Monday, June 1, 2026
26.7 C
Lagos

‘CHANGE’: One Year of Buharinomics! – Executive Summary

One year into the transition from President Jonathan to the Buhari-led administration, the burden on Government remained the need to rejuvenate the Nigerian economy which has suffered from the declining global oil prices, poor governance structure, sub-optimal fiscal crisis and monetary policy actions.

Recent domestic macroeconomic numbers have suffered from both global and domestic shocks which currently threaten the economic fundamentals of the country. The recent data published by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reflects the impact of the delayed budget passage as well as the weak monetary policy response on macroeconomic aggregates.

The significant drop in government revenue and lower allocation to Sub-Nationals bites harder, pushing many States to the edge of a fiscal crisis with most unable to pay workers’ salaries for more than 3 months.

However, many view the implementation of the 2016 budget as a catalyst for reflating the economy and resetting it on a growth pedestal.

According to the NBS, Real GDP contracted 0.36% in Q1:2016 dragged by declines in the manufacturing and key services sector components.

Similarly, unemployment rate in Q1:2016 worsened to 12.4% from 10.1% in Q4:2015 as total number of people in full time employment decreased by 528,148 within the quarter and about 1.5m people joined the labour force. Inflationary pressures continued unabated rising to 13.7% in April 2016 (from the 12.8% in March 2016) due to cost push factors which impacted on most components of the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

Thus, Nigeria’s mystery index also rose to 24.9% in Q1:2016 from 20.0% in Q4:2015. Pressure on external reserves (declined 8.6% YTD) continued relentlessly despite controls introduced by the CBN. Parallel market FX rate has depreciated 24.0%YTD due to control measures in the official market.

Thankfully, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) took a major move during the week in voting for the adoption of a flexible FX rate regime, though with a “small window” to cater for critical transactions. Nonetheless, the lack of economic impulse from the fiscal space for most of H1:2016 signals that the economy already nears a recession.

The Buhari-led administration sought to employ a new approach to budget formation and implementation in a bid to hasten infrastructural development and reflate the economy. The 2016 Budget adopted a zero-based budgeting system, a move from incremental budgeting system. Hence, the 2016 Appropriation Bill tagged “the Budget of Change” was characterised with cocktail of controversies leading to late passage and signing by the President.

Nonetheless, the structure of the 2016 budget is a significant deviation from the previous years as the anticipated revenue was less tilted towards oil receipts (21.2%) and more skewed towards tax revenue as well as intensified efforts to reduce leakages across Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).

On the back of the huge infrastructure deficit which has hampered growth and constrained business activities, the government increased allocation for capital expenditure from 11.0% in 2015 to 28.8% in 2016. Worthy of note is the special intervention programme on social safety nets (N500.0bn or 8.0% of total expenditure) to ensure an inclusive growth in 2016.

Whilst we hold the view that the 2016 budget has the potentials to reflate the economy if properly implemented, the required funding of the budget for optimal performance could be a drag.

We note that the specific provisions for capital spending will boost infrastructure projects and investments while the recurrent expenditure would have a multiplier effect on private consumption expenditure component of the GDP.

We think the fiscal deficit may exceed the 2.2% level projected for 2016 owing to pipeline vandalism which has lately hampered production.

We see the recent liberalisation of the downstream petroleum sector and the interbank foreign exchange market as a seeming synergy of fiscal-monetary policy synchronisation, but amidst the various macro-economic constraints, we ask; how much can the “budget of change” achieve?

– Afrinvest Research

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Mutual Benefits Delivers Strong 2025 Financial Performance, Record Profit Growth, Balance Sheet Expansion

Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc has announced its audited financial...

Heirs Insurance Group Opens Entry for 5th Essay Championship with ₦11.5m Prizes for Students, Teachers, Schools

Heirs Insurance Group, Nigeria’s fastest-growing insurance group, has opened...

NGX Seeks Cross-Listing Opportunities with Nairobi Securities Exchange

Alhaji (Dr) Umaru Kwairanga, Group Chairman, Nigerian Exchange Group...

NAICOM Issues First Insurtech Licence, Reinforcing Commitment to Innovation, Market Integrity

L-R: Mr. Suleiman Olalekan Ajani, MD/CEO, CBI Insurtech and...

NDIC Reiterates Commitment to Strong Deposit Insurance Funding to Enhance Financial System Stability

L – R: Executive Director, Corporate Services, Nigeria Deposit...

Topics

The Federal Cabinet: Time for Effective Governance

The 2015 Presidential Election ended on Saturday, March 28, 2015. It now belongs to the history books. Regardless of the pros and cons of the polls, it came and went. And in a commendable act worth eulogising, the then incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan conceded defeat and congratulated the declared winner, Muhammadu Buhari, a development that earned widespread local and international applause for Nigeria as a nation.

Interswitch Kicks Off 20th Anniversary, Unveils #NeverStop Brand Campaign

To herald its 20th anniversary commemoration, Interswitch has launched...

Worldwide Smartphone Sales Grew 9.7% in 4qtr 2015

Global sales of smartphones to end users totaled 403...

Africa Oil Week 2018 Partners SuperReturn Africa

Africa Oil Week (AOW) has announced their partnership with...

Chinese Dominance Worries Nigeria’s Textile Traders

Nafiu Badaru, a junior civil servant in northern Nigeria's biggest city Kano, doesn't make much money and it takes some cash to look good so he tends to buy Made-in-China fabric."A piece of high-quality brocade (cloth) costs around 10,000 naira ($50, 47 euros), which is way too expensive for me," he told AFP. "With the same amount of money, I can buy six pieces of cheap Chinese brocade which cost only 1,500 Naira a piece and still keep some change."The proliferation of Chinese-made textiles is a boon for consumers like Nafiu, with Kano and the wider North struggling with unemployment and economic constraints. Click here to make a lazy tweet.

PwC: Africa Needs Innovation, Tech to Grow Oil Sector

The oil & gas industry in Africa continues to...

Nigeria Needs $3tr to Plug Infrastructure Gap

Mr. Andrew Alli, President/CEO, Africa Finance Corporation (AFC), says...

Global Airlines Financial Monitor [June]

Key Points: · The latest financial results continue to point...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img