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National Assembly to get 2018 budget, October – Presidency

 

The nation’s 2018 Appropriation Bill will be submitted to the National Assembly in October.

Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on National Assembly Matters, Ita Enang, gave the assurance when he appeared at the News Agency of Nigeria Forum in Abuja.

The National Assembly had last year fixed October as deadline for the submission of the bill.

Enang said the Federal Government accepts the deadline as sacrosanct and was committed to meeting it.

He said that the government was working assiduously to ensure that the deadline was complied with to take the country back to the annual budget cycle of January to December.

According to him, different Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) have made their budget inputs and submissions to the Ministry of Budget and National Planning.

“The ministers are already appearing before the ministry and defending their submissions.

“It is intended that in the next few days they would have completed the exercise and have the total of the budget as well as get ready with the final draft.

“Everything is being done to ensure that we keep to the date,” Enang said.

He added that in presenting the 2018 proposal in October, “the National Assembly will consider it between October and November and by December it would have been passed.

“The current budget will end in 12 months and having been signed on June 12, 2016, the budget is legally to run between June 12, 2017 and June 12, 2018.

“But the intention of the government is to make sure that the implementation date and assent will be for January 1, 2018 so that we will return the budget to the conventional January.”

Enang also said that the National Assembly was committed to ensuring that the budget was passed in time after presentation by the Executive.

“This was a negotiated position between the executive and the legislature and in fact, the legislature is more anxious to get the budget passed by December and assented to in January.

“It is what was discussed and agreed and we are working together; there is harmony and there is understanding and unison on this subject.

“There is no matter that will frustrate this because all things were taken into account at arriving at this decision,” he said.

Examining the 2016 budget performance, the presidential aide said that the government recorded some constraints in the execution of capital projects.

“We made it clear that most of the funds for capital projects will come from borrowing and if it has to come from external sources, it will have to be approved by the National Assembly.

“If the National Assembly approves the borrowing and the international agency from which you intend to borrow the money did not release the money, you cannot release it for capital projects.

“Also, sometimes it is the slow procurement process by different ministries that affect the implementation of capital projects.

“Some get proactive by setting timelines of when they will advertise, open the bid, open for selection and when they will seek certificate of no objection, while some ministries start it late.

“Some start it and get stuck within their processes and sometimes one file lies in one place or the other for longer time so it affects the procurement.

“This is one of the things that affect capital implementation.”

Enang further said that passage of statutory budgets of government corporations and agencies by the National Assembly when it resumed September 26 from its seven-week recess was vital to reviving the economy.

According to him, the passage of budgets of agencies like the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Central Bank of Nigeria, Federal Inland Revenue Service and the Nigeria Customs Service will boost the country’s economy.

 

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