The Federal Government on Thursday released N200bn for the second quarter capital projects.
The Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, confirmed the release in a statement issued by her
Special Adviser on Communications, Mr. Paul Nwabuikwu.
The N200bn brings the total capital release for both the first and second quarters to N600bn.
The 2013 budget made provision for an
aggregate expenditure of N4.987tn, representing an increase of 6.2 per
cent over the N4.697tn appropriated for 2012.
This is made up of N387.97bn for
statutory transfers; N591.76bn for debt servicing; and N2.38tn for
recurrent (non-debt) expenditure, of which N1.717tn is the provision for
personnel cost, while overhead cost is to gulp N208.9bn.
Similarly, a total of N1.62tn was
provided for capital expenditure in addition to the N273.5bn budgeted
for the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme.
The gross federally collectible revenue
is projected at N11.34tn, of which the total revenue available for the
Federal Government’s budget is N4.1tn.
According to the statement, the prompt
release of funds will ensure progress in the execution of capital
projects captured in the budget.
Of the N400bn released for the first
quarter, Okonjo-Iweala said N335bn had been cash-backed, while 65 per
cent of the cash-backed portion had been utilised by ministries,
departments and agencies of government.
The statement also said that a total of
N72.7bn had so far been paid to the Federal Ministry of Power to cover
various items necessary for the implementation of the Power Roadmap.
The amount, she said, included the sum
of N45bn paid to workers of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria as part
of the power privatisation programme and the sum of N5bn paid for the
Multi Year Tariff Order.
“Other beneficiaries include the Power
Ministry headquarters, Power Holding Company of Nigeria, National Rural
Electrification Agency, National Electricity Regulatory Commission,
National Power Training Institute, National Electricity Liability
Management Limited/GTE and Bulk Trader,” the minister said.
A breakdown of the N72.7bn shows that
N59.089bn was paid in the first quarter, while N13.733bn has so far been
paid for the second quarter.
President Goodluck Jonathan, who signed
the 2013 budget amidst reservation, had sent an amendment supplementary
version to the National Assembly to address grey areas in the one
earlier passed by lawmakers.
The grey areas include reduction in
personnel cost; reallocation of capital expenditure by lawmakers and
reallocation of the budget for the SURE-P.
The Finance minister had in a
presentation on the 2013 budget said the government remained focused on
critical economic and social sectors driven largely by private sector
activities.
To achieve this, she had said N497bn was
allocated to key infrastructure, including power, works, transport,
aviation, gas pipelines; the Federal Capital Territory; human capital
development i.e. education and health, N705bn; and agriculture/water
resources, N175bn.
Okonjo-Iweala had said, “We recognise
that Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit remains one of the binding
constraints to growth in the economy. Therefore, our strategy is to
prioritise infrastructure investments in the budget, and also to
leverage additional external financing for infrastructure investments in
the country.
“For example, the budget 2013 has some
important infrastructure projects in the transportation sector, such as
the second Niger Bridge.”
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