FG May Sack Workers, Says Okonjo-Iweala
The
Federal Government may be forced to embark on cost cutting measures
like retrenching workers in some of its agencies to reduce its recurrent
expenditure if the price of oil continues to fall, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, the Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of
Finance said in an interview with London-based Financial Times
newspaper.
“We will have to look very hard at recurrent
expenditure, and identify overlapping agencies. When the price is
heading down, everyone sees the necessity but that doesn’t stop them
from hating you,” the minister said in the interview with the newspaper.
The
measure will definitely lead to mass retrenchment in the federal civil
service which many Nigerians believed is over bloated.
Government
had toyed with the rationalization and restructuring of its agencies in
the past over complaints that over 70 per cent of its annual budget is
being spent on salaries and overheads, but had shied away from going
ahead with it out of the fear of political backlash that may result from
the action.
Ironically,
the minister had last week said at a briefing in Abuja that the falling
oil prices is not a threat to the Nigerian economy.
It
is estimated that Nigeria has witnessed a near 30 per cent decline in
revenues over the past three months.
The 36 states of the federation,
most of which depend on the central government for funding of over 70
per cent of the budget are already complaining of inability to pay
salaries and meet obligations to contractors as a result of declining
funds from the federal purse.
Though the price of
Nigeria’s Light Brent crude still hovers around $86 a barrel, some
analysts have predicted that oil may plunge to around $70 per barrel in
the next few weeks. The federal government, which depends on oil for
about 80 per cent of revenues based its estaimate for the 2015 budget at
an oil price of $78 per barrel. This is up from $77.5 per barrel in
2013.
Okonjo-Iweala said if oil price dips below $78
government will have to take some painful measures which will include
draw down on the Excess Crude Account (ECA) she set up to keetp savings
above the budgeted oil price.
She said the country can survive on the ECA for three months to avoid what she called “hard landing”.
“But
even if prices continue to go down we can survive sufficiently for two
to three months. That is the time needed to get other measures in
place,” she said.
Nigeria had used the same ECA then
with a balance of about $22 billion to cushion the effect of the 2008
global financial crisis when there was a similar dip in price of oil.
“Our
buffers are slimmer this time,” said Okonjo-Iweala who put the amount
in the ECA at about $4 billion which is $2 billion short of what the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) had recommended.
She added that the falling oil price means Nigeria will have to accelerate the bid to diversify its sources of revenue.
“On the fiscal side we need to ramp up our non-oil revenues,” Okonjo-Iweala said.
McKinsey,
a consulting firm, she said, has been carrying out an extensive review
of revenue services in order to identify potential gains. She
added that that lower oil prices would provide a stronger incentive to
government to rein in oil theft, which has cost billions of dollars a
year, and help to drive through stalled oil sector legislation to
stimulate production.
“That would enable us to pick up quantity to help us cushion on the price side,” she said.
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