The upper chamber of the Nigerian legislature, Nigeria’s Senate, passed the medium-term expenditure framework for 2024–2026 on Wednesday.
The lower chamber—the House of Representatives—had passed the same framework a day before. The approval, which serves as a framework and important document in Nigeria’s budget process to guarantee that government spending is in line with its economic and social goals, lays out the government’s fiscal plan for the following three years.
With the two houses of the Nigerian parliament now having passed the framework, it allows President Bola Tinubu to send the proposed 26 trillion naira ($34 billion) national budget for 2024 to parliament for approval.
The document, which has also gone through the Federal Executive Council, projects that the value of the naira will be approximately 700 per dollar in 2024, with a slight strengthening in 2025 and 2026.
Meanwhile, the country’s budget system has been greatly affected by the fluctuating value of the Nigerian currency. In the last six months, the Naira has declined from N600 to about N800, and as high as N1,300 at the black market in exchange for the dollar, a reflection of the growing gap between the parallel and official exchange rates. The rates have continued to experience volatility.
Nigeria is attempting to increase investment rather than relying solely on debt to prop up its economy which is beset by double-digit inflation, slow growth, record debt, shortages of foreign exchange, and industrial-scale theft of its principal export— crude oil.