Bulwark Intelligence

Nigeria is in Recession, says Adeosun

*FG releases N247.9 billion for capital projects Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, on Thursday admitted that the country is in recession. Adeosun who made the declaration while briefing Senators in plenary on measures adopted to bail out the economy from the woods also said that the Federal Government has released N247.9 billion in the last […]
The post Nigeria is in Recession, says Adeosun appeared first on The Nation Nigeria.

*FG releases N247.9 billion for capital projects

Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, on Thursday admitted that the country is in recession.

Adeosun who made the declaration while briefing Senators in plenary on measures adopted to bail out the economy from the woods also said that the Federal Government has released N247.9 billion in the last two months for capital expenditure.

She said that another N60 billion would also be released for capital vote in the next few weeks.

She added that the sum of N74 billion was released to the Works Ministry.

All the releases, she said, had been fully cash backed.

The Minister however told the Senators that the recession would be a very short one because government had put measures reverse the trend.

She said that Nigerians should not dwell on the recession but rather on where the country is going through the measures being taken to save the economy.

Adeosun said: “‎Is Nigeria in recession? Technically, if you go into two quarters of negative growth, technically, we are in recession. But I don’t think we should dwell on definitions. I think we should really dwell on where we are going. I think if we are in recession, what I will like to say is we are going to come out of it and it would be a very short one because the policies that we have would ensure that we don’t go below where we need to go and I think with what we are doing, we would begin to turn the corner I believe by Quarter three”‎

“‎We are not the only country in recession, many countries are doing far worse than us. But for Nigeria, what Nigerians want to know is ‘how’s that going to affect me’ and I want to assure everybody that what we are doing is going to work and it’s going to turn this economy around.”

The minister further insisted that despite the economic downturn, Nigeria’s economy remained the biggest in Africa and would continue to be so.

On the N247.9billion released, she noted that N107 billion was for projects in the Works and Housing sector, while the agriculture sector received N29.1 billion.

She asked the lawmakers to continue to believe in the ability of the country to recover from the economic problems.

She said that Nigerians should ‎not panic over opinions expressed by some international organizations, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in respect of the state of country’s economy.

She declared, “‎I ‎am not too worried about the IMF projection, I will tell you why because IMF job and function is global economic surveillance. They equally issued a negative report on Britain as a result of Brexit.

“I don’t think we should panic every time IMF speaks. I think we need to be confident around what we are doing and where we are going. I remained extremely confident as I said around Nigeria, IMF has given their projections which is we may continue into negative territory and I am not sure what we have seen suggests that. ‎”

On what was inherited from the immediate past administration, Adeosun said: “‎I inherited very little by way of reserves.

“I inherited significant debt, contractor debt. Cash calls of $5 billion dollars outstanding to the oil companies.

“I mentioned the cash calls of $5 billion dollars outstanding to the oil companies. I equally mentioned the fact that many of the contractors even though we have paid them N107 billion find it very difficult to work because they are owed and some of them have not being paid since 2012.

“Their claims are over N390 billion. So, I didn’t inherit reserves that are positive, I inherited reserves that tend to be more negative than positive because the economy is actually in very good hands and we are doing absolutely our best to get through this difficult period and I explained how we are doing that, we have being extremely disciplined around our spending.

“We are investing in essential infrastructure I gave the metric we have released N74 billion to Works in two months compared to N19 billion for the whole of last year. We are doing everything possible to avert and to manage the situation which we didn’t create unfortunately but which we inherited and we as a nation we must all get out of.”‎

On the loans the government has taken to fund the budget, she said that the loans have been more of local loans.

She said, “We have been borrowing largely from the domestic market because we needed to get the exchange rate sorted out to enable us borrow from the international market.

“The international borrowings will begin to come in quarter three; that is always our projections. We would take initial money from Nigeria as we sorted things out and we go on the road to borrow internationally.”‎

Adeosun said: “The projected rate of implementation of the budget I found that difficult question to answer simply because there are quite a few moving part in terms of our revenue and many of our revenues will come in the third quarter.

