The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Atiku
Abubakar, has rubbished the 2019 budget President Muhammadu Buhari
presented at the National Assembly last week.
Abubakar said the 2019 budget presented by Buhari was “fundamentally
flawed,” adding that the budget was built on a “shaky foundation.”
In a statement he signed and issued on Sunday, the Waziri of Adamawa
stated that it will be a disservice to the nation if the “fundamental
flaws” are ignored.
Buhari had last week presented a budget proposal of N8.83 trillion
for 2019 to a joint session of the National Assembly on December 19,
2018.
Reacting to the budget, Atiku accused the Presidency of filling the
budget proposal with several inaccurate claims and making attempts to
hide its failure to improve the welfare and living standards of
Nigerians.
The statement entitled ‘My Takeaways from Budget 2019’ reads: “The proposed budget as presented is fundamentally flawed.
“It deliberately ignores and fails to address current realities and
pretends, as Mr President asserts, ‘we are on the right direction.
“On the contrary, the 2019 budget is built on a very shaky foundation
and makes very generous, often wild and untenable assumptions which
pose significant risks to its implementation.”
“I see the rhetoric of ‘inclusive, diversified and sustainable
growth’ as no more than an amplification of the All Progressives
Congress (APC)-led government’s renewed propaganda to hoodwink the
citizens into believing that there is ‘light at the end of the tunnel.”
Abubakar stated that the economy has yet to recover from the
2016/2017 recession as it remains “severely stressed, extremely fragile
and vulnerable to external shocks.”
The former Vice President stated that the nation’s Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) growth declined from 2.11 per cent in 2017 to 1.9 per cent
in Q1, and to 1.5 per cent in Q2 of 2018.
He, however, noted an increase of 0.3 per cent to 1.8 per cent in Q3 of 2018.
“In reality, Mr. President should expect no less. It is a fact that
under his watch and resulting from his actions or inactions, investor
confidence in the economy has waned like never before in Nigeria’s
history.
“Nigeria remains an uncompetitive economy as demonstrated by the
recent World Economic Forum (WEF), Global Competitiveness Index which
positions Nigeria as 115th of 140 Countries.
“The Report shows that Nigeria has moved three places down, contrary
to Mr President’s claim that ‘we are moving in the right direction’.
Nigeria remains one of the most difficult places to do business as
evidenced by the massive outflows of capital in recent times,” he said.
On the way forward, Abubakar said there should be an alternative to the government’s budget proposal.
He stressed that Nigeria needed a government which understands how to run the economy in order to get it working again.
“For the avoidance of doubt, an Atiku Presidency, come 2019, will
present to Nigerians a people’s budget that will prioritise and focus on
the twin challenges of unemployment and poverty.
“Nigeria’s high rates of unemployment, poverty and inequality
represent both a significant distortion in the economic system and a
lost opportunity for critical national development and could potentially
threaten social stability,” he added.
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