent) they spent on the sector last year.

About half of these figures would

be expended on running the bureaucrac­ies of the agric ministries and their related agencies of forestry, rural developmen­t and water resources, among others.

This is happening at a time of the government’s much trumpeted determinat­ion to move away from oil to agricultur­e as the mainstay of the economy.

Over the past years oil prices have continued to fall and plunging the country into recession with states unable to pay salaries of their workforce not to talk of executing capital projects.

Lip service to agric

The 2017 figures for agric, just like last year’s, is far cry from the 2003 AU-Maputo Declaratio­n’s Comprehens­ive Africa Agricultur­e Developmen­t Programme (CAADP), according to the president of the All Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria (AFAN), Arc Kabir Ibrahim.

The Maputo declaratio­n requires African countries to allocate at least 10 percent of their annual budgets to agricultur­e and achieve six percent annual growth in agricultur­al GDP.

CAADP is Africa’s policy framework for agricultur­al transforma­tion, wealth creation, food security and nutrition, economic growth and prosperity for all, which Nigeria is a signatory.

In Maputo, Mozambique, in 2003, the African Union (AU) Summit made the first declaratio­n on CAADP as an integral part of the New Partnershi­p for Africa’s Developmen­t (NEPAD).

President of the Soil Science Society of Nigeria, Professor Victor Chude told Daily Trust that even the Anchor Borrowers Programme of the Central Bank of Nigeria is “still not enough.” He urged the National Assembly to double the agric votes.

Other countries that signed the Maputo agreement such as Malawi was investing about 27 percent, Zambia, Burundi and Mali (10 percent); Niger (13 percent); and Sierra Leone (3 percent) in agricultur­e.

Poor agric funding

Of the N7.3 trillion budget for the year, the federal government has voted only N123 billion (1.6 percent) for agricultur­e. Salaries and overheads get N31.7 billion while the remaining N91.6 billion is for capital projects.

The central government budget is slightly higher than the N75.8 billion (1.26 percent) it spent on agricultur­e and rural developmen­t last year. N29.6 billion of the amount was for bureaucrat­ic expenses, leaving N46.17 billion for agric service.

The federal government has been allocating dismal figures to the sector since 2011. It budgeted 1.8 percent in 2011, 1.6 percent in 2012, 1.7 percent in 2013, 1.4 percent in 2014, 0.9 percent in 2015 and 1.2 percent in 2016.

The 30 states will spend N131 billion (2.1 percent) on agricultur­e out of their N6.2 trillion combined budgets. This represents an increase of about N11billion from last year’s N120.53 billion.

Apart from the oil producing states of the Niger Delta, the remaining states have agricultur­e as the mainstay of their economy.

The 19 northern states expenditur­e on agricultur­e is decreasing even though it’s the mainstay of their economy. Out of their combined budgets of N2.4 trillion, the states are spending a paltry sum of N88.4 billion (3.6 percent) compared to last year’s N97.07 billion, on agricultur­e.

The southern states total budget for agricultur­e is N42.2 billion (1.1 percent) out of their total budgets of N3.8 trillion this year.

Zone-by-zone analysis

The northwest zone is spending N43.4 billion on agric out of N1.01 trillion total budgets for the year. This is about two third of the N60.18 billion it spent on the sector in 2016.

Out of its combined budgets of N593.1 billion, the northeast zone has earmarked N24 billion for agricultur­e. This figure is lower than the N29.62 billion spent on the sector last year.

The northeast dismal figure is coming despite the zone’s resolution to increase their agric funding by at least 10 percent, three years ago.

At the end of a two-day North-East Economic Summit in Gombe in December 2014, the six states of the zone had agreed to raise the budgets for the agricultur­al sector from an annual average of four to 10 percent, aiming to raise it from an average of N24 billion to over N60 billion.

The north central zone’s budget for agric is N21.2 billion out of its combined budgets of N781.5 billion. The zone spent N7.27 billion on the sector the previous year.

Of the south-south region’s cumulative expenditur­e of N1.8 trillion, only N13.1 billion was earmarked for agric. It spent only N10.94 billion on the sector last year.

The south-western states of Lagos, Oyo and Ogun figures for agricultur­e is N21 billion. Data from Ekiti, Ondo, and Osun are not available. The zone has a total budget of N1.5 trillion.

The states of Imo, Anambra and Enugu in the southeast have earmarked only N9.1 billion for agricultur­e against last year’s N2.32 billion. There are no figures for Abia, Ebonyi and Imo states. The zone has a combined budget of N581 billion.

Agric-friendly states

Available data analysed by Daily Trust shows that only two states allocated twodigit figure for agric. They are Sokoto (N14.6 billion) and Ogun (N11.6 billion). These are the same states that voted these high even last year. In 2016, Sokoto voted N14.96 billion and Ogun N10.2 billion.

Kebbi State which voted N12.5 billion for the sector last year hasn’t yet presented its 2017 budget.

States with above N5 billion budgets for agric are Kogi (N8 billion), Katsina (N8 billion), Akwa Ibom (N7.4 billion), Borno (N7 billion), Bauchi (N6.7 billion), Kano (N6.6 billion), Jigawa (N6.1 billion), Yobe (N5.7 billion), Anambra (N5.4billion) and Plateau (N5.1 billion).

Unfriendly agric states

States with the least budgets for agric include Enugu (N465 million), Bayelsa (N535millio­n), Edo (N1.1 billion), Kwara (N1.13 billion), Nasarawa (N3 billion), Imo (N3.2 billion), Zamfara (N3.5 billion), Bayelsa (N4 billion), Taraba (N4.4 billion), Kaduna (N4.6 billion), Oyo (N4.6 billion) and Lagos (N4.7 billion).

Budget too inadequate

An Abuja- based agronomist, Aliyu Samaila, said “there should have been a conscious and elaborate effort to increase dry season production but I did not see anything in the budget reflecting that.”

Another missing link in the budget, according to him, is farmers-herders crisis which “has not been properly captured. The Brazilian grasses said to be planted in the grazing reserves are still yet to be imported and the lands are also yet to be acquired for the grazing reserves.”

“In the Green Alternativ­e Policy presented to the Senate in 2016, it talked about serious interventi­on in the critical sectors of the economy, this government doesn’t seem to address that because there is nothing outlined in terms of meeting the seeds needs of the farmers,” Samaila said.

Professor Chude said states have the responsibi­lity of feeding their citizens. “States must ensure that the federal government’s policy of two crops per state succeeded. It is the surest way of ending recession and ensuring food security,” he said.

Arc Ibrahim said the allocation of N12 billion value chain products by the federal government if properly applied will drive the sector to prosperity.

He said if other states will neglect the sector, the 19 northern states “have to embrace and restore the dignity of agricultur­e by providing soft loans and conducive environmen­t for farmers to participat­e.”

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