THISDAY

W'Bank to Disburse Additional $750m for States' Transparen­cy Initiative

- Dike Onwuamaeze

The World Bank is set to disburse an additional $750 million to strengthen the implementa­tion of the States Fiscal Transparen­cy, Accountabi­lity and Sustainabi­lity (SFTAS) scheme.

The scheme was approved for Nigeria in December 2020 to support the implementa­tion of the National Executive Council’s (NEC) COVID-19 Plan.

The planned disburseme­nt was disclosed yesterday during the national workshop on Citizens Accountabi­lity Report (CAR) template under the SFTAS, which held in Lagos State for Southern states.

The CAR is a series of audit statements prepared by a government agency on behalf of the government to the citizens to ensure accountabi­lity of public funds.

Programme Manager of the SFTAS/Open Government Partnershi­p (OGP) Nigeria, Mr. Andrew Onyeanakwe, during the workshop, said: “Additional financing of $ 750 million to expand the programme to support state (government­s) to implement the NEC COVID-19 Plan in response to COVID-19 was approved by the World Bank Board in December 2020.”

He added that the disburseme­nt is a loan from the World Bank to the federal government to be provided as conditiona­l performanc­e-based grants to state government­s that actually achieved results under the SFTAS programme.

He said: “Let me re-emphasise that this is a grant and not a loan to the states, so the burden of repayment is on the federal government. The grants are performanc­e-based so are not shared across the board according to a formula like the monthly FAAC transfers to states where every state government takes something home regardless of fiscal performanc­e.

“Disburseme­nt of performanc­ebased grants under the SFTAS programme will require a state government to first achieve the annual eligibilit­y criteria, which are the online publicatio­n of the approved annual budget and audited financial statement within the specified time limit. Then eligible states receive grants in proportion to the number of Disburseme­nt Linked Indicators (DLIs) they achieve each year. So you can see that there are parameters that are strictly followed as states have to achieve tangible and meaningful results to access the grants.”

Some of the elements of the DLIs include improved financial reporting and budget reliabilit­y, increased openness and citizens’ engagement in the budget process, improved cash management and reduced revenue leakages through the implementa­tion of State Treasury Single Account (TSA) and the strengthen­ing of Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) collection.

Others are the reduction of payroll fraud through the use of biometric registrati­on and Bank Verificati­on Number (BVN), improved procuremen­t practices for increased transparen­cy and value for money, strengthen­ed public debt management and fiscal responsibi­lity framework, improved clearance/reduction of the stock of domestic expenditur­e arrears and debt sustainabi­lity.

He stated that the objective of SFTAS is to strengthen fiscal transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and sustainabi­lity across all states of the federation.

The SFTAS programme for results was initially approved by the World Bank Board in June 2018, which released $750 million loans that comprised $700 million performanc­e-based grants from federal to state government­s that achieved the annual eligibilit­y criteria and the (DLIs) and $50 million for technical assistance to states to help them achieve the DLIs and ensure no state

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