Abia Assembly Approves N22.2bn Governor Otti Virement Request

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The Abia State House of Assembly on Tuesday approved Governor Alex Otti’s request for a virement warrant, totalling over N22.2 billion for government’s services.

The approval followed the consideration of a letter by the governor presented by the Deputy Speaker, Mr. Austin Mmeregini, at the house plenary session in Umuahia.

The Majority Leader, Mr. Uchenna Kalu, had moved a motion asking the lawmakers to consider the request.

Kalu said that the request was necessitated by the present administration’s desire to rebuild the state and improve the welfare of the citizenry.

This bill is straightforward and seeks to vire money from the expenditure sub-heads, where they were not properly captured to the areas where they will be properly utilised and needed without actually increasing the budget.

“We are all aware that the present administration merged some ministries when it came on board, so it is proper for the state to vire funds from some of the ministries to the areas where they are needed in order to ensure the optimal utilisation of the funds.

“I urge my honourable colleagues to support this bill to enable the present administration to continue to deliver democracy dividend to the people,” Kalu said.

Ruling on the motion, the Deputy Speaker, who presided over the session, put the motion to vote and it was unanimously accepted by the lawmakers.

Media term economic framework

In another development, the commissioner for Budget and Planning, Mr Kingsley Anosike presented the Abia Medium Term Economic Framework on the floor of the house.

Anosike described the framework as a document that would serve as a roadmap for the Abia Government to achieve fiscal transparency and efficiency in the state.

He said: “The purpose of this document is to provide an indicative sector roadmap for the period covering 2024 to 2026, which constitutes the Mid-Term Budget Framework.

“The second is to provide a backwards-looking summary of fiscal and economic trends that will affect the public expenditure in the future, and the future means the budget cycle covering 2024 to 2026.

“To set out medium-term fiscal objectives and targets, which will include revenue mobilisation, level of public expenditure, deficit financing and all these are public expenditure programmes.”

Anosike said that government plans to strengthen its fiscal framework, control and enforce compliance with established spending limits in government transactions to achieve a sound budgeting system.

He also said that the key target for the government from a fiscal perspective would be to create efficiency in personnel and overhead expenditure to allow greater resources for capital development.

According to him, the Ministry had proposed a budget sectored around increasing the internally generated revenue by a minimum of 17.5 per cent every year from 2024 to 2026.

Anosike further said that government’s priority, with respect to sound budgeting, would be the completion of ongoing capital development projects before the commencement of new ones.

 

 

 

 

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