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Nigerian president signs Parliament’s 2013 budget

World Business
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan approved on Tuesday a 4,99 trillion naira ($31,63 billion) budget passed by Parliament, the presidency said, ending two months of dispute over the spending plans.

ABUJA – Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan approved on Tuesday a 4,99 trillion naira ($31,63 billion) budget passed by Parliament, the presidency said, ending two months of dispute over the spending plans.

Reuters

Jonathan presented the budget to the national assembly in October, but lawmakers increased spending and reduced the amount of oil revenues Africa’s largest producer would save by the time they passed the budget in December.

Spending has risen from 4,92 trillion proposed by Jonathan’s team, which is led by Finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who has been praised by economists for her fiscal prudence.

But Parliament usually wins budget disputes.

“Following consultations and an agreement between the Executive and the Legislature on the 2013 Appropriation Bill, President Goodluck Jonathan today signed the Bill into law,” a statement from the presidency said.

“As part of the understanding reached with its leadership, the observations of the Executive arm  . . . will be further considered by the National Assembly through legislative action.”

Africa’s second biggest economy and top oil producer is growing in popularity as an investment destination, offering the promise of high economic growth and a consumer market of 160 million people.

But investors remain wary of the government’s tendency to squander oil revenues through a combination of reckless spending and corruption.

The budget was based on an assumption of a $79-per-barrel budget oil price, higher than the $75-per-barrel proposed by Jonathan and up from $72 for this year’s budget.

Any money earned from oil over and above the benchmark price is deposited into a savings facility called the Excess Crude Account. Any increase in the benchmark price therefore reduces savings and makes Nigeria less resistant to oil price shocks.

The global oil price is at almost the same level as a year ago, leaving little justification for increasing the benchmark by $7 a barrel, economists say.

But lawmakers, who have been unhappy about delays in their allowances set out in the 2012 budget and who want more money freed up for their constituencies, were unlikely to accept such a slight increase in the benchmark price.

The budget assumes oil production of 2,53 million barrels per day (bpd), up slightly from 2,48 million bpd in the 2012 budget and at the top end of actual output this year.

It also assumes economic growth in 2013 will be 6,5%, inflation 9,5%, and assumes an exchange rate of 160 naira to the dollar.