ABUJA (Reuters) -
Nigeria's finance minister said on Thursday that a significant portion
of the billions of dollars drained from the oil savings account over the
past two years was distributed to powerful governors instead of being
saved for a rainy day.
Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil producer, is grappling with
financial difficulties owing to a 30 percent fall in the price of oil
since June, which has added pressure on the government's already
depleted fiscal buffers.
The central bank devalued the naira by 8 percent on Tuesday
because it was running out of forex reserves with which to defend the
currency.
The
Excess Crude Account (ECA) had around $9 billion in December 2012, but
it has since fallen to around $4 billion, Finance Minister Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala noted in a speech to capital market authorities. Most of
the falls occurred during a period of record high oil prices, when oil
savings are supposed to accrue.
Okonjo-Iweala said some of the money had been needed to
cover revenue lost due to outages caused by oil theft and pipeline
vandalism, thought to drain hundreds of thousands of barrels a day.
"Some of it (the ECA) was then legitimately used to offset
revenue shortfalls arising from quantity shocks and to narrow the
fiscal deficit," she said. "But against our advice, significant portions
were also used to augment monthly allocations," to local and state
authorities.
"States argued that rainy days were already at hand and in fact (the
rain) was already pouring, so the money needed to be used right away,"
Okonjo-Iweala said.
Nigeria's oil revenues are the source of around 80 percent of
government spending and are distributed each month to the three tiers of
government: federal, state and local.
Money from oil sold over and above the finance ministry's
benchmark price is in theory deposited into the ECA, which can later be
used to protect against oil price shocks or to plug the deficit.
However, there are disputes about who should control this
money, and state governors often argue the central government is
hoarding the money and should distribute more to them.
The president, being the country's most powerful person,
can usually have the de facto last say on how ECA funds will be
distributed.
President Goodluck Jonathan, approved two dispersals of $1 billion last year to state governments.State governors are some of the country's most powerful people and their support is crucial for winning presidential elections -- President Goodluck Jonathan faces re-election in February 2015.
State governors requested $2 billion from the ECA this month to complete projects and provide security ahead of the February elections. [ID:nL6N0T91BH]
The request has not yet been approved.
OPEC DECISION ADDS PRESSURE
Demands from local governments for more funds are likely to intensify in the run-up to the election, but the falling oil price means government finances are likely to be squeezed further.
The government has already revised down its assumed oil price for next year's budget to $73 a barrel, from $78 a barrel. But OPEC's decision on Thursday not to cut output has put further pressure on the oil price, potentially worsening Nigeria's problems.
Okonjo-Iweala said on Thursday that government plans to
review tax incentives and waivers and plug customs loopholes while also
increasing surcharges on luxury goods, should raise 480 billion naira
($2.7 billion) over the next three years.
She also said the government planned to save 160 billion
naira by weeding out 60,000 "ghost workers" from the payroll, although
she did not give a time frame.
(1 US dollar = 174.5 naira)
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