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How N’Assembly Cut N347.5bn From 4,700 MDAs Projects

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  • How N’Assembly Cut N347.5bn From 4,700 MDAs Projects

Facts have emerged on how the National Assembly reduced allocations to 4,700 projects of Ministries, Departments and Agencies of the Federal Government to the tune of N347.55bn.

Documents obtained from the Budget Office of the Federation on Monday in Abuja showed that 25 MDAs were affected by the reduction in allocation for their capital projects.

President Muhammadu Buhari while signing the 2018 budget last month, had said that it would be difficult to effectively implement the programmes of his administration as contained in the budget as passed owing to several distortions made to the document by lawmakers.

Buhari had regretted that the federal lawmakers made reductions amounting to N347bn in the allocations to 4,700 projects submitted to them for consideration and introduced 6,403 projects of their own amounting to N578bn.

The President had said, “The logic behind the constitutional direction that budgets should be proposed by the Executive is that it is the Executive that knows and defines its policies and projects.

“Unfortunately, that has not been given much regard in what has been sent to me. The National Assembly made cuts amounting to N347bn in the allocations to 4,700 projects submitted to them for consideration and introduced 6,403 projects of their own amounting to N578bn”

An analysis of the document obtained from the budget office showed that 25 MDAs were affected by the cuts to the 4,700 projects.

Most affected by the reduction in allocations is the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing, which has funds on 1,135 projects cut by the lawmakers.

The allocation for capital projects for the ministry was reduced by N97.1bn from the Executive’s proposed amount of N475.14bn to N377.97bn by the National Assembly.

This is followed by ministry of water resources with a total of 886 projects representing a cut of N19.76bn from the proposed N70.8bn sent by the Executive.

The Ministry of Education had a reduction of N10.9bn for 682 projects, health had a cut of N25.4bn on 379 projects, while the agriculture and rural development ministry suffered a cut of N8.2bn on 388 projects.

The Ministry of Budget and National Planning suffered a slash of N65.16b on 10 projects; communications had N2.2bn cut on 39 projects; defence had N12.4bn on 50 protects; while environment had N1.7bn reduction on 183 projects.

Similarly, the sum of N16.2bn was reduced from the capital budget of the Federal Capital Territory Administration on 24 projects, while the ministries of information, interior, justice and labour suffered cuts of N2.3bn, N4.3bn, N43.9m and N2.9bn on 40, 84, one and 43 projects, respectively.

In the same vein, the mines and steel ministry’s 11 projects were affected with a cut of N869.8m; while the Niger Delta ministry had N10.8bn slashed on 103 projects; the National Security Adviser had N3.4bn cut off its 16 projects. The Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Ministry of Petroleum Resources recorded cuts of N4.3bn and N1.9bn on 169 projects and 15 projects, respectively.

The National Assembly also reduced the capital budget of the National Population Commission by N560m for seven projects; the Presidency had N348m reduced on eight projects; the Ministry of Science and Technology recorded a cut of N10.6bn on 288 projects; and the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment had its capital allocation reduced by N15.9bn on 30 projects.

The budget of Ministry of Transportation was also reduced by N26.29bn on 42 projects, while ministries of women affairs and youths and sports development suffered reduction of N655m and N2.58bn on 16 projects and 51 projects, respectively.

Is the CEO and Founder of Investors King Limited. He is a seasoned foreign exchange research analyst and a published author on Yahoo Finance, Business Insider, Nasdaq, Entrepreneur.com, Investorplace, and other prominent platforms. With over two decades of experience in global financial markets, Olukoya is well-recognized in the industry.

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Economy

FIRS VAT Revenue Surges to N1.56 Trillion in Q2 2024 Amid Economic Struggles

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Value added tax - Investors King

The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) generated N1.56 trillion in Value Added Tax (VAT) in the second quarter (Q2) of 2024, according to the latest report from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

This represents an increase of 9.11% compared to the N1.43 trillion reported in the first quarter of 2024.

A breakdown of the report showed that local VAT payments accounted for N792.58 billion of the total amount generated, while foreign VAT payments stood at N395.74 billion, and import VAT contributed N372.95 billion.

