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news you can trust I * * WEDNESDAY 09 OCTOBER 2019 I vol. 19, no 411
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L-R: Ikechukwu Nnamani, vice president 1, Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria; Mohamad Darwish, CEO, IHS Nigeria; Ngozi Chimdi-Ejiogu, assistant director, Bilateral Funds, Rural Electrification Agency Nigeria, and Babagana Digima, assistant director, special duties, Nigeria Communications Commission, at the Power and Telecommunications Synergy conference supported by IHS Towers in Lagos. Pic by Pius Okeosisi
Again, FG fixes unrealistic Questions for Nigeria as ExxonMobil awards $33bn revenue targets for 2020 budget LNG contract for Mozambique proposes revenue generation of N8.155trn
MICHAEL ANI, DAVID IBIDAPO, Lagos, SOLOMON AYADO & JAMES KWEN, Abuja
N
igeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday presented a N10.33 trillion 2020 Appropriation Bill to the National Assembly, with an ambitious revenue target aimed at funding it. The draft proposal pegs the Federal Government revenue target at
an all-time high of N8.155 trillion, 7 percent higher than the N7.594 trillion the government planned to generate in the 2019 budget. Africa’s largest economy has over time been confronted with ballooning budget deficit owing to revenue shortfalls. According to the draft proposal, the Federal Government plans to generate N2.64 trillion as oil revenue, N1.81 trillion from non-oil, and N3.7 trillion from other revenue sources.
Analysts say this calls for concern as Nigeria has for years failed to meet the revenue target projected in the budget and, in fact, the variance between the budgeted and actual revenues has widened within the past five years, forcing the government to resort to huge borrowings to meet its planned expenditure. For example, as of June this year, the Federal Government had
Continues on page 38
ISAAC ANYAOGU, STEPHEN ONYEKWELU & DIPO OLADEHINDE
U
S oil giant Exxon Mobil is investing $33 billion into two liquefied natural gas projects in Mozambique, a country of 30 million people with less than 50 percent of Nigeria’s gas reserves, at a time when investment into the continent’s biggest oil producer is drying up. This development raises
questions about why investment dollars are fleeing Nigeria for smaller African countries and what will be Nigeria’s ability to remain competitive in a
Continues on page 38
Inside Nigeria risks bleak future as investment to GDP lags peers P. 2