The Director-General, Federal Budget
Office, Dr Bright Okogu, on Wednesday said Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment
Programme (SURE-P) received N441billion for its programmes from 2012 to date.
Okogu made this known in Lokoja while
presenting a paper titled “Three Years of Delivering SURE-P mandate: The
Benefits and the Costs” at a two-day stakeholders’ conference organised by
SURE-P.
He said that although the programme had
an annual allocation of N180 billion from the Federation Account, it received
N126 billion in 2012, N180 billion in 2013, and N135 in 2014 billion.
He said that the subsidy funds would
have been utilized in other ways but that the establishment of SURE-P for the
use of the money was on the insistence of President Goodluck Jonathan “after
wide consultations with Nigerians”.
According to him, in line with its
mandate, SURE-P intervened in social safety net, health, road infrastructure,
bridges and rail transportation, among others.
“The purpose is to do what the people can
see and enjoy,” he said.
Okogu, however, expressed that the
declining crude oil price may adversely affect the operations of SURE-P,
explaining that SURE-P fund was dependent on the gap between the pump price of
petroleum products and crude oil price.
“Survival of the SURE-P is contingent
on the continued price gap,” he said.
He stated competition in the global oil
market may get tougher in view of the changing dynamics in the market and
discovery of oil in many African countries.
Okogu also called for reintroduction of
toll gates on roads to provide the necessary funds for their maintenance rather
than leaving such expenditure to the government or SURE-P alone.
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