A quarterly analysis of the report revealed that human health and social work activities recorded the highest growth rate with 98.44%. This was followed by agriculture, forestry, and fishing with 70.26%, and water supply, sewerage, waste management, and remediation activities with 59.75%.

On the other hand, activities of households as employers and undifferentiated goods- and services-producing activities of households for own use had the lowest growth rate with –46.84%, followed by real estate activities with –42.59%.

Sectoral analysis showed that the manufacturing sector contributed the most at 11.78%. Information and communication and mining and quarrying contributed 9.02% and 8.79%, respectively.

Nevertheless, activities of households as employers and undifferentiated goods- and services-producing activities of households for own use recorded the least share with 0.00%, followed by activities of extraterritorial organizations and bodies with 0.01%, and water supply, sewerage, waste management, and remediation activities and real estate services with 0.04% each.

On a year-on-year basis, VAT collections grew by 99.82% from Q2 2023 despite ongoing economic challenges.

Nigeria’s inflation rate remains well above 30 percent, while new job creation is almost nonexistent.

Other key economic factors, such as investor sentiment, the purchasing managers’ index, and consumer spending, remain weak amid intermittent protests by citizens demanding improvements in quality of life.

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Economy

Nigeria Sees 9.11% Increase in VAT Revenue, Generating N1.56 Trillion in Q2 2024

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The federal government in the second quarter of 2024 generated a total of N1.56 trillion from Value Added Tax. This is a 9.11 percent increase from the N1.43 trillion in Q1 2024.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics report, local payments recorded were N792.58 billion, foreign VAT payments were N395.74 billion, while import VAT contributed N372.95 billion in Q2 2024.

“On a quarter-on-quarter basis, human health and social work activities recorded the highest growth rate with 98.44%, followed by agriculture, forestry and fishing with 70.26%, and water supply, sewerage, waste management and remediation activities with 59.75%,” NBS reported.

“On the other hand, activities of households as employers, undifferentiated goods and services producing activities of households for own use had the lowest growth rate with 46.84%, followed by Real estate activities with 42.59%.

“In terms of sectoral contributions, the top three largest shares in Q2 2024 were
manufacturing with 11.78%; information and communication with 9.02%; and Mining and quarrying with 8.79%.

“Nevertheless, activities of households as employers, undifferentiated goods- and services-producing activities of households for own use recorded the least share with 0.00%, followed by activities of extraterritorial organisations and bodies with 0.01%; and Water supply, sewerage, waste management and remediation activities with and real estate services 0.04% each.

“However, on a year-on-year basis, VAT collections in Q2 2024 increased by 99.82% from Q2 2023.”

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Economy

Finance Minister Denies VAT Hike, Confirms Rate Remains at 7.5%

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Value added tax - Investors King

Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr Wale Edun, on Monday, debunked reports doing the rounds that the rate for Value-Added Tax (VAT) has been upwardly adjusted to 10% from 7.5%.

The Minister, in a statement signed by him, affirmed that VAT rate as contained in relevant tax laws and chargeable on goods and services remains 7.5%.

“The current VAT rate is 7.5% and this is what government is charging on a spectrum of goods and services to which the tax is applicable. Therefore, neither the Federal Government nor any of its agencies will act contrary to what our laws stipulate.

“The tax system stands on a tripod, namely tax policy, tax laws and tax administration. All the three must combine well to give us a sound system that gives vitality to the fiscal position of government.

“Our focus as a government is to use fiscal policy in a manner that promotes and enhances strong and sustainable economic growth, reduces poverty as well as makes businesses to flourish.

“The imputation in some media reports on the issue of VAT and the opinion articles that have sprouted from them seem to wrongly convey the impression that government is out to make life difficult for Nigerians. That is not correct. If anything, the Federal Government has, through its policies, demonstrated that it is committed to creating a congenial environment for businesses to thrive.

“In fact, it is on record that the Federal Government, as part of efforts to bring relief to Nigerians and businesses, recently ordered the stoppage of import duties, tariffs and taxes on rice, wheat, beans and other food items.

“For emphasis, as of today, VAT remains 7.5% and that is what will be charged on all the goods and services that are VAT-able,” Edun said

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