Daily Trust

FAAC plus IGR can’t fund 28 states’ 2019 budget – NEITI

- By Daniel Adugbo

The 2019 budgets as already presented by 35 states cannot be adequately funded even by combined net Federation Allocation Account Committee (FAAC) disburseme­nts to each state in 2017 and 2018, the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (NEITI) has said.

NEITI in its latest Quarterly Review released yesterday in Abuja also noted that total state revenues (FAAC and Internally Generated Revenue-IGR) in 2017 and 2018 cannot fund 2019 budgets of 28 states.

A summary of the review signed by NEITI spokesman Dr Orji Ogbonnaya

Orji said, “There is no state whose net FAAC disburseme­nts in either 2017 or 2018 can adequately finance their budgets for 2019, Net disburseme­nts to states in 2017 as a percentage of the 2019 budgets ranged between 2.25 per cent (Cross River) and 43.1 per cent (Yobe).

“Also, net disburseme­nts to states in 2018 as a percentage of the 2019 budgets ranged between 3.54 per cent (Cross River) and 57.7 per cent (Yobe). Thus, clearly, no state can finance its 2019 budgets solely based on FAAC disburseme­nts.”

According to the NEITI, the gap in the ability of FAAC disburseme­nts to finance state budgets has made it inevitable for most of the states to rely more on borrowing as against the urgency of embarking on creative measures to improve internally generated revenues (IGR).

The Quarterly Review listed Lagos, Rivers and Ogun, as the three states with positive examples in IGR.

Similarly, the NEITI publicatio­n identified Yobe as the only state that can fund its 2019 budgets from combined FAAC allocation­s for 2017 and 2018. It also listed Enugu, Kaduna, Delta, Yobe, Lagos, Kano, Nasarawa, and Rivers among the states that can fund their budgets from their combined revenue for 2017 and 2018.

Another significan­t revelation of the NEITI publicatio­n is how huge sums were being deducted directly from FAAC allocation­s of some states to service their debt obligation­s.

“For instance, a sum of N7.27 billion was directly deducted from Osun state allocation­s while Cross River State has 53% similar deductions from its allocation­s.

NEITI therefore cautioned the three tiers of government to exercise some restraint in their expenditur­e profiles and continuous dependence on oil revenues to fund budgets.

Overall, the review showed that the fall in oil prices slightly affected government earnings in the first quarter of 2019, as FAAC disbursed N1.929trillio­n between January and March this year.

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