The National Assembly on Saturday approved a N28.77 trillion budget for 2024, accepting a funding increase that the government had sought due to higher revenue forecasts and a weaker currency.
President Bola Tinubu had initially presented a N27.5 trillion budget to lawmakers, projecting a deficit of 3.9 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and assuming an average exchange rate of N750 naira per dollar. But at a special sitting on Saturday, the Senate and House of Representatives separately debated the budget and resolved to adopt it with the changes sought by the government.
The government said it expected more revenue from government-owned enterprises and now expected an average exchange rate of N800 to the dollar, which would boost export income. Economic growth is forecast at 3.88 percent.
Tinubu campaigned on a promise to revive the country’s struggling economy, but Nigerians have endured increased hardships this year after the president removed a decades-old petrol subsidy and scrapped currency controls, helping to push inflation to its highest level in two decades.
The budget will be sent to Tinubu on Monday to be signed into law. Nigeria has struggled with high deficits over the years due to low tax revenue and falling production of oil, its biggest export, forcing the government to borrow more. Africa’s biggest economy is also in the grips of widespread insecurity, which has worsened in some places since Tinubu came to office. Tinubu who appears clueless so far has yet to spell out how to tackle the problem of insecurity across Nigeria.
Tinubu was one of the loudest critics of former President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government tagging them as clueless because they were unable to contain the barrage of insecurity of lives and property in the country. Since assuming office on May 2023, the killing spree across Nigeria has continued as if Nigeria has no leadership, which is one of the reasons foreign investors are avoiding Nigeria like a plague.
Meanwhile, the lawmakers separately debated last week’s attacks by suspected herdsmen in central Plateau State, which left at least 140 people dead, and resolved to invite security chiefs to explain the circumstances surrounding the incident.