Thursday, February 20, 2020

Excess Crude Account drops from $325m to $70m

 

   Experts on Wednesday expressed concern following a report that the Excess Crude Account(ECA) was depleted from $325 million to $70 million within a month. The experts blamed it on profound revenue challenges and lack of rules governing deposits and withdrawals from the special account.

   They argued that the depletion would not have been  so massive if   state governors had not insisted on   sharing of monies in the ECA,  a special account for keeping  extra oil revenue above budgeted oil benchmark. The implication of the drop, according to them, is a likely crash of the exchange rate, which invariably would result in  devaluation of the naira.

   A statement from the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC)   yesterday said the strategic reserve account now has $71.814 million down from the $324.968 million recorded on   January 15. Details of the huge depletion was not provided by the FAAC team that issued the statement. Last month, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) warned the fiscal authorities to build up buffers against revenue shocks by saving for the rainy day.

    The CBN urged the Federal and state governments to build buffers against the tradition of spending all earnings in the Federation’s purse. Speaking on the ECA depletion, the Director- General of Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Dr. Muda Yusuf, said, the reality is that there are profound revenue challenges at all levels of government. He said it was difficult to sustain the ECA in the face of such pressures. “There is a strong temptation to draw down on the savings, which the excess crude account represents.

   “One key factor is the weak oil prices.  This naturally affects the fiscal stability of the various tiers and levels of government.  These shocks would remain as long as we remain critically dependent on crude oil  both for revenue and foreign exchange earnings,” A former Executive Director, Keystone Bank, Richard Obire, recalled that  it was during former President Olusegun Obasanjo Administration that the ECA was instituted and savings were accrued.

   He added that   it was during the Goodluck Jonathan administration that    governors insisted that it was unconstitutional to keep ECA savings when they needed money, insisting that the funds should be shared. Obire said Nigeria has been under a heavy borrowing streak, as earnings dropped and ECA was relied on to cover revenue shortfalls.

  The  statement  by Henshaw Ogubike, a deputy director(Press and Public Relations) in the office of the Accountant-General,” announced that as of   February 19, 2020, the balance in the Excess Crude Account (ECA) was $ 71.814 million.”.

   It added  that N647.353 billion comprising Statutory Revenue, Value Added Tax (VAT), Exchange Gain, Non-Oil Revenue and Excess Bank Charges recovered was shared by the three tiers of government-federal , states and local governments- for the month of January.

   The gross statutory revenue for the month  was N525.253 billion. This was lower than the N600.314 billion received in the previous month by N75.061 billion. For the same month of January, the gross revenue available from  VAT was N104.758 billion as against N114.805 billion in the previous month, resulting in a decrease of N10.047 billion.

   Exchange Gain yielded a total revenue of N1.044 billion, while the Non-Oil revenue was N16.298 billion. The communique issued by FAAC  indicated that from the total revenue of N647.353 billion, the Federal Government received N267.389 billion;    states,   N176.923 billion  and the local governments,   N132.944 billion.

   Oil producing states received N46.197 billion as 13 per cent derivation revenue while  the revenue generating agencies got N23.900 billion. From  VAT  revenue of N104.758, the Federal Government received N14.614 billion; states,   N48.713 billion and local governments, N34.099 billion.  Revenue Generating Agencies received N7.333 billion.

   From the Exchange Gain revenue of N1.044 billion, the Federal Government received N0.485 billion; states,  N0.246 billion; local  governments, N 0.190 billion and   oil producing states,  N0.123 billion as 13 per cent derivation revenue. From the non-oil revenue of N16.298 billion, the Federal Government got N8.586 billion; states,    N4.355 billion and  local government,   N3.357 billion.

THE NATION

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