This
intervention is not about the fact that it took about six months for
the National Assembly to pass the 2017 budget which was sent to it by
the Presidency on December 14, 2016. After all, the National Assembly
needed to do a thorough job and look at it with a fine-tooth comb to
ensure that there are no incidents of “padding” in the budget. Besides,
there are other competing assignments and bills to be attended to, in
the midst of oversight functions and constituency projects supervision.
We are also not concerned that what came back from the National Assembly
as the approved budget had transmogrified from N7.298t to N7.44t, since
no one expected that the role of the National Assembly was that of a
“rubber stamp”. The legislators must not only make inputs where
necessary, but they must be seen to have made such inputs. It is our
contention that there are a few issues we must pay attention to if the
budget termed “budget of growth and recovery” would realise its purpose.
On
the face of it, the budget looks large. For the first time we crossed
the N7trillion mark. However, interrogating the numbers would
immediately show that it is not as big as it looks. At the originally
submitted figure of N7.298t it was supposed to be 20.4% higher than the
2016 budget. However, if we factor in inflation which averaged 18% in
the last one year, it would be clear that in reality, this budget is
almost at the same level with the 2016 budget. This is a real concern
because this is the first year of the implementation of the Economic
Recovery and Growth Plan of the government. The N7.44t approved by the
National Assembly makes the case look a little better as it would now be
22.8% larger than last year’s budget in nominal terms. In reality,
however, significant growth may not be delivered by the budget. Of
course I am quick to concede that growth may not happen just because
numbers have increased as reallocation of priorities may have a
significant impact on the economy. Greater efficiency in resource
allocation and utilisation is also bound to produce better results.
When
we convert the numbers from Naira to dollars, the situation becomes
more alarming. The 2016 budget was based on an exchange rate benchmark
of N197 per dollar. In dollar terms, therefore, the size of the N6.06t
2016 budget was slightly less than $31b. Compare this with the current
budget with a benchmark of N305 per dollar. The size of the 2017 budget
would be just above $24b. Should you use the parallel market rate of
N380/$ to convert, the budget size would drop to $19.6b. So when you
adjust for inflation or for exchange rates, you are bound to have a
budget size that would be in conflict with the promises of government.
The
more fundamental point is that we are still battling with recession or
better still, stagflation. We had argued in the past and the government
had also confirmed that the chosen route to get the country out of the
economic challenge is by issuing stimulus packages and increased
spending particularly in the area of infrastructure. This would have
required a massive expansionary budget. Given the above analysis, the
budget that has just been approved is anything but expansionary. Again,
the infrastructure spend of about N2.174t is just about 29% of the
budget. Recurrent expenditure still occupies its pride of place at about
71% of the budget. Out of the total revenue of N5.08t, over 46% or
N2.35t is going to be borrowed. This means that our budgeted revenue
cannot even fund our recurrent expenditure of N5.27t as the latter is
higher than the former by over N500b.
The
major constraint to the kind of budget that would massively impact
growth is our capacity to generate revenue. The amount of money that a
government and in fact any entity can spend depends on how much that
government can generate in revenue. In the event that the government
intends to spend over and above its revenue, it must borrow the
difference. From the analyses made earlier, it is clear our expenditure
far outstrips our revenues, leaving us with the debt option. Our
situation is such that our revenue is less than our recurrent
expenditure, so, we are technically borrowing to pay salaries. But, we
cannot continue to borrow ad infinitum. This is because, there is a cost
to borrowing. Recently, the Central Bank of Nigeria cried out over the
level of government borrowing. After the Monetary Policy Meeting of May
23, 2017, the CBN is quoted to have expressed concern over the borrowing
activities of the federal government arguing that the government’s
borrowing has exceeded the target for the 2017 fiscal year. According to
the CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, “the Net Domestic Credit, NDC
grew by 1.40% in April 2017, annualised to 4.21% which is significantly
below the 17.93% provisional growth benchmark for 2017. However, net
credit to government grew by 24.08% over end of December 2016,
representing an annualised growth of 72%”. The Monetary Policy Committee
was, therefore, concerned that credit to government continued to
outpace the programmed target of 33.12% for fiscal 2017, while credit to
the private sector declined considerably far below the programmed
target of 14.88%. So, if the full implementation of the budget is yet to
kick off and the pace of government borrowing has already exceeded
target, we need to worry. Other than the argument of crowding out of the
private sector, there is also the issue of cost of borrowing which is
bound to continue to go up. This would put further pressure on the
budget as debt servicing whose budget is put at N1.66t or about 23% of
budget or 32% of recurrent expenditure is sure to go up. Meanwhile,
maturing bonds of over N170b which will be due for repayment within the
year may attract higher coupons, should the government decide to reissue
them. Commenting on the vulnerabilities of the country’s debt profile,
PWC notes that the debt service to revenue ratio has risen from 9.5% in
2009 to 30.9% in 2015, above the country specific threshold of 28%. In
2016, it rose to an all-time high of 50% of revenues which was largely
due to unfavourable financing terms and weak revenue growth. PWC
estimates that average interest rates on domestic debts, went up from
10.8% in 2015 to 13.2% last year.
