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Oily Questions Osinbajo Must Answer Before Signing 2017 Budget - Politics - Nairaland

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Oily Questions Osinbajo Must Answer Before Signing 2017 Budget by 2000viewsNg(m): 4:34pm On May 27, 2017
There will be only one 2017 in the Gregorian calendar, and in effect, we can only have one 2017 in the entire human history. Nigeria will never have a chance like this anymore. And as long as it is 2017, N7.441 trillion remains the biggest budget (in naira terms) in Nigeria’s history.
I expect that the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) to release GDP numbers on Tuesday, and those numbers will most likely say Nigeria is out or on its way out of its worst economic recession in nearly three decades. This will also mean that the 2017 budget is our first post-recession budget. Hence, there is a need for caution on every side.
If you ask me, this is an opportunity to get it right, an occasion to begin again, and a golden chance to set the nation on the path of sustainable development. Fortunately for him, Osinbajo has got posterity’s situational blessings to be at the helm at this challenging but opportune time in our nation’s history.
Femi Falana, human rights lawyer and senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), has called on the acting president not to sign the illegal 2017 budget. According to him, the national assembly has no power or authority to inflate national budgets.
“We are therefore calling on the Acting President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, who is a professor of law not to endorse and sign the illegal appropriation bill of 2017 into law,” Falana had said.
Some other legal luminaries have opposed Falana, saying that the acting president can sign a bloated 2017 budget. But as the politics of budget passage bully the economics of the same, Osinbajo must take it upon himself answer some economic questions that are not often asked, and that will not make front page.
OILY QUESTIONS OSINBAJO MUST ANSWER
The N7.441 trillion budget has a deficit of N2.35 trillion before passage, and an oil benchmark $44.5 per barrel, with a production level of 2.2 million barrels per day.
In simple English, this means that when Nigeria produces 2.2 million barrels of oil per day, sells the oil above $44.5 per barrel, the nation will still need to borrow N2.35 trillion to meet its budget obligations for 2017. And here is the problem.
Today, Nigerian authorities have said the country is pumping as much as 2 million barrels of oil per day. Maikanti Baru, the group managing director of the NNPC even went as far as saying the country hit 2.1 million barrels before backtracking to say we were on 2 million barrels per day.
“Crude production has steadily increased to 2.1m b/d due to some strategic dialogue efforts embarked upon by the federal government in the Niger Delta,” Baru said in February.
In early May, after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari, Baru explained to state house correspondents that the nation was still about 200,000 barrels short of daily production expectations.
The same Baru-led NNPC told the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) that Nigeria’s average daily production was at 1.484 million barrels per day. OPEC’s secondary sources however put the country’s production levels at 1.508 million barrels per day for April 2017.
Data from all of OPEC’s monthly oil market report from January till date, shows that the country has not produced at a daily average of anything above 1.6 million barrels per day. Going by these figures Nigeria is at least 600,000 barrels short of 2017 budget expectations.
Based on these expectations, Nigeria is expected to get about N2 trillion from oil exports, about N1.4 trillion from non oil revenue, and still have a to borrow at least N2.35 trillion, for funding the budget.
What if Nigeria does not meet production target of 2.2 million barrels per day?
The first question the acting president must answer is the possibility of not meeting the set target of 2.2 million barrels per day in oil production. If this is not met — which is very likely considering our current numbers — the deficit in the budget will increase, and Nigeria will again be at the me.

