It took covid-19 pandemic for the Nigerian government to finally realize that there are certain government expenditures that are unnecessary and non essential, such as the purchase of vehicles among others.
According to a disclosure by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, in a document tagged ‘What you need to know about the Nigeria Economic Sustainability Plan’, the Buhari administration will blacklist the purchase of vehicles and other "Non-critical and administrative capital spending" in a bid to cut cost.
Adesina listed some of the key interventions as stated in the plan as mass agricultural programme, infrastructure, informal sector support, business support for MSMEs, technology, expansion of National Social Investment Programmes, cut non-essential spending and support for state governments.
He said, “The President has approved the implementation of the report on the rationalisation of government agencies. The NESP will also target a reduction in average production costs of crude oil.
Under the plan, Adesina added that a minimum of 1,000 young Nigerians would be recruited per local government into what would be the largest public works programme in the history of Nigeria, amounting to 774,000 direct jobs.
Adesina said the NESP, which had been developed as a 12-month N2.3trillion transit plan between the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan and the successor plan to the ERGP currently in development would be funded through N500 billion from Special FGN Accounts; N1.1 trillion from the CBN in the form of structured lending; N334 billion from external bilateral/multilateral sources; and N302.9 billion from other funding sources.