Tag: capital spending

  • Fiscal-year extension aims to end Nigeria’s ‘overlapping budget’ problem

    Fiscal-year extension aims to end Nigeria’s ‘overlapping budget’ problem

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-24 06:00:00

    According to Punch, Nigeria’s National Assembly has moved to extend the implementation window for the 2025 budget into early 2026 as lawmakers debate how to avoid a repeat of “multiple budgets running at the same time” and the planning distortions that follow.

    The shift effectively keeps the 2025 appropriation alive beyond the traditional December-end cycle, giving MDAs a wider runway to complete ongoing procurement, releases, and capital execution that typically slip late in the year.

    The extension is also being framed as a legislative response to recurring delays in budget passage and cash-backing—an attempt to align “budget life” with actual spending realities rather than calendar formality.

    In practical terms, the change sets a new reference point for ministries and contractors: the 2025 budget is not “dead” on December 31, which could reduce abandoned projects and rushed year-end spending.

    Reuters reported the plan was intended to “bring an end to the practice of running multiple budgets concurrently,” while TVC News described it as extending the 2025 budget’s life “to March 31, 2026.”

    Echotitbits take: This is an admission that Nigeria’s budget cycle still struggles with realism—late passage, slow releases, and weak project discipline. Watch for whether cash releases and procurement timelines are also adjusted; otherwise, lawmakers may simply be postponing the same execution bottlenecks into Q1 2026.

    Source: The Punch — December 24, 2025 (https://punchng.com/budget-crisis-nass-extends-2025-fiscal-year-to-march/)
    The Punch 2025-12-24

  • Debt Service and Salaries Outstrip Federal Revenue in 2025 Budget Data

    Debt Service and Salaries Outstrip Federal Revenue in 2025 Budget Data

    2025-12-18 00:00:00

    According to Punch, official budget documents show that debt service and personnel costs consumed more than the Federal Government’s total revenue in the first seven months of 2025, underscoring the pressure on fiscal space.

    The report says earnings came in well below pro-rata targets, forcing deep cuts to capital spending and tightening the room for new projects without additional borrowing or revenue reforms.

    The figures add weight to growing concerns about budget credibility, cash-backing of appropriations, and the need for stronger domestic revenue mobilisation.

    BusinessDay reported that “debt servicing and personnel costs consumed more than the Federal Government’s entire revenue” for the period, citing official budget documents. (BusinessDay)

    Another report on the same figures said Nigeria earned far below targets between January and July and that the gap hit capital releases hard. (Legit.ng)

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: When “fixed” obligations swallow revenue, the real economy suffers via delayed infrastructure and weak service delivery. Watch for 2026 revenue measures, credible subsidy/accounting reforms, and how government aligns spending plans with cash realities.

    Source: Punch — December 18, 2025 (https://punchng.com/salaries-debt-service-gulp-105-of-govt-revenue/)

    Photo credit: Punch