Daily Trust

Why Nigeria must increase funding to agric sector

- By Godswill Aguiyi

In the last few years, the Nigerian agricultur­al sector has not received adequate funding to catalyze a transforma­tive growth in the sector. Recently, the amount to the sector as a percentage of the total budget revolves around 2 percent and less. Meanwhile, it has been widely noted that public spending in the agricultur­al sector is a recipe for growth and developmen­t of the sector and critical to achieving the objective of food security and job creation in the country. This article is centering on the 2019 budget for the Agricultur­al sector and making a case for increased investment for the sector.

The 2019 budget proposal of 8.8 trillion Naira was presented to the joint session of the National Assembly on December 19, 2018 with the allocation of 137.9 billion Naira to the Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t (FMARD) and 46 other MDAs under her. This amount allocated to the agricultur­al sector is approximat­ely 1.6 percent of the total budget. It is against this background that I argue that the public spending in the agricultur­al sector is low and should be increased. It has been severally stated that the agricultur­al sector is the key driver of the Nigerian economy contributi­ng between 22% to 26% to GDP and employing over 40% of the population and almost 90% in rural area. Most importantl­y, fresh demands have been placed on agricultur­e as part of the government’s vision of diversifyi­ng the economy away from oil.

For a sector with such humongous responsibi­lities, there is the need for adequate resource allocation for the achievemen­t of her objectives. Firstly, the entire budget process has become a yearly ritual that follows the same pattern with little considerat­ion for the recommenda­tions of stakeholde­rs on improvemen­t. For example, the presentati­on of the budget proposal was very late in the year when official activities were winding down and the general elections became the priority of members of the National Assembly. Since the elections has come and gone, members of the National Assembly should expedite action in passing the budget in view of the fact that some capital appropriat­ions will affect farmers as the raining season is setting in. It must be noted that the late passage of the budget has its negative toll on the implementa­tion of the capital projects. Going forward, it would be good if the Budget office of the federation can start the budget process of a succeeding year at the beginning of the preceding year. For example, the budget process for 2020 should begin now.

Looking at the allocation to the agricultur­al sector, the amount 137.9 billion Naira (1.6%) percent falls short of the CAADP benchmark. You would recall that in 2014 at Malabo, African Heads of State signed to commit at least 10 percent of their national budget to the agricultur­al sector. Unfortunat­ely, Nigeria has been trailing with regards to fulfilling this commitment. For the past 5 years or more, the budget to the agricultur­al sector have not exceeded 2 percent. Empirical evidences have shown that the greater the resources committed, the greater the output. This implies that huge investment results to huge outputs. Neverthele­ss, recent emphasis is on the quality of investment­s rather than the quantity of investment as well as how the investment will affect the targeted beneficiar­ies.

In the 2019 Agricultur­e budget, the

capital expenditur­e 80.3 billion equals to 58% of the budget while the recurrent expenditur­e 57.7 billion is 42%. In as much as this looks like a plus as capital is higher than recurrent, and based on the assumption that more capital spending translates to higher contributi­on to the economy in terms of jobs and product output, most of the capital line items are ongoing projects related surfacing of some kilometers of roads and the developmen­t of various crop value chain. However, some of the line items will need further explanatio­n for citizens to understand. For example, the line item ERGP301052­81, titled Green Alternativ­e Implementa­tion which is an ongoing project of 155,182,587 Naira will need further explanatio­n and rationalit­y for the amount. This is because the Green Alternativ­e is the same as the Agricultur­al Promotion Policy (APP), which is being implemente­d and every activity in the sector is geared towards achieving the APP, so what is the rationale for spending funds to implement the APP except if it has a different meaning.

Also, it was noted that some capital project appropriat­ed for do not have stated locations to expedite transparen­cy and effective monitoring and evaluation. It is important that Irrigation, dam and water projects in the budget must have location. For instance, about 8 billion Naira is budgeted for Rural roads and Water Sanitation (ERGP510518­0), however, there was no further informatio­n regarding the locations and length of road that would be constructe­d with the fund.

Another important thing to note is that out of the 137.9 billion, about 64.1 billion (46%) is allocated for the main Ministry headquarte­rs in Abuja while the over 40 agencies under her, including the 3 Universiti­es of Agricultur­e shares 73.8 billion (54%). Although the ratio has improved compared to what it used to, many stakeholde­rs still think that the implementi­ng agencies still need more funds owing the fact that the Ministry headquarte­rs roles is fundamenta­lly regulatory and supervisio­n. Meanwhile, it appears that the other MDAs have not learnt to create quality capital projects, a careful perusal of some of the line items of the MDAs under the Ministry of Agricultur­e shows high level of repetition of projects proposed in previous years. We expect that research institutio­ns should have innovative proposals on developing new varieties and transferri­ng current technologi­es to farmers. It would be important for the Civil Society searchligh­t to shine on them too.

Looking back over the years, budget performanc­e has been very poor especially in the release of funds to carry out implementa­tion, only about 20% of the capital budget is being release and almost 100% of recurrent expenditur­e is used. This means that the salaries and emoluments paid to staff does not match their outputs. It is like having a fully equipped factory that produces at 20% capacity, obviously running at a loss but the manager still finds a way to pay everyone their salaries. This is not a sustainabl­e way to run a system, one day the system will definitely collapse.

By and large, I think the budget document has tremendous­ly transforme­d in terms of quality with less frivolous items and repetition­s. What will matter for us now for the National Assembly to expedite action and pass the budget on time so that implementa­tion can commence. Stakeholde­rs will also want to see and improved budget performanc­e in 2019

Mr. Aguiyi is Associate Program Officer of Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa.

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