The surprise thirty-two per cent jump in Federal Account
Allocation Committee (FAAC) disbursements to the three tiers of
government in June was a result of a more transparent reporting of the
federation’s gross revenues BusinessDay can report.
The unexplained rise at a time of a continued fall in
international crude oil prices left many analysts wondering but
investigation by BusinessDay has showed that the transparent reporting
method imposed by the two-month old Buhari administration meant that
revenues that were hitherto unaccounted for, had to be brought into the
collective pool for sharing.
The total disbursable fund for June amounted to N539bn or $2.71bn, up by 32 per cent from the level for May.
The statutory allocation, the largest element of the
payment, brought an increase of N162b or the equivalent of $810m on May
revenues.
A state like Edo, for instance saw its June allocation
rise significantly, by more than N500m and governor Adams Oshiomhole who
confirmed the development was unequivocal that the additional funds
would not have come in if government agencies were left to account for
their revenues in their old ways.
“I can tell you that my state got much more than it would
normally get and this additional funds came because they (federal
agencies) could no longer hide or cook their books”, the governor told
BusinessDay in Ndola, Zambia, on the sideline of the commissioning of
the 1.5MT cement plant build by Dangote Cement.
The governor, who is one of those selected by the National
Economic council to beam a searchlight on the irregularities in flows
into FAAC, added, “we are already seeing the benefit of the attitude of
the Buhari administration to our collective resources and this is
welcome, especially because we have just started and their scope for
getting better. We all can now see that the days of impunity are gone.”
Governor Oshiomhole’s explanation has helped to shed light on the jump in the federal allocation disbursement.
In its August 5 daily note, FBN Capital had said, “we
struggle to explain the marked increase in the allocation which is
predominantly derived from the oil industry.”
On Friday, FBN Capital welcomed the recovery in foreign
reserves, which rose $2.5bn in July to $31.5bn on a 30-day moving
average basis.
FBN Capital said the increase in reserve couldn’t be
explained by just the savings from the ban on 41 items, which hitherto
accounted for about $900m in FX utilisation per month, on the basis of
figures for Q1.
Analysts at FBN Capital said, “we have to look elsewhere for additional explanations for the pick up in reserves in July.”
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