
The Senate and House of Representatives, have passed the 2018 Appropriation Bill into law, with the addition of N500 billion, after 190 days.
Today, being Wednesday, made it exactly 190 days the 2018 budget was submitted to the joint House of the National Assembly, for consideration by President Muhammadu Buhari.
The Lawmakers on Wednesday, passed the total sum of N9.1 trillion, an increase of N508 billion from the N8.6 trillion originally presented to the Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari on November 7, 2017.
The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriation, Danjuma Goje, declared that the increase of oil benchmark from the proposed N45 to N51, led to the addition of N500 billion.
He said also that the exchange rate of N305 to a dollar and production of 2.3 million barrels of oil per day proposed by the Executive, was adopted.
The funds accrued from the increment will be spent on specific projects already earmarked by the Committee, the Senator said.
Giving the breakdown of the budget in the Committee report, he said N42.72 billion will be spent on Security, N57.15 billion for Health, and N106.50 billion for the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing.
Other areas are: Education, N15.7 billion, Judiciary, N10 billion and Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, N44.20billion.
In the final breakdown, the Senate passed a 2018 budget of N9,120,334,988,225 of which N530,421,368,624 is for statutory transfers, instead of N456,458,654,074 proposed by the Executive.
N2,203,835,365,699 was budgeted for debt service, and N190,000,000,000 was for a sinking fund for maturing loans.
N3,512,677,902,077 was earmarked for recurrent (non-debt) expenditure, with a slight increment from N3,494,277,820,219 proposed, and N2,873,400,351,825 was budgeted for capital expenditure, as against N2,427,665,113,222.
The fiscal deficit of N1,954,464,993,775 and a deficit to GDP of -1.73 percent was approved.
Of the total budget, N530 billion was allocated for statutory transfers; N2 trillion for debt service; N2 trillion for sinking fund for maturing bonds, and N2 trillion for recurrent (non-debt) expenditure.
Establishments expected to get their allocations on first line charge are the National Judicial Council, N110 billion; Niger-Delta Development Commission, N81 billion; NDDC Outstanding Liabilities on Federal Government of Nigeria, N34 billion; Universal Basic Education, N109 billion; National Assembly, N139 billion and Public Compliant Commission, N7 billion.
The rest are: N45 billion for the Independent National Electoral Commission, and N3 billion for National Human Rights Commission.
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