Nigeria's Post-Election Financial Realities

Ayo Teriba
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Abstract

Nigeria faces a paradox of having Africa’s biggest economy but not Africa’s biggest government revenue. While Nigerian economy is about 155.4 percent of South Africa’s economy, the revenue generated by Nigerian government is only about 79.5 percent of the revenue generated by South African government. The total revenue in the Nigerian federation account has been 12 percent of GDP, compared to minimum government revenue of 25 percent of GDP in Africa’s next five largest economies: South Africa, Egypt, Algeria, Angola, and Morocco.The stark fiscal reality is that Nigerian government currently has less than half of the revenue required to deliver quality governance. Little wonder that health, education, security and basic infrastructure services provided by Nigerian government are very poor. However, revenue leakages through crude oil ‘theft’, spurious petroleum ‘subsidy’ payouts, abuses of tax/import-duty waivers and too much ‘autonomy’ for revenue collecting agencies is the bane of Nigeria’s revenue inadequacy.Nigeria needs to put an end to crude oil theft, stop all petroleum subsidy payments, streamline tax/import-duty waivers, amend existing laws to abolish the autonomy granted revenue collecting agencies and create a single-treasury-account for all types of government revenue, with all government ministries, departments and agencies included in a single appropriation process to ensure adequate resources for good quality governance. In addition government should rely on self-funding mechanisms for developing nationwide rail network and related infrastructure systems.Financial intermediaries and markets are contributing their bits in mobilizing the financial assets required for Nigeria’s growth and stability, but Nigerian government has to pull its weight as an independent attractor of foreign capital, and also court investors more actively by liberalizing growth enabling sectors, getting out of the way, making necessary arrangements to provide concrete assurances of stability, and being more conscious of the sensitivity of inward investment to realities of, especially government’s pronouncements about, the fiscal situation.
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尼日利亚选举后的财政现实
尼日利亚面临着一个悖论:拥有非洲最大的经济体,却不是非洲最大的政府收入。尼日利亚经济约占南非经济的155.4%,而尼日利亚政府的财政收入仅占南非政府财政收入的79.5%。尼日利亚联邦账户的总收入占国内生产总值的12%,相比之下,非洲五大经济体南非、埃及、阿尔及利亚、安哥拉和摩洛哥的最低政府收入占国内生产总值的25%。严峻的财政现实是,尼日利亚政府目前的收入还不到提供高质量治理所需收入的一半。难怪尼日利亚政府提供的卫生、教育、安全和基本基础设施服务非常差。然而,通过原油“盗窃”、虚假的石油“补贴”支付、滥用税收/进口关税豁免以及税收征收机构过多的“自主权”而导致的收入泄漏是尼日利亚收入不足的祸根。尼日利亚需要停止原油盗窃,停止所有石油补贴支付,简化税收/进口关税豁免,修改现有法律,废除授予税收征收机构的自主权,并为所有类型的政府收入创建一个单一的财政账户,所有政府部门、部门和机构都包括在一个拨款程序中,以确保有足够的资源用于良好的治理。此外,政府应依靠自筹资金机制发展全国性的铁路网络和相关基础设施系统。金融中介机构和市场在调动尼日利亚增长和稳定所需的金融资产方面做出了自己的贡献,但尼日利亚政府必须发挥自己的作用,作为一个独立的外国资本吸引者,并通过开放促进增长的部门来更积极地吸引投资者,让路,做出必要的安排,提供具体的稳定保证。并且更加意识到外来投资对现实的敏感性,特别是政府关于财政状况的声明。
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