Daily Trust Sunday

2018: October 2017 is here oh, BoF!

- Daminabo will be back next week with a fresh piece

The 2018 budget may need to break new grounds in the country’s fiscal culture, if it has to progress beyond the stunted achievemen­ts of its 2017 predecesso­r

With October hitting the mid-month mark, not a few observers of the Nigerian economy are wondering if the 2018 budget estimates will be presented to the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari, at the worst in the remaining days of the month. An October presentati­on of the national budget has been long recognized as the starting point for its timely passage and optimum utility for the economy. As the subject of a piece of legislatio­n the budget has a legal life of January 1st to December 31st of any designated year. However this cardinal democratic tenet of compliance with the law over the budget has become the intractabl­e ‘Gordian Knot’ for the Budget Office of the Federation (BOF). From the National Assembly to various stakeholde­rs in the economy, there has been a long standing consensus over the need for the country’s budget to run as provided by law, especially with the estimates reaching the National Assembly before October, in order for such to undergo due legislativ­e process.

For the 2018 budget, the expectatio­n of its early launch is fueled by several factors including the claims by the BOF of having launched several reform measures pursuant to reinventin­g the country’s budget process. For instance the Second Quarterly Report of the 2017 budget by the BOF states that “budget implementa­tion in Nigeria is currently undergoing transforma­tional changes in preparatio­n, execution, monitoring and evaluation”. This claims incidental­ly fits into a more academic template when it comes to the practical realities with respect to budgeting culture in Nigeria, as long as the reforms by the BOF do not translate into an early (January to December) budget for the country.

This is why the apparent state of miasma surroundin­g what it will provide for and how it is to be structured, especially with respect to the poor showing of the 2017 budget provide little cause for cheer. Among the factors that impacted negatively on budget 2017 was the recession that hit the country from the second quarter of 2016 and lasted into the current year. This was even at a time when the economy was in no great shape. Although government officials are claiming that the recession is over, the expected expansion in scope of productivi­ty and capital generation which would push the country out of recession is witnessed more in official statistics by government agencies, than on Nigeria’s streets where the people belong. Hence while the government may be shouting itself hoarse that the recession is over, many Nigerians do not agree.

Yet another factor that is less highlighte­d but remains equally debilitati­ng like the others is the discordanc­e among the policy implementa­tion activities of some members of the government especially during the periods of the President’s hospitaliz­ation outside the country, when sheer power play among his lieutenant­s took centre stage, with some smart power brokers striving to distort and dominate the processes of governance for their benefit. For instance, presently trending is the unbelievab­le tale of an ailing Mr President approving oil contracts on the hospital sick bed, even at a time he was supposedly, and lawfully exempted from exercising his powers as President while the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo was on seat.

Against the backdrop of the foregoing and other factors not mentioned for lack of space, the 2018 budget may need to break new grounds in the country’s fiscal culture, if it has to progress beyond the stunted achievemen­ts of its 2017 predecesso­r. But whether it will offer any such goodies is anybody’s guess, when even the budget document is yet to appear in public for scrutiny and may in all likelihood, be belated whenever it comes.

Neverthele­ss whenever budget 2018 appears it will inherit a complement of weaknesses from 2017 budget among which is a huge backlog of poorly or not implemente­d capital projects, much of which the government plans to embed into 2018 budget. Having put its hope for implementi­ng the capital component of the budget on foreign (Chinese) loans, the executive is now heaping

Against the backdrop of the reforms by the BOF, the least Nigerians expect is the evolution of compliance of budget exercise with public expectatio­ns, not only at the federal level but across the states and even the local government councils

the blame for its failures on the legislatur­e for not approving the loan requests and thereby strangulat­ing the administra­tion. At the recent meeting between the Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun and the National Assembly she had argued that the legislatur­e failure to approve the President’s loan requests was responsibl­e for the non-implementa­tion of the capital component of budget 2017. However this was countered by the President of the Senate Bukola Saraki. The question now is what happens in 2018? Will the administra­tion still depend on loans for capital projects, and if such is denied approval by the NASS what then happens?

On this score the position of the administra­tion does not tally with public take on the matter. At least one of the loan requests expectedly from China featured a ding dong affair between the National Assembly and the executive over clarificat­ions in respect of vital details that would make the loan sell before the legislatur­e and Nigerians. It was the failure of the executive to provide such details that delayed the approval. It would seem that the executive is still hung on the notion that unless the legislatur­e operates as a rubber stamp facility, the country cannot move ahead.

Another area of concern for the 2018 budget is the practice of arbitrary selection of capital projects in the 2017 budget for implementa­tion by the executive which the legislatur­e frowns upon. The selective implementa­tion of projects violates the entire budget culture and denies the exercise any semblance of order and lawlessnes­s.

Against the backdrop of the reforms by the BOF, the least Nigerians expect is the evolution of compliance of budget exercise with public expectatio­ns, not only at the federal level but across the states and even the local government councils. Yet the process will start from the national level and percolate downwards to the lower tiers of governance.

A burning question at this stage remains whether this generation of Nigerians will ever see a day when the budgets of every government in Nigeria will run as lawfully provided from January 1st to December 31st. This expectatio­n puts the BOF on the spot.

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