There
is this misleading argument made by “experts” about Nigeria’s debt
sustainability. The argument goes this way: “Nigeria has a lot of room
to borrow more and more to the extent that our debt to GDP ratio is
lower than the average of 42% for developing countries and 56% benchmark
as per the IMF/World Bank Debt Sustainability framework”. The problem
with this argument is that it does not take into account the revenue
earning potential of the country. It also doesn’t account for the low
tax to GDP ratios of the country. While Nigeria’s tax to GDP ratio is a
meagre 6%, the global average is about 15%, leaving the country with oil
as the major financier of the budget. Given the heavy drop in oil
prices, the ability of the country to generate revenue is therefore
impaired. In the quoted report, the Federal Government is said to have
ramped up its debt “at a compounded annual growth rate of 16.2% over the
last 5years to about USD42.1b (N13.8t) in 2016. Going by the borrowing
plans for 2017, the debt stock could increase by as much as 20% year on
year to USD54.4b (N16.6t) with debt to GDP rising to 17% from 15% in
2015”. You cannot isolate the issue of debt to GDP ratio from debt
service capacity. If at 15% debt to GDP ratio, we are using up to 50% of
revenues to service debt, it follows that doubling the debt would still
leave us below the debt to GDP ratio threshold while we may use all our
revenue to service debt annually. This does not work and is the problem
with argument of the experts.
The
dilemma therefore, is that since the economy is in recession, the
government must continue to reduce wasteful expenditure while at the
same time increasing productive expenditure to stimulate the economy and
consumption, generate employment, improve capacity utilisation and
ensure positive economic growth. To do this, government must make use of
its revenue or borrow. Since government revenue is not inelastic, the
only option left is to borrow. From our analysis, it is clear that there
is a limit to how much it can borrow. Government is already receiving
warnings from regulatory authorities and multilateral financial
institutions about its borrowing activities. Besides, the debt service
obligations are already strangulating and choking it. This is where the
challenge is and must be recognised by the implementers of the budget to
be able to do something about it.
Readers
who had followed this column would recall that we had drawn attention
to this dilemma last year when we advised against the proposed $30b
borrowing. In that column, we attempted to estimate mathematically, the
optimum level of debts we could manage given some of these realities
that have now become apparent. Somehow, we were misunderstood by the DMO
which took out one paged advert in several newspapers to accuse us of
“dangerous misinformation”. We would have loved to be wrong and the
dilemma, averted.
So,
faced with this situation, what does the government do, should be the
question that every patriot should ask? The easiest option is to do
nothing. The outcome of this option is that all the lofty goals set by
government, particularly, in terms of exiting recession and
institutionalising growth will not be achieved. In fact, the modest
gains achieved so far in the area of slowing the decline in GDP growth
can easily be reversed. Nobody wants that. We must therefore put on our
thinking caps to work out solutions. One sure approach is to begin to
work seriously on shoring up government revenue. In doing this, we must
de-emphasise mono-product revenue source and push the tax option
frontier. Increasing tax rates may look like the way to go, but it is
not. The most sustainable option is to expand the tax base and bring
more people into the tax net. Of course, it is only those who are
empowered that can pay tax. We must, therefore, do all to positively
engage as many people as possible, in economic activities. The other
option is to look at the private sector to fill the gap. Strictly
speaking, the private sector is a bit shallow in Nigeria. Most of what
you have today as private sector is dependent on the public sector. The
public sector had over the years assumed a larger than life image
dominating every facet of the economy. That has created a private sector
that is filled with government contractors and vendors. In some cases,
where big money is required for investment, such monies seem to be
non-existent in the country. Even the banks which should ordinarily
support the private sector seem to be more interested in lending to the
public sector given the high risk-free interest rate regime in the
country in the last couple of years. That is exactly the major reason
for the ‘crowding out’ argument advanced by the CBN above. It is
therefore incumbent upon us to ensure that the private sector is not
only strengthened, but encouraged to play its role in the economy.
Closely related to this is foreign investment. Statistics show that in
the last couple of months, we had lost a lot of foreign investment owing
to our economic challenges which were not helped by our foreign
exchange policies. I believe that this may be a good time for us to look
at unifying the exchange rates, sequel to the gains made by ensuring
that the foreign exchange market remains liquid. This new policy had the
positive effect of bringing down the parallel market rate from over
N530 per dollar to the current rate of about N380 per dollar.
If
per chance oil prices go up beyond the benchmark used for the budget,
we would be able to build up additional funds in the excess crude
account which would help in funding the deficit. Recovery of more stolen
funds than anticipated by the budget would also help in resolving the
challenge. If none of these happens and we are unable to see any
traction in the area of private sector involvement and improvement in
tax collections, then we should be prepared for a partial implementation
of the 2017 budget.
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