http://2000views.com.ng/oily-questions-osinbajo-must-answer-signing-2017-budget/
Re: Oily Questions Osinbajo Must Answer Before Signing 2017 Budget by 2000viewsNg(m): 4:39pm On May 27, 2017
2000viewsNg:
There will be only one 2017 in the Gregorian calendar, and in effect, we can only have one 2017 in the entire human history. Nigeria will never have a chance like this anymore. And as long as it is 2017, N7.441 trillion remains the biggest budget (in naira terms) in Nigeria’s history.
I expect that the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) to release GDP numbers on Tuesday, and those numbers will most likely say Nigeria is out or on its way out of its worst economic recession in nearly three decades. This will also mean that the 2017 budget is our first post-recession budget. Hence, there is a need for caution on every side.
If you ask me, this is an opportunity to get it right, an occasion to begin again, and a golden chance to set the nation on the path of sustainable development. Fortunately for him, Osinbajo has got posterity’s situational blessings to be at the helm at this challenging but opportune time in our nation’s history.
Femi Falana, human rights lawyer and senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), has called on the acting president not to sign the illegal 2017 budget. According to him, the national assembly has no power or authority to inflate national budgets.
“We are therefore calling on the Acting President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, who is a professor of law not to endorse and sign the illegal appropriation bill of 2017 into law,” Falana had said.
Some other legal luminaries have opposed Falana, saying that the acting president can sign a bloated 2017 budget. But as the politics of budget passage bully the economics of the same, Osinbajo must take it upon himself answer some economic questions that are not often asked, and that will not make front page.
OILY QUESTIONS OSINBAJO MUST ANSWER
The N7.441 trillion budget has a deficit of N2.35 trillion before passage, and an oil benchmark $44.5 per barrel, with a production level of 2.2 million barrels per day.
In simple English, this means that when Nigeria produces 2.2 million barrels of oil per day, sells the oil above $44.5 per barrel, the nation will still need to borrow N2.35 trillion to meet its budget obligations for 2017. And here is the problem.
Today, Nigerian authorities have said the country is pumping as much as 2 million barrels of oil per day. Maikanti Baru, the group managing director of the NNPC even went as far as saying the country hit 2.1 million barrels before backtracking to say we were on 2 million barrels per day.
“Crude production has steadily increased to 2.1m b/d due to some strategic dialogue efforts embarked upon by the federal government in the Niger Delta,” Baru said in February.
In early May, after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari, Baru explained to state house correspondents that the nation was still about 200,000 barrels short of daily production expectations.
The same Baru-led NNPC told the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) that Nigeria’s average daily production was at 1.484 million barrels per day. OPEC’s secondary sources however put the country’s production levels at 1.508 million barrels per day for April 2017.
Data from all of OPEC’s monthly oil market report from January till date, shows that the country has not produced at a daily average of anything above 1.6 million barrels per day. Going by these figures Nigeria is at least 600,000 barrels short of 2017 budget expectations.
Based on these expectations, Nigeria is expected to get about N2 trillion from oil exports, about N1.4 trillion from non oil revenue, and still have a to borrow at least N2.35 trillion, for funding the budget.
What if Nigeria does not meet production target of 2.2 million barrels per day?
The first question the acting president must answer is the possibility of not meeting the set target of 2.2 million barrels per day in oil production. If this is not met — which is very likely considering our current numbers — the deficit in the budget will increase, and Nigeria will again be at the me.

http://2000views.com.ng/oily-questions-osinbajo-must-answer-signing-2017-budget/

true
Re: Oily Questions Osinbajo Must Answer Before Signing 2017 Budget by Nobody: 4:41pm On May 27, 2017
Op You are a selfish being.. You still went ahead to claim ftc.. I smh
Re: Oily Questions Osinbajo Must Answer Before Signing 2017 Budget by technicallyrich(m): 4:41pm On May 27, 2017
Everytime oil.cant nigeria look for another natural resources to use and complement the so called oil Atleast let it not be raping Niger delta and the east.
Don't yorubas have anything to offer in the scam called. Nigerian.
Don northerners. Have anything to offer.
These is wickardness how can only one region feed the entire nigeria.

1 Like

Re: Oily Questions Osinbajo Must Answer Before Signing 2017 Budget by 2000viewsNg(m): 4:43pm On May 27, 2017
Luxuryconsult:
Op You are a selfish being.. You still went ahead to claim ftc.. I smh
meaning?

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