NewsPDP Faults Abia 2024 Budget, Says Will Mortgage Future Of People

PDP Faults Abia 2024 Budget, Says Will Mortgage Future Of People

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By Ayodele Oni

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The Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP), in Abia State has kicked against Governor Alex Otti’s 2024 budget proposal. The Party said it will put future generations into huge debt.

A statement on Sunday, signed by the state  Vice Chairman/Acting State Publicity Secretary, Elder Abraham Amah noted that the “budget’s total figure is N567 billion; that is N407 billion and a three and half times higher than the state’s 2023 budget and N420 billion and more than four times the 2022 budget even when the state’s economy grew at less than five per cent in the year 2023.”

UBA

The party pointed out that it is “unrealistic and a ploy to create enough grounds of excuses for  inability to deliver on  promises and much-touted magic wand in good governance and excellent management of resources.

“The smoking gun in the budget is that of the N567 billion, only N166.08 billion, about 29 per cent, would be generated from the monthly Federation Allocation Account Committee, (FAAC) and the State’s Internally Generated Revenue, (IGR), which has even dropped from the Ikpeazu era of N5.7 billion monthly to N3.3 billion in the last six months.

“This is despite all the fuss about automation that was used to create political noise in the State, while the balance of N401b, which is 71% of the budget would be borrowed from both foreign and local lenders.

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“Moreover, the FAAC revenue is almost solely dependent on the FG’s budget benchmark of oil price of $77 per barrel, which is always open to the volatilities of international politics and can fluctuate precipitously and with shocking spontaneity.

“That alone is a red flag and a dead end which dispassionate analysts have read early on and clearly shows that there is nothing to cheer about.

“Worse still, of the N567 billion, 84% amounting to N476 billion would be spent on capital expenditure, while 16%, amounting to N91 billion would be spent on recurrent expenditure.

“The N91 billion recurrent expenditure is more than 50% the last recurrent expenditure of N35 billion of the 2023 budget.

“The recurrent expenditure comprises wage bills of civil servants, security vote and running of the government house.

“It is easy to see the road we are headed because more than 15,000 of Abia civil servants have been sacked, more than 10,000 unpaid in the last six months, yet the recurrent expenditure continues to rise unconstrained.

“In the Q3 2023 budget, July-September 2023, Alex Otti spent 87% of the N25 billion that accrued to the State on himself and his office and this trend would continue because the N91 billion recurrent expenditure would follow a similar pattern.

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“He took N5.3 billion to service his office from his personal house, N2.8 billion as security vote when he had campaigned that he will not take security vote, used N233 million for feeding, N552 million for information dissemination and other humongous amounts that cannot be accounted for.

“Of the N401 billion to be borrowed, $115 million which translates to about N100 billion, using the prevailing official exchange rate has already been approved by the lender, African Development Bank, (AfDB) and the obligor, the FGN has also approved for disbursement, and Alex Otti still proposes to borrow N300 billion from both local and external sources.

“So from the onset, Alex Otti has already planned for an excuse for his failure when he fails to borrow about N300b to fund his unrealistic budget.

“In the past 32 years, Abia’s debt profile which Alex Otti converted into a hymn in the last eight years is put officially at N166 billion and this includes those inherited from our sister state, Imo when Abia was carved out of the old Imo State.

“If Alex Otti succeeds in borrowing N300 billion in one year, he would have shot up Abia’s debt exposure up to N570 billion in just one year.

“And the economic question to ask is, which of the capital expenditure projects is an income-generating project that would generate the income to repay the loan or is he just borrowing for aesthetics?

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“The debt per capita of Abia is currently N46,315 and by the time he borrows to fund the 2024 budget, the debt per capita would rise by N137,209 by the end of 2025.

“From the foregoing, it is obvious even to the layman in Economics and Finance that the 2024 budget proposals made by Alex Otti would mean more suffering for the masses because the budget as it is, is unrealistic and offers no hope for the future of Abians.”

The Abia PDP, therefore, called on the State House of Assembly to study the 2024 budget proposal closely, cut the excesses and “save future generations of Abians from the future debt which Alex Otti wants to lead them into.

“We also call on the good people of Abia to prevail upon Alex Otti from mortgaging our future with debts and not allow him to bite more than he can chew at a time and ask him to cut his cloth according to his size.”


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