President Muhammadu Buhari will not sign the 2016 budget bill passed by the National Assembly last week unless lawmakers provide more details of the legislation, a government official said on Tuesday.
Buhari refused to sign the budget because he did not know what was contained in the bill.
Missing from the document are details of allocations to each ministry, departments and agencies (MDAs).
The move spells further delay of the record $30 billion budget aimed at reviving the country’s economy, hit by a slump in oil prices. Buhari had presented the bill in December before withdrawing it due to an unrealistic oil price assumption and flaws in the draft.
The National Assembly had earlier sent on Tuesday the bill, which calls for record spending, to Buhari’s office but it had contained only highlights of the budget, no details, the official said, asking not to be named.
“As a result, the president has been unable to sign the bill because he does not know what is contained in the details and what adjustments the National Assembly must have made to the proposal sent to them,” the official said.
Another source added that “the President is anxious to sign the budget but he doesn’t have the details of what was passed.”
The source accused the lawmakers of doing a shoddy job or playing politics with the fate of Nigerians.
“This development confirms speculations that the National Assembly either did not complete work on the budget or are playing politics with the documents which affects the life of both the country and its citizens. The National Assembly may just have passed the bill to pass the buck to the executive and escape the wrath of the public which was gradually suspecting it of sabotage.”
Buhari will travel to Washington on Wednesday returning on Sunday, his office said, which makes it unlikely the bill will get signed this week.
The budget debated by a joint session of both chambers had left open how it would be financed.
Officials previously suggested up to half of the estimated deficit of 3 trillion naira would be funded though the sale of Eurobonds or loans from China and international agencies. But no such deal has publicly emerged.
The new budget, which is based on an oil price of $38 a barrel, aims to recharge the economy by trebling capital spending compared with 2015’s plan.
A deepening crisis slowed gross domestic product growth to 2.8 percent in 2015, Nigeria’s weakest in decades.
The overall budget is 6.06 trillion naira ($30.47 billion).
Oil revenues, which make up about 70 percent of Nigeria’s income, have slumped, hammering the currency, halting development projects and leaving budget funding uncertain.
In January, Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun said Nigeria planned to borrow up to $5 billion from multiple sources, including the Eurobond market, but officials have not provided an update since then.
Nigeria has in recent months held exploratory talks with the World Bank and tried to secure funding from the African Development Bank and China’s export bank, but no deal is known to have resulted.