Daily Trust

Nigeria’s spending structure unsustaina­ble — Budget Head

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Nigeria’s current trend of spending more money on running the government than on building new infrastruc­ture is unsustaina­ble, the country’s top budget oversight official said.

Low revenue collection and high recurrent costs have resulted in actual capital expenditur­e below two trillion naira ($4.88 billion) a year for a decade, Ben Akabueze, director-general of the Budget Office, said Tuesday in a virtual presentati­on.

“Hence, the investment­s required to bridge the infrastruc­ture gap are way beyond the means available to the government,” Akabueze said. Recurrent spending, allocated towards salaries and running costs, has accounted for more than 75% of the public budget every year since 2011, he said.

Africa’s largest economy requires at least $3 trillion of spending over the next 30 years to close its infrastruc­ture gap, Moody’s Investors Service said in November. The country’s tax revenue as a proportion of gross domestic product is one of the lowest globally, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

“Huge recurrent expenditur­e has constraine­d the provision of good roads, steady power supply, health care services, quality education and quality shelter,” Akabueze said.

Nigeria should amend its constituti­on to create six regions to replace the existing 36 states, which each have their own government­s, Akabueze said. The country also needs to reduce the number of cabinet ministers to a maximum of 24 from more than 40 and cut federal ministries to fewer than 20 from the current 27, he said.

“No country can develop where a large part of its earnings is spent on administra­tive structures rather than on capital investment,” Akabueze said. [Bloomberg]

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