
The Federation Account Allocation
Committee (FAAC) yesterday approved and disbursed a whopping N1.196
trillion to the three tiers of government for the months of August and
September.
According to the spread sheet made
available to journalists at the end of the much awaited twin FAAC
meeting for the months of August and September 2013, the net statutory
disbursements to the federal government was N484,429,000,000 or
(52.68%); the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT)
N245,708,000,000 or (26.72%) and the 774 local government areas,
including the six area councils of the FCT N189,431,000,000 or (20.6%).
To make up the N1.19 trillion windfall
for the governments, N127,661,000,000 was distributed between the
federal government (N19,149,000,000); states (N63,831,000,000) and local
governments (N44,682,000,000) as proceeds of the value added tax (VAT)
for the two months.
N35,549,000,000 was shared from the
Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) by all the tiers
of government and an additional N7,617,000,000 from the continued
monthly instalmental payment from the Nigeria National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC).
Addressing journalists at the end of the
meeting, the Minister of State for Finance and Chairman of FAAC, Dr.
Yerima Lawan Ngama, said the committee approved the August and September
accounts.
Speaking further, Ngama said the month
of September witnessed a drop in the amount of revenue which accrued
into the federation account by N22.783 billion “due to the slight
decline in crude oil production as a result of Force Majeure declared at
Brass Terminal, maintenance issues and theft.”
By this development, only the actual
accruals into the federation account was shared for the two months as
earlier agreed by all the parties, thus bringing to an end the culture
of augmenting monthly allocations which fell short of the budgeted sum
for the month.
The minister also disclosed that the
NNPC had made 27 monthly instalmental payment of N7.617 billion to FAAC
as agreed. As a result, the corporation has only six more instalmental
payments to make to offset all that it owes FAAC.
After the meeting, the state governments
expressed concern at the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) directive of
50 per cent compulsory public sector deposits to banks, saying that the
sates are not comfortable with the CBN’s directive.
Speaking to journalists after the FAAC
meeting, the Chairman of Commissioners forum, Barrister Timothy Odaah,
said the apex bank’s directive was “giving states harsh experience as
banks are no longer eager to extend facilities to states without the
say-so of the CBN among other negative effectives to the investment
desires of the states and the fact that they now have to pay higher
interest when they borrow from the money market.
Odaah hinted that the state governors
would present their misgivings on the compulsory deposit to President
Goodluck Jonathan at the next National Executive Council (NEC) meeting,
to look for possible ways to bale the states out of economic
difficulties.
No comments:
Post a Comment