Featured Finance

FG to recover unremitted N450bn from MDAs

…Defence, Transport, others get lion share in 2021 budget

In a desperate move to shore up government’s dwindling revenue, the Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning has begun moves to recover N450 billion unremitted operating surpluses from Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs).

The issue has been a protracted one and the government says it would no longer tolerate excuses for non-remittance.

The government has also warned public office holders to stay away from flying first class tickets, just as it has activated its efficiency unit to prune down the bogus procurement spending of MDAs.

These were contained in its budget call circular to MDAs signed by the Finance Minister, Mrs Zainab Ahmed.

The circular also stated that President Muhammadu Buhari has banned the distribution of souvenirs events and will move some government offices to properties forfeited to the government by looters.

The Minister warned MDAs on foreign travels, trainings and other concerns related to overhead expenditure, insisting that their travels, training and capacity development programmes must be restricted to locations within the country and as close to their office locations as possible.

“Foreign travels and training should be limited to exceptional cases, and with necessary approvals in accordance with extant government policy,”

“More specifically, hosting of board meetings outside the country, payment of sitting allowances, the number of such meetings, etc., must comply with the provisions of the Circular and also be subjected to the reasonableness test,” she added.

MDAs were also warned to desist from the practice of specifying the models and brands of assets they propose to acquire in the budget.

“As much as possible, generic specification of items should be made in accordance with the Public Procurement Act. Here again, the BOF will intervene to effect necessary amendments.”

Details of the 2021 budget showed that the aggregate expenditure is made up of Statutory Transfers of N481.41 billion, Debt Service of N3.124 trillion, Sinking Fund of N220 billion, Recurrent (non-debt) expenditure of N5.746 trillion and Capital expenditure (exclusive of capital in Statutory Transfers) of N3.086 trillion.

Of the capital expenditure, the budget call circular showed, MDAs Capital is N1.485 trillion.

The Ministries of Works and Housing, Power, Transportation and Defence are to get the highest capital allocation in the 2021 Federal Government.

The Ministry of Works and Housing is to get the highest allocation of N272.06 billion.

This is an increase of N6.2 billion when compared to the N256.73 billion which the sector got in the revised budget of 2020.

The Ministries of Power, Transportation, and Defence followed with the sums of N178.38 billion N120.04 billion and N120.04 billion respectively as against N128bn, N109.34 billion and N115.87 billion which they got in the 2020 budget in that order.

Also, Education ministry is to get N80.21bn as capital allocation in 2021 as against N115.87bn it this year; Water Resources N84.14bn as against N80.7bn; Agriculture N83.86bn compared to N102.49bn, Health N93.67bn as against N51.4bn.

Similarly, Trade and Investment got capital allocation of N38.14bn, Petroleum N2.8bn, Mines and Steel N7.05bn, Environment N11.21bn, Niger Delta N19.07bn, Federal Capital Territory N31.87bn, Communications Technology N7.01bn, Science and Technology N42.12bn, Aviation N54.97bn.

In the security sector, the Federal Government is also planning to allocate the sum of N35.9bn to the Ministry of Interior, National Security Adviser N28.04bn, Police Service Commission N280.47m, Police Affairs N12.9bn.

In Social Development, the government is proposing the sum of N5.88bn got Women Affairs,  Youth Development and Sports N9.54bn, Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management N58.33bn.

For the Presidency, N10.01bn is being allocated for capital projects; Labour and Employment N13.4bn; Finance and Planning N5.6bn; Information and Culture N12.9bn; Foreign Affairs N6.6bn; and Special Duties N1.4bn among others.

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