Home » Namadi Presents N901.841bn Budget Proposal for 2026 to Jigawa State Assembly

Namadi Presents N901.841bn Budget Proposal for 2026 to Jigawa State Assembly

Isiyaku Ahmed
6 views
A+A-
Reset

Governor Umar Namadi of Jigawa State has presented the 2026 Appropriation Bill to the State House of Assembly with a total proposed expenditure of N901.8 billion, signalling a significantly expanded capital development agenda for the 2026 fiscal year.

The governor described the proposal as an ambitious yet achievable plan aimed at consolidating progress already recorded and accelerating development across key sectors of the state’s economy.

In his presentation, Governor Namadi explained that the proposed budget reflects a 19.2% increase over the 2025 appropriation of N756.3 billion, which reflects the administration’s commitment to sustained investment in critical infrastructure, agricultural modernisation, energy expansion, education, health, and social development.

He stated that the budget is anchored on the state’s long-term vision as articulated in the 12-Point Agenda and the recently approved Comprehensive Development Framework.

The governor outlined the budget’s revenue structure, projecting the total N901.8 billion from the following sources: N96.2 billion from Statutory Allocation, B102 billion from VAT, N223 billion from other federal transfers, N88.9 billion in Internally Generated Revenue, N42 billion from LEA and PHC reimbursements, and N349.5 billion as capital receipts from opening balance, loans, and grants.

He explained that these figures were carefully considered and validated to ensure a realistic and credible financing framework for the budget.

Governor Namadi stated that the expenditure structure of the budget reflects the administration’s determination to prioritize long-term development over recurrent commitments, as a total of N693.4 billion, representing 76.9% of the budget, is earmarked for capital investments, while the remaining expenditures cover N120 billion for personnel costs, N75.6 billion for overheads and other recurrent needs, N7 billion for contingency and stabilization, and N5.7 for public debt charges.

Presenting the sectoral allocations, the governor explained that the economic sector, which includes roads, agriculture, power, commerce, investment promotion, and youth empowerment, received more than N396 billion, which includes N186.3 billion for roads and transport development, N74.9 billion for agriculture and livestock, N50.7 billion for power and energy, N17.5 billion for commerce and investments, N17.4 billion for strategic investments, and N12.6 billion for youth empowerment and employment generation.

He stated that these investments are designed to enhance connectivity, boost agricultural productivity, facilitate energy reliability, expand market systems, and create jobs for the growing youth population.

The social sector also received substantial allocations, totalling more than N236 billion, with education and health taking prominent positions, as the budget provides N48.2 billion for basic education, N52.3 billion for post-basic education, N38.6 billion for tertiary education, N27.2 billion for the Ministry of Health, N20.1 billion for the Primary Health Care Development Agency, and N13.9 billion for women’s affairs and social development, while the Information, Youth, Culture, and Sports sector is allocated N2.8 billion.

Governor Namadi emphasised that the combined allocations for education and health exceed N310 billion, reinforcing the centrality of human capital development in the state’s growth strategy, just as he further highlighted the allocations made to strengthen water supply, environmental protection, and urban development.

These include N25.4 billion for water supply and sanitation, N35.4 billion for environmental protection and climate resilience, N7.9 billion for land, housing, and urban development, and N2.3 billion for local governance and community development.

These investments will support access to clean water, erosion control programmes, mitigation of climate-related risks, and improvements in regional and urban planning.

Alongside the state budget, Governor Namadi also presented the consolidated budget of the 27 local government councils, amounting to N288,848,892,051, with N68,884,969,458 going to personnel costs, N74,265,000,320 to overheads, N8,100,000,000 to contingency, and N137,598,273,000 to capital expenditure.

WhatsApp channel banner

You may also like

-
00:00
00:00
Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00

Adblock Detected

Please support us by disabling your AdBlocker extension from your browsers for our website.