BudgIT knocks FG over running 4 budgets simultaneously
…Calls it Anomaly with no precedence
BudgIT, a civic-tech organisation promoting transparency and accountability in Nigeria, has decried the proposed extension of federal government Budget 2023 implementation period and that of 2023 Supplementary Budget to December 31, 2024.
The 2023 Budget of N21.83 trillion, signed into law by President Muhammadu Buhari in January 2023, was designed to run from January to December.
While the 2024 Appropriation Bill was being drafted, the 2023 Supplementary Budget of N2.17 trillion was passed by the National Assembly and assented to by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu barely two months before the end of the 2023 fiscal year.
The National Assembly had initially extended the implementation of the two budgets to June 30, 2024, and now to December 31, 2024.
According to the statement by Mr. Gabriel Okeowo, BudgIT’s Country Director, in Abuja, yesterday,
“More worrisome is the fact that the Federal Government is currently drafting another 2024
Supplementary budget, which it intends to implement alongside the 2023 Approved Budget, 2023 Supplementary Budget and 2024 Approved Budget, thereby resulting in the simultaneous implementation of four budgets—an anomaly with no precedence. Standard practice should be that projects not catered to within a fiscal year are rolled over to the budget of a new fiscal year.
“The concurrent implementation of four budgets will lead to severe budget credibility issues, as revenues projected in 2024 alone would most likely be used in implementing four different budgets, negatively impacting service delivery in critical social sectors and the provision of essential public infrastructure.
“If allowed to be implemented, the practice would convert Nigeria’s annual budget into a biennial one, a practice neither provided for by the 1999 Constitution nor the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007.”
Mr. Okeowo said that BudgIT identified many frivolous items in the 2023 Approved Budget and 2023 Supplementary Budget that would compete with essential projects in the 2024 Budget for the meagre resources available to the Federal Government.
Return to January-December cycle
The organization therefore called on the National Assembly to return the budget cycle to the January-December period.
“To this end, we call on the Federal Government and the National Assembly to amend the complications of this convulated budgeting system and return to a disciplined January to December Budget Calendar.
“We also urge the Federal Government to identify and implement only the projects and programs that align with Nigeria’s overarching development goals, reduce inequality, and improve the lives of citizens, the bulk of whom are multidimensionally poor.”
BudgIT noted that for a brief period, Nigeria returned to the January – December budget calendar in 2019 but retrogressed from the 2020 fiscal year but that from 2020 to date, “it routinely extended the implementation period for the capital budgets beyond 12 calendar months—a practice that negates the principle of annuality of public budgets.”