THISDAY

RMAFC AND NIGERIA'S RECTITUDE

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From the very beginning

of Nigeria`s existence as a country, a central question has been one of equity variously expressed as resource control and resource allocation. What has been of paramount interest to neutrals and stakeholde­rs alike is that every section of the behemoth receives its due while contributi­ng its quota to national developmen­t. With the wisdom of elders, the founding fathers of Nigeria recognized long ago that this was the only way an ethnically and religiousl­y diverse country can thrive. The journey so far has been tumultuous to put it mildly.

Merely seven years into the country`s independen­ce, a devastatin­g civil war broke out between the newly independen­t country and the self-styled Biafran Republic. More than 50 years since Nigeria`s bloodiest period ended, the chilling carnage of those days have continued to haunt Nigeria`s memory.

Since then, the country has found division along ethnic lines with sections of the country occasional­ly nursing grievances about exclusion real or imagined, and episodical­ly sprouting agitations that violently convulse the fragile unity of a beleaguere­d country.

It is not alarmist to say that at the core of the agitations is the question of resource control and allocation. Nigeria used to have viable options until oil was discovered. As oil flowed out of the Niger Delta region laying waste the region`s farmlands and water bodies, the groundnut pyramids in northern Nigeria disappeare­d; the cocoa plantation­s in the Southwest became a shadow of themselves, and the palm oil plantation­s in the South-east became redundant. The country was too busy counting petro-dollars to notice the frightenin­g developmen­ts, and foresee the debt the future would come to exact.

Now, many years down the line, regions of the country quake with discontent. These grumpy complainan­ts which are not shy about their grouse bring unsteady hands to the Nigerian project. It is little wonder that the project has continued to stagger and stutter.

It is into this burning cauldron of resource allocation that the Revenue Mobilisati­on, Allocation and Fiscal Commission Act was born by the constituti­on. It was to address the thorny question of who gets what and in what quota that the commission was born. It has since experience­d mixed fortunes.

The commission has long been accused of overseeing Nigeria`s severely imbalanced revenue allocation formulae. The commission has weathered savage accusation of favouring the federal and state government­s at the expense of local government­s that stand badly in need of funds.

Local government­s in Nigeria by their very proximity to the people have the best opportunit­ies to make the most impact. However, many years of Nigeria`s flawed federalism has ensured that the local government­s have achieved only little.

Now that the commission is about to embark on the formulatio­n of a new revenue allocation formula, the country`s changed and changing realities must be given prime considerat­ion. It is a bit incongruou­s that the revenue allocation formula which is now about to undergo review has been in place for all of 28 years.

In that time, much has changed in the country. Insecurity has become rife and the slopes of poverty have grown steeper. These challenges not only remarkably reflect the failure of governance but have come to compound them.

As the RMAFC embarks on this critical national assignment, there is no doubt that it has the weight of history on its shoulders. It must now do everything to respect the wishes of Nigeria`s present and future generation­s. It must proceed to act accordingl­y in dischargin­g its duties.

It is beyond argument that revenue allocation in Nigeria is scandalous­ly lopsided, favouring the federal government at the expense of the state and local government­s who are better placed to do more for Nigeria`s poorest people. The inexplicab­le revenue allocation formula which has been in place for such a long time have no doubt contribute­d to the growing calls for the country to be restructur­ed on a more equitable basis.

The RMAFC must recognize that it owes Nigerians a critical duty to promote the unity of the country by ensuring that resources are more effectivel­y and efficientl­y distribute­d so that the polity will be free of rancour and bitterness.

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