On areas of priority she said, “I think we have being fairly consistent that we needed to invest in infrastructure and in our releases we have tried to priotise those areas and also to work with seasonality.

“For example Works Ministry needs to have their money during the dry season because during the rainy season works stops and we are trying to time the releases to ensure maximum impact.

On the 2017 budget, “I believe the minister of budget and planning has started working on putting that documents together and I am very sure in good time for us to go back to the calendar that we lie which is the December calendar.

“The releases are fully cash backed. We have stopped the practice of releasing or approving releases that are not cash backing. We have changed that process we now start from the position how much cash do we have and then we release appropriately.”

On exchange rate she said, “We predicated the budget on N197 and the rate is now N280 per dollar.

On social intervention she said, “The question about the interest of Nigerians, I think it is a very good one. Job creation and reserves. One of the things that I mentioned that we have done is release this money for the first time for the social intervention programmes.

“We have released N15 billion of capital and we put in N5 billion this month for recurrent and so that recurrent will continue to increase as they roll out the implementation of things like the duty calls, the agriculture extension workers and the other job creation initiatives.

“Also beyond that, the police, one of the upside from the cleaning we have done on the pay roll was that the police were able to recruit 10,000 new officers but there is no impact on their salaries because we have cleaned up those who have or who shouldn’t have being there and so they can now create 10,000 new jobs. So, there is quite a bit of job creation activity going on as a result of some of the interventions we have done.”

On what government inherited she said, “I think at a time like this blaming who was responsible doesn’t actually take us anywhere but I will tell you what I inherited. I inherited very little by way of reserves.

“I inherited significant debt, contractor debt. Cash calls of $5 billion dollars outstanding to the oil companies. I mentioned the cash calls of $5 billion dollars outstanding to the oil companies.

“I equally mentioned the fact that many of the contractors even though we have paid them N107 billion find it very difficult to work because they are owed and some of them have not being paid since 2012.  Their claims are over N390 billion. So, I didn’t inherit reserves that are positive, I inherited reserves that tend to be more negative than positive because the economy is actually in very good hands and we are doing absolutely our best to get through this difficult period and I explained how we are doing that.

“WE have being extremely disciplined around our spending, we are investing in essential infrastructure I gave the metric we have released N74 billion to Works in two months compared to N19 billion for the whole of last year. We are doing everything possible to avert and to manage the situation which we didn’t create unfortunately but which we inherited and we as a nation we must all get out of.

“We have being borrowing largely from the domestic market because we needed to get the exchange rate sorted out to enable us borrow from the international market.

The international borrowings will begin to come in Q3 that is always our projections we would take initial money from Nigeria as we sorted things out and we go on the road to borrow internationally.”

On IMF prediction she said, “I am not too worried about the IMF projection. I will tell you why because IMF job, one of their functions is global economic surveillance. They equally issued a negative report on Britain as a result of Brexit.

“I don’t think we should panic every time IMF speaks. I think we need to be confident around what we are doing and where we are going. I remained extremely confident as I said around Nigeria, IMF has given their projections which is we may continue into negative territory and I am not sure what we have seen suggests that.

“Agriculture output seems to be going up. If you even look inflation which is very high, the month on that reduced and that tells you that things are moving in the right direction. If you look at what is happening in the petroleum sector before subsidy we are subsidising around 45 million dollars litres of fuel a day. Now without subsidy usage has dropped to 26 million litres so what does that tells you all the smuggling that was going out of the country based on the subsidy that we are providing have stopped those are real savings to the economy which we are now redirecting into the essentially infrastructure that will get this economy going.”

The post Nigeria is in Recession, says Adeosun appeared first on The Nation Nigeria.

Source:The Nation Nigeria

Scroll to Top