The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) expressed fears when it reviewed the economic performance in 2018 and projection for 2019.
The association observed that the proposed 2019 budget appears to be an extension of 2018 as no new grounds were explored.
“There is the need to properly align the assumptions of the budget with economic realities. No doubt, some of the provisions of the budget would be very important in supporting economic activities in the coming year.
The huge emphasis on infrastructure development, especially power, road and rail is encouraging. However, as more development on the budget unfolds, it will be easier to understand why the budget fell short of 2018 figures, notwithstanding the improvements in the global and Nigerian economy”.
It noted, however, that the budget at it stands, suggests that a lot of works still need to be done while hoping that it will be passed with dispatch, adding that in broad terms, the manufacturing sector could be in for a tough operating environment in 2019, seeing that the needed supporting policies and infrastructure have not been given sufficient priority.
“Technically, from the observed trends in the Nigerian budget cycle, the 2019 budget proposal might undergo late passage and the resultant negative effect on the overall economic ambience of the country might be colossal for an economy whose current growth rate is still fragile,” the Association stressed.
It said in the course of the year, development in the global scene such as increasing interest rates across large developed markets and tightening commodity markets would likely contract investment inflow to the country, evidenced by the capital reversals from emerging and frontier markets observed in the current year.
It noted that being an election year, performance of the economy in 2019 would to a large extent depend on the transparency and credibility of the election, while distractions from political activities may slow down infrastructure spending and the performance of the manufacturing sector being a sector whose operations relies heavily on these infrastructures.
MAN also said that inflation rate might slightly increase due to electioneering spending resulting from heightened political activities and lack of proper policy coordination, while more pressure may be mounted on registered companies by government agencies in a bid to vigorously drive for revenue to salvage the precarious status of the country’s debt service to revenue ratio.
It also, backed the federal government refusal to sign the Africa Free Trade Agreement, saying that “government should ensure that Nigeria’s economic interests, especially the private sector, are not only projected, but protected in arriving at the decision to sign or not to sign or when to sign.
“As a necessary part of the readiness assessment and the resulting action plan, the government should put in place the necessary framework to protect and boost the capacity of the manufacturing sector to thrive in the continental free trade area,” it said.
MAN in the review gave some recommended measures government should take to achieve sustainable economic growth and budgetary objectives of the fiscal proposals for next year.
Among the recommendations is that government should revisit the assumptions of the 2019 budget, particularly crude oil production and price as well as ensure an upward review of education and health allocations before appropriation.
It said “the crude oil price has a $60 per barrel benchmark, while oil production has a 2.3 million barrel per day projection as it suggests that these assumptions should be revisited to reflect present economic realities.
It called for caution in the country’s rising debt profile in view of the associated services charges and future economic burden that it would exert on the nation.
The Association called for cutting down on government recurrent expenditures to reduce fiscal deficit, borrowing and service charges and canvassed shedding the current borrowing size of the government in the domestic financial market so as not to completely crowd-out the private sector.
It also called for the commencement of the implementation of the harmonised taxes and levies and to allow the Joint Tax Board (JTB) monitor and enforce compliance by states and local governments.
It said that the government should be more interested in result-oriented spending with frugality, be more transparent and accountable in order to assuage the psychology of taxpayers for improved tax compliance.