Governor of Imo State, Hope Uzodimma, has signed into law the 2020 revised budget of N108,385,836,130.
Performing the assignment at the Imo State Executive Council Chambers, Government House, Owerri the governor said that the “revised 2020 Imo State Budget of rehabilitation, reconstruction and recovery heralds a fresh page, with great promise in the fiscal history of our great State, Imo.”
The governor informed that it was the first conscious step of the shared prosperity government to begin the implementation of a fiscal road map that guaranteed economic liberation for the people of Imo State.
The governor described it as “a new dawn, a new day and a great new beginning,” and enjoined the prosperity team to be “proud of the glorious new day which comes with its attendant responsibilities and challenges.”
He expressed the state’s gratitude to the Speaker, Chiji Collins, and the entire members of Imo State House of Assembly for their prompt and diligent attendance to duty and sacrifice in ensuring that the 2020 revised budget was passed into law on time.
The governor gave an insight into the reasons for the revised budget, saying it was predicated on two reasons: the downward oil prices that have made the original budget unattainable and the revised National Medium Term Expenditure Framework, NMTEF, which is an agreement between Nigeria and the World Bank to help fund the shortfalls arising from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic through its SFTAFS (State Fiscal Transparency Accountability For Sustainability) Programme.
He said for states to benefit from SFTAFS there was a lot of conditionalities attached to it which included but not limited to revised budget where COVID-19 related expenses must be at least 10% of total budget.
According to him, such conditions and more were all captured in the revised 2020 Imo State approved budget.
In addition, the governor informed that the state had commissioned online publication of the citizens’ budget and first quarter 2020 report on budget performance.
He said it was in line with his promise to Imo people to run a transparent people-oriented governance and that he was glad that with the above, Imo State was qualified to receive the sum of $300,000 (USD) and $1m (USD) respectively from the World Bank, as an encouragement for running an open, transparent government.
Governor Uzodimma seized the opportunity to inform of his administration’s efforts towards mitigating the negative effects of COVID-19 on Imo people to include: granting of a number of tax relief and waivers on personal income tax, consumer tax, PAYE for private schools and levies for tricycles and motorcycle operators.
He reassured that from provisions of the revised approved 2020 budget the 3Rs agenda anchored on shared prosperity would go a long way in alleviating the hardships experienced by Imo people as a result of COVID-19 pandemic.
The governor reiterated his earlier warning to all political appointees in his administration that corruption was a mortal sin which attracted maximum sanctions.
He charged them to be “true apostles of the shared prosperity programme by resisting corruptions with every blood in their veins,” noting that they could not afford to fail the people.
Making further clarifications on why the budget was revised downward, the Speaker, Collins, informed that it was as a result of the prevailing circumstances all over the world today, especially the nose-dive in the prices of oil at the international market which had brought undue pressures on foreign earnings and consequent reductions in federal allocations to states and local governments, and Imo State was not an exception.
Collins emphasised that the budget was brought down to make sure that it accommodated the deliverables of the present situation anchored on the true economic realities.
The Speaker reassured Imo people that the bill signed as law went through all the legal processes of the House of Assembly before it was passed as a law and thanked Governor Uzodimma for promptly assenting to the revised 2020 Imo budget.
The sectoral approvals that came from the House of Assembly reduced the Recurrent expenditure by 30.7%, Capital expenditure revised down wards from N106.28bn to N44.96bn.
Economic sector experienced 7.7% reduction, social services revised to N7.19bn representing 66% decrease, general administration lost 25.5% as a result of the revised budget, while N1.15bn is made available for COVID-19 pandemic in the general administration sector of the budget.
Also, government transfers were reviewed upwards to N4.248bn as against N4.146bn representing 25% increase in the total provisions of government transfers.
The revised 2020 capital expenditure stands at N44,966,099,871 which represents 41% of the revised budget size.
Present at the signing were the Deputy Governor of Imo State, Prof. Placid Njoku, Principle Officers of the State House of Assembly, Secretary to the State Government, Chief Cosmos Iwu, the Chief of Staff, Barr. Nnamdi Anyiaehie, and other members of the Expanded Executive Council.