The House of Reps passed a budget of N4.493 trillion for the year 2015.
This figure is N135.4 billion higher than the N4.357 trillion proposed
by the president when he sent the proposal through Dr. Ngozi Okonjo
Iweala in November 2014.
According to the budget passed, President Jonathan and other former
presidents and vice presidents will be maintained with N2.3 billion.
The Nigerian police force will be receiving an improved remuneration package of N11.755 billion.
The Citizen writes: "The budget was passed on the basis of oil sales at
$53 per barrel, production estimate of 2.2782million barrels per day and
an exchange rate of N190/US dollar.The budget is pegged on a deficit of
N1,075.303 trillion representing 1.12 percent as deficit/GDP
respectively.Breakdown of the final amount passed showed that N375.616
billion is for statutory transfer; N953.620 is for debt service;
N2,607,132,491,708 is for recurrent (non-debt) expenditure while the sum
of N556,995,465,449 is for capital expenditure in statutory transfer
inclusive of N144.420 billion is for contribution to the development
fund capital expenditure"
"Under statutory transfers, Niger Delta Development Commission’s
allocation was raised from N45.780 billion to N46.720 billion; Universal
Basic Education’s allocation was raised from N67.3 billion to N68.380
billion; National Assembly’s allocation was raised from N115 billion to
N120 billion; Public Complaint Commission’s allocation was raised from
N2 billion to N4 billion while National Human Right Commission’s
allocation was raised from N1.2 billion to N1.516 billion.Meanwhile, the
House retained the sums of N73 billion for the National Judicial
Council and N62 billion for Independent National Electoral Commission
were retained.
The breakdown shows that the sum of N153,330,022,460 is for Interior;
N69,423,427,479 is for Youth Development; N62,226,771,999 is for office
of the National Security Adviser; N58,274,429,975 is for Petroleum
Resources; N48,389,942,264 is for Secretary to the Government of the
Federation; N41,649,382,166 is for Foreign Affairs while N31,869,020,717
is for Agriculture and Rural Development.
The sums of N26,590,103,366 is for Science and Technology;
N25,173,916,543 is for Works; N23,682,420,241 is for Information;
N20,085,865,120 is for Presidency; N18,081,478,935 is for Tourism,
Culture and National Orientation; N15,559,334,341 is for Environment;
N10,941,859,480 is for Trade and Investment while N10,592,048,381 is for
Communication Technology.From the N13,965,664,092 approved for the
eight Federal Executive bodies, the sums of N5,293,800,054 is for
National Population Commission; N1,935,767,344 is for Code of Conduct
Bureau; N493,656,088 is for Code of Conduct Tribunal; N2,207,213,456 is
for Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission;
N1,125,005,114 is for Federal Civil Service Commission; N740,477,185 is
for Police Service Commission while N2,167,931,068 is for Federal
Character Commission."
Source: #TheCitizen