The
Senate has received a written request from President Muhammadu Buhari
to present the 2020 Appropriation bill before a joint session of the
National Assembly on Tuesday.
The
request, which was dated October 2, 2019 and addressed to the
President of the Senate, Ahmad Ibrahim Lawan, was read at plenary on
Thursday.
The
letter read: “May I crave the kind indulgence of the Distinguished
Senate to grant me the slot of 1400 hours on Tuesday, 8th October,
2019, to formally present the 2020 Appropriation Bill to the Joint
session of the National Assembly.
“Please
accept, Mr. Senate President, the assurances of my highest regards,
as I look forward to addressing the Joint Session”.
Meanwhile,
the Senate on Thursday passed the 2020-2022 Medium Term Expenditure
Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF/FSP).
The
document which is usually the basis for the annual budget proposals
was forwarded to the National Assembly last week by President Buhari.
The
Senate made 16 recommendations to the Executive following
consideration of the report of the Joint Committees on Finance and
National Planning.
The
Senate in its recommendations proposed N10.729 trillion as total
estimated Federal government expenditure of the Federal, as against
N10.002 trillion.
It
also recommended daily oil production of 2.18 million barrels in
2020, as well as $57 per barrel as benchmark for the fiscal year.
Also,
the upper chamber recommended that the revenue target of the Nigerian
Customs Service of N942.6bn naira for 2020 be increased to N1.5
trillion.
According
to the Senate, the sum of N557.4 billion from the revenue increment
of the Nigeria Customs Service be used to reduce borrowing by N200
billion increase on capital expenditure.
The
Senate left unchanged the exchange rate of N305 to $1, just as
proposed by the Executive for economic stability.
It
recommended that the saving on income accruing from the increase of
the benchmark amounting to N172 billion, which represents the federal
government portion of the $2 added to the benchmark, be used to pay
salaries and emoluments for the proposed 30,000 new employees by the
federal government.
The
upper chamber insisted that proper investigation be carried out on
the e-collection stamp duty domiciled in the Central Bank of Nigeria
for the past years, so as to show probity and accountability, and of
course, increase the revenue base of the country.
The
Senate further called for proper investigation on the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation, so as to ascertain the actual cost
associated with joint venture agreements.
In
his remarks after the passage of the MTEF/FSP proposals, the Senate
President, called on the Federal Inland Revenue to widen its tax net
and also stressed the need to diversify the economy.
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