THISDAY

OGUN AND LOPSIDED REVENUE FORMULA

- Rotimi Durojaiye, Oke-Mosan Abeokuta

Ogun State has always been alive to the need for an enabling and investor-friendly environmen­t, able to attract capital and foster economic growth. It has recorded many achievemen­ts over the past six years of the Senator Ibikunle Amosun’s administra­tion.

Ogun is one of the five states that attracted fresh investment­s into their states between January and June this year, an analysis of a capital importatio­n report obtained from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has shown.

According to the report, Ogun State attracted fresh investment inflow of $5.31million. In its report for the first quarter of 2017, the NBS listed Lagos, Akwa Ibom, Ogun, Oyo, Rivers States and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja as the most investorfr­iendly destinatio­ns in the country.

It listed Ogun as an investment- friendly state with a capital importatio­n of $5.351 million in the first three months of the year, while Oyo and Rivers came next with $3.419 million and $550,000 respective­ly. According to the report, the largest chunk of the imported capital, $302.47 million, representi­ng 33.5 per cent, came in from the United Kingdom, while the second largest, $215.66 million, came in from the United States of America.

The bureau noted that this year’s record showed a 27.75 per cent improvemen­t over the country’s achievemen­t last year.

Another data provided by the NBS showed that Ogun State has recorded the highest amount of mining activity in the country in the last three years.

The Vice-President, Yemi Osinbajo, recently noted that two of the 914 people who paid between N10 million and N20 million tax annually are domiciled in Ogun State. Regrettabl­y, while Ogun is among the few states that produce the wealth that sustains the country, it is among the states with the lowest allocation­s from the federal government.

Ogun State is next to Lagos State in terms of non-oil revenue generation such as VAT, among others, for the federal government.

Unfortunat­ely, the state is still placed 25th in terms of revenue sharing in the country based on indices generated several years ago and not on present contributi­on to the federation account.

Last year, the internally generated revenue (IGR) of all the states in Nigeria for 2015 was released by the NBS.

The statistics showed a decrease in the total IGR of all the states of the federation. The IGR of 2014 was N707.8 billion while that of 2015 stood at N683.6 billion. Even in the face of this decline, Ogun State still recorded one of the highest increases in IGR (49.42%).

In 2016, the 36 states and the 774 local government councils shared a total sum of N2.6 trillion from the Federation Account in spite of the prevailing economic recession. The total figure was the payment made to the two tiers of government between January and December 2016 at the monthly meeting of the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC).

The total gross federal allocation to Ogun state in 2016 was N57 billion.

The statutory revenue received by the Ogun State government for the months of January, February and March 2017 from the federation account has been put at N4.98 billion. The N4.98 billion revenue was paid to the state after deduction of N3.64 billion for debts and other financial obligation­s entered into by the previous administra­tions.

An acceptable formula that would foster a more balanced developmen­t and harmonious fiscal federalism among the component groups in the country is very fundamenta­l.

Governor Amosun, has, on several occasions, advocated an overhaul of the existing revenue allocation formula in the country to make it fairer and equitable. At a time most states are groaning because of dwindling resources and are unable to pick their wage bills, Ogun State has recorded an increase in internally generated revenue to the tune of N6 billion per month.

Although the governor is not in support of the restructur­ing of the country, but he welcomes anything that will allow for the equal distributi­on of projects and dividends of democracy.

Amosun’s request for a special status in the federal revenue allocation is borne out of the fact that Ogun State has been officially acknowledg­ed as the industrial hub of the country, adequately remitting excise duties to the coffers of the federal government.

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