Nigeria will begin investing
the initial $1 billion allocated to a new sovereign wealth fund by June, a
statement from the fund showed, after it delayed the start date twice.
Africa's biggest oil
producer is one of only three OPEC member states that do not yet have a wealth
fund (SWF) set up. Global markets and investors are closely watching Africa's
second-biggest economy's plans for its SWF.
Nigeria's Sovereign
Investment Authority (NSIA) in a late Monday statement, also said it would
allocate 32.5 percent of the fund to infrastructure investment, the same amount
for a savings pot for future generations, 20 percent to protect against
commodity price shocks, with 15 percent unallocated.
"This formula
aims to balance the infrastructure need of the current generation and the need
for savings for the future generation of Nigerians," the statement said.
Investment in both the
future generation and the stabilization fund will start in June, but more
details needed to be worked for the infrastructure fund, it said.
The fund faces
opposition from Nigeria's powerful state governors, who want oil savings to be
distributed for spending on projects, arguing that it is unconstitutional for
the federal government to hoard money that belongs to all three tiers of
government - federal, state and local.
Because of this, it
started with a mere $1 billion, whereas the Excess Crude Account (ECA) it is
supposed to replace had nine times that amount in it late last year. That has
fallen to $5.87 billion so far this year, as the government has made
withdrawals to appease state governors.
Analysts say the ECA
does not sufficiently protect Nigeria's oil savings from profligate
politicians, because it can be dipped into too easily.
Nigeria hopes the new
fund will provide a firmer legal basis to ring-fence it's savings from
competing demands so it can better save money when oil prices are high. The NSIA has moved the
date of commencing its investments twice. Last year, the finance minister Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala told revealed that the fund would begin investing by the end of 2012
but political opposition stalled its progress. In December it delayed the
launch again to March.
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