The
House of Representatives Thursday followed in the footsteps of the Senate to
pass a budget of N4.695 trillion for the 2014 fiscal year.
The
Senate had on Wednesday passed the budget with the same figure, which is N53
billion higher than the N4.642 estimates submitted by the executive.
With
the House’s passage of the 2014 Appropriation Bill, both chambers of the
National Assembly will be expected to set up a harmonisation committee to resolve
whatever differences they might have, especially in sectoral allocations in the
budget before the document is transmitted to President Goodluck Jonathan for
assent.
The
passage of the budget by the House was however not a smooth exercise as Hon.
Kingsley Chinda (PDP, Rivers) raised a point of order, which if it had been
adopted, would have stalled the approval of the fiscal bill Thursday.
Chinda
invoked Order 97, Rule 8 of the House, which states that consideration of the
clauses of an Appropriation Bill shall be postponed until a compendium giving
details of the budget accompanies it.
His
reason for raising the objection stemmed from the charge that the budget did
not make provisions for capital projects in his state.
Chinda
also cited the same Order, Sub-rule 5, which states that when a bill is read
for the second time, it shall be committed to a committee of the House and
subsequently deliberated upon by the Appropriation Committee, which will then
pass it on to the House for consideration.
However,
his suggestion that the motion for the passage of the budget be stood down and
the Easter break suspended to enable the House do a thorough job drew the ire
of his colleagues who shouted “nay” until the Speaker, Hon. Aminu Tambuwal,
waded in to restore order.
After
Chinda's submission, the House Minority Leader, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila (APC,
Lagos) drew the attention of the chamber to Order 17, which states that
proceedings on the budget shall not be interrupted or postponed once it has
begun. He urged the House to suspend its rule and consider the fiscal document.
Tambuwal
then ruled Chinda out of order, paving the way for the House to proceed with
its consideration of the budget.
A
schedule of the budget bill passed into law indicates that of the N4.695 trillion
passed, N408.68 billion was allocated to statutory transfer, while N712 billion
is meant for the servicing of foreign and domestic debts.
Under
recurrent expenditure, ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs), federal
executive bodies (FEBs), service wide votes and pensions and the Presidential
Amnesty Programme got N1.95 trillion, N13.76 billion, N301.838 billion and
N63.281 billion, respectively.
From
the N1.119 trillion earmarked as capital expenditure, provisions were made for
42 MDAs, seven FEBs and capital supplementation.
The Subsidy Re-investment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) got N268.370 billion.
The Subsidy Re-investment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) got N268.370 billion.
The
passage of the budget was preceded by a closed-door executive session on
Wednesday, which the House Committee Chairman on Media and Public Affairs, Hon
Zakari Mohammed, explained was held to “play down the issue of the legal
process of passing the budget”.
“We
allowed common sense to prevail in order to ensure that the budget sails
through in the interest of Nigerians. We couldn’t wait for two weeks, as the
House goes for Easter break, before passing the budget,” he added.
He
explained that capital projects needed to be kicked off quickly to ensure that
Nigerians enjoy the dividends of democracy.