Image source: Daily Trust |
The Nigerian Union of
Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers on Saturday advised the Federal Government
against the issuance of bailout funds to state governments for the payment of
workers’ salaries.
News
Agency of Nigeria report continues:
The
NUPENG’s South-West Chairman, Mr Tokunbo Korodo, gave the advice in Lagos.
The
disbursement of bailout funds to the states was necessitated by the prevailing
economic challenges which resulted in the non-payment of workers’ salaries by
many states across the federation.
The
state governments received ₦713.7 billion as bailout funds from the federal
government, to defray the backlog of salaries.
Korodo
urged the state governments with huge salary arrears to look inwards and find
new ways to generate revenue, without waiting for monthly allocations from the
federation account.
He
regretted that most state governments in the country had too many aides that
were a big drain on their resources and advised them to downsize, to save
costs.
“Most
of the Governors have about 20 Commissioners and over 42 Special Advisers,
besides another large number of associates from which they have appointed the
heads of various boards and agencies in the state.
“Governors
from the 27 state governments that cannot pay the monthly salaries of their
workers should look inwards to find new ways of making money to settle their
wage bills.
Korodu
suggested the revitalization of agriculture as a credible alternative to the
current over-dependence of such states on revenues from the federation account.
He also advised such governors to block all existing leakages in revenue generation in their states.
States’ Bankruptcy: Time
To Embrace The ‘R’ Word?
By
Jideofor Adibe
The
Chinese are said to use two brush strokes to write the word, ‘crisis’. It is
said that for them one brush stroke stands for danger while the other stands
for opportunity. The critical question here is: what opportunities does the
current economic crisis present to the country? I am using the virtual
bankruptcy of our states to epitomize the current economic crisis.
Declining
revenue from oil and consequently smaller receipts from the Federation Account
is often blamed for the current economic crisis. For instance while the ₦305
billion shared by the three tiers of government in May 2016 was higher than the
₦281.5 billion of the preceding month, the marginal increase hardly improved
the states’ balance sheets. Also though the state governments may get more
money with the flotation and consequent depreciation in the value of the Naira,
their receipts are unlikely to be enough to solve their cash problems,
especially as inflation continues to gallop to the high heaves. Unemployment,
says the National Bureau of Statistics, grew from 10.4 per cent to 12.1 per
cent in the first quarter of 2016, a figure that does not take into
consideration underemployment and disguised unemployment
The
bankruptcy of the states is reflected in the fact that 27 of our 36 states are
currently unable to pay the salary of their workers – arguably the most basic
of their functions. In some states, workers are owed more than twelve months’
salaries. For instance lecturers at the Tai Solarin College of Education, Omu
Ijebu in Ogun state are said to be owed 13 months’ salaries as at the end of
June 2016. Across the country, teachers and lecturers in several state-owned
institutions are owed months of salary. And students who paid tuition in such
institutions naturally feel angry that they are not getting value for money –
if they are lucky for their institutions to be open and running skeletal
services. Other state employees are not faring better.
The unviability of our current states has other far-reaching implications: for instance can we really have the moral unction to preach anti-corruption gospel to workers who have not been paid for months and who have families to feed?
The unviability of our current states has other far-reaching implications: for instance can we really have the moral unction to preach anti-corruption gospel to workers who have not been paid for months and who have families to feed?
This
is why we argue that corruption is not just caused by moral lapse but is
largely systemic. It is another way of arguing that states’ inability to meet
their basic obligations to their employees undermines loyalty and legitimizes
corruption in the eyes of such workers. And add to the mix other problems
created by the bankruptcy of the states – inability to pay contractors, high
indebtedness of the states, lack of employment opportunities and inability to
provide basic development infrastructure. The bankruptcy of the states will
also create legitimacy crisis for the federal government – despite its penchant
for blaming all the current challenges on the past government. For many people,
the failure of the sub states is the same as failure of the Buhari government
because the buck stops at his table.
The
above are among the reasons why I feel it has become urgent for the government
to find a lasting solution to the current problem of the bankruptcy of most of
our states. Bailouts, even on generous terms, are at best palliative measures
that are in themselves unsustainable and a sharp reminder of the unviability of
those states queuing to meet the conditions for accessing them. And it is
unrealistic to keep hoping that revenues from oil would bounce back to the
levels they were two or three years ago. This is unlikely to happen soon –
unless there are unexpected major crises in key oil producing countries.
The
truth is that oil revenue on which the country depends for some 80 per cent of
its revenue has for long masked the unviability of our 36- state system and the
structure of the country on which it rests. So in many ways it is good, as the
Igbo would say, for the wind to blow harshly so that the anus of the fowl would
be exposed. We need to see in the crisis the opportunity to finally admit to
ourselves the current structure has failed.
I know that the ‘R’ word conjures different emotions among different people in our highly polarized and emotionally charged environment. I have in fact read about people who threaten that any talk about restructuring the country is an invitation for war or for the dismemberment of the country. Threats like these – age-old bargaining strategies by the different regional factions of the elite - now sound passé given the economic challenges facing the country. The irony with these threats though is that quite often those issuing them do not look strong enough to give anyone a good slap.
I know that the ‘R’ word conjures different emotions among different people in our highly polarized and emotionally charged environment. I have in fact read about people who threaten that any talk about restructuring the country is an invitation for war or for the dismemberment of the country. Threats like these – age-old bargaining strategies by the different regional factions of the elite - now sound passé given the economic challenges facing the country. The irony with these threats though is that quite often those issuing them do not look strong enough to give anyone a good slap.
It
has in my opinion become imperative to seriously consider a structure of the
country in which fewer units will partake in sharing revenue from the
Federation Account. I will align myself with the proposal that the current six
geopolitical zones should replace the current 36-state system. Under this
arrangement each zone will be at liberty to create as many states and local
governments as it wants without these partaking in sharing the revenue from the
federation account.
With
the six geopolitical zones as the only units to share revenues with the federal
government, there will be reduction in the number of bureaucracies in each zone
and concomitantly reduction in the cost of government. Perhaps with this
sort of arrangement, the various geopolitical zones will be in a better
position to provide infrastructure, invest in development projects and turn the
country into a ‘federation of economies’ or what some people inappropriately
call ‘true federalism’. This system will also be in a better position to
promote national integration. For instance, with larger markets in each zone,
if the cocoa produced in the south-west is used in the manufacture of chocolate
in the North-west, the people from the two zones will increasingly over time
come to appreciate their economic interdependence. Economic linkages and
interdependencies among the different geopolitical zones will in turn attenuate
the anarchic nature of our politics.
The
President should look into allegations of ‘northernization’ policy
The
social media is awash with reports of how the Buhari government has been
favouring the North, especially Northern Muslims, in its appointments. Internet
warriors and social media activists revel in such stories. Mistakes in this
regard – whether of the head or of the heart – will only amount to giving
ammunition to the government’s critics with which they will happily take pot
shots at the regime.
While every regime in the country has had to face similar allegations of favouritism in various degrees since ‘ethnic/religious watching’ became part of our political culture, the Buhari government should recognize that perception is everything and should take deliberate measures to ensure that in instances of proven imbalance are addressed as quickly as possible.
While every regime in the country has had to face similar allegations of favouritism in various degrees since ‘ethnic/religious watching’ became part of our political culture, the Buhari government should recognize that perception is everything and should take deliberate measures to ensure that in instances of proven imbalance are addressed as quickly as possible.
The
President should remember what happened during his First Coming. His coup was
so popular that the late Dele Giwa recommended that all the politicians being
tried of corruption should simply be given the ‘Rawlings treatment’.
Ironically, a few months after, the activities of the ‘ethnic/regional and
religious watchers’ ‘convinced’ a significant portion of Nigerians from the
southern part of the country that the regime was discriminating against them
and favouring the Muslims from the North.
With
time, virtually every action of that government was analyzed in the southern
part of the country using the prism of ethnicity, regionalism and religion. The
result was legitimacy crisis which paved the way for the Babangida coup. The
politicians from the south who were jailed for corruption all came out as
heroes and heroines. Certainly the Buhari government does not need these
distractions. It already has a plateful of these. Therefore it needs to do all
it can to avoid getting entangled in further distractions.
Originally
published in Daily Trust
No comments:
Post a Comment