THISDAY

STILL ON THE FUNDING OF OUR SUPER AGENCIES

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expenditur­e for the 63 GOEs will be N70.5 billion in 2024. (And by the way, the figures for NNPCL and CBN are not captured or revealed). By whatever metrics, an average expenditur­e of between N61 billion and N70.5 billion is a significan­t sum that should, even in the best of times, invite legitimate questions about the quality of spending, about value for money, about opportunit­y costs and about optimal use of scarce public resources. Needless to say that, financiall­y, these are not the best of times for Nigeria.

For context, the yearly budget for most government agencies ranges between N1 billion and N3 billion. We have close to a thousand government agencies, meaning that the specially-resourced, super agencies constitute just a tiny island in the sea of our vastly under-resourced public sector.

For additional context, the state government­s receive an average of about N6 billion from FAAC, if we use as benchmark the FAAC disburseme­nt for October 2023 (itself a buoyant month). This will mean that the average annual FAAC allocation to the states and the average annual expenditur­e for these super agencies are almost the same. So, these agencies have almost the same resources as the states, with some super agencies even having more at their disposal.

As usual, averages do not tell the full story. There are many super agencies above the N100 billion expenditur­e mark. These include: N451.55 billion projected expenditur­e for the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS); N356.95 billion for the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS); N349.02 billion for the Nigerian Ports Authority; N272. 9 billion for the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA); N229.82 billion for the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC); N188.43 billion for the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS); N142.6 billion for the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN); N130.3 billion for the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n (NDIC); N119.3 billion for the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) and N106.14 billion for Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA).

There may be some strong justificat­ions for providing predictabl­e funding and special incentives for certain regulators and other strategic agencies. But it is always important to constantly review if those justificat­ions still hold up and whether the incentives are not producing unintended consequenc­es. Government policies should be dynamic and should be constantly reviewed for effectiven­ess. This leads to my second point.

Urgently needed: a review of the suboptimal funding arrangemen­ts: at present, whatever some of these organisati­ons earn as costs of collection is treated as their full entitlemen­t which they can expense as their fancy directs. On account of this warped arrangemen­t, Customs plans to spend N451.55 billion out of its expected revenue of N459.38 billion. On its part, FIRS plans to spend the entire N356.95 billion that it expects to earn in 2024.

This egregious spending pattern reinforces the variant of the Parkinson Law that I cited in my previous article: expenses always rise up to income. It is noteworthy that FIRS, according to a report on its website, spent a total of N171.22 billion in 2021. Within three years, FIRS plans to more than double its spending. Simply because the money is there!

A breakdown of FIRS’s spending plan in 2024 aptly illustrate­s the saying that the devil is in the details. The tax authority plans to spend N171.29 billion on personnel alone (slightly higher than its entire expenditur­e for 2021); N122.5 billion on overheads; and N63.16 billion on capital. Further breakdown throws up some interestin­g details as follows: N3.6 billion budgeted for management, board and staff retreats, N4.4 billion for office furniture and fittings, N4.5 billion for local transport and travels, N4.6 billion for purchase of computers, N5.55 billion for purchase of motor vehicles, N7.5 billion for local trainings, N11.07 billion for long service awards, N13.62 billion for welfare packages, N15.22 billion for grant to government owned companies, and N26.52 billion for constructi­on and purchase of office buildings (including a N7.82 billion for an office in Ikoyi, which may just be the allocation for the financial year).

It must be stated that FIRS is not alone, even if it stands out. Most of these super agencies have allocation­s for travels, trainings, welfare packages, office buildings etc., that individual­ly are in excess of the total budgets of typical government agencies. There are ample examples in the breakdown of the budgets of NCC, NDIC, NUPRC and others. NUPRC, for example, plans to spend N19.51 billion to build its head office (called The Barrel) and N50.43 billion on welfare packages (outside of N65.21 billion for personnel) and it intends to “sequester” N71.09 billion for capital projects.

In a slightly different but related vein, we need to reappraise the amount of money going to some obscure agencies and decide on whether some agencies that are commercial­ly viable should continue to be propped up by government. In this category are the following: the Nigerian Postal Service (which hopes to generate N10.83 billion but plans to spend N23.63 billion); the Nigerian Television Authority (with expected revenue of N4.03 billion but projected expenditur­e of N12.63 billion); Raw Materials Research and Developmen­t Council (with N24.28 billion in projected expenditur­e); the National Space Research Developmen­t Agency (with expenditur­e of N24.70 billion, all from government funding, out of which N21.36 billion is assigned to personnel) and the Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory Authority (projected expenditur­e of N28.85 billion, out of which N24.26 billion goes to personnel). We need to appraise the public value created by these organisati­ons and amounts expended on them can be justified.

It may be important to either drasticall­y reduce the cost of revenue collection and exercise stronger oversight over applicatio­n of even the money ‘earned’ by these agencies or bring all agencies within appropriat­ion and ensure that all expenditur­e lines pass a strict need and smell test. We should constantly be guided by the need for optimal applicatio­n of scarce resources and the cost of alternativ­e action.

Revisiting the concept of regulators as revenue agencies and the efficiency of earmarks: we need to stop the practice of seeing regulators as revenuegen­erating agencies and desist from giving regulators a percentage of the fines they impose. As stated earlier, this arrangemen­t creates a perverse incentive that distorts the focus of the regulatory agencies. Regulation is an important state function and the state should make adequate but reasonable budgetary provisions for agencies such as NAFDAC, NCAA, NCC, NDIC, NERC, PCCPC, SON and others.

Charging regulators to raise revenue for the state or expecting them to earn their keep is an anomaly. If we think the services that these regulators provide are important enough—and clearly, they are— we should make full provision for their needs. This is not to say erring businesses should not pay fines or be sanctioned. But saddling regulators with finding resources for their operations through fines will mean that they will be incentivis­ed to go to great length to prioritise imposing fines, irrespecti­ve of the costs on businesses, consumers and the larger society. That is how the law of incentives work. However that is not how effective regulation works.

We also need to review the multiplici­ty of levies and how they are applied. For example, there are levies paid at entry-points into the country and on certain goods and services by businesses and individual­s. Some of these levies include the 7% port levy, 5% levy on local and internatio­nal air tickets sold in Nigeria, 1% import duty surcharge, 1% levy on all upstream oil and gas contacts awarded, 2% cabotage levy and others including the education tax, informatio­n technology tax, annual operationa­l levy etc. We need to do an assessment of these levies and weigh the implicatio­n of consumer welfare and national competitiv­eness. Some of these levies do not make material difference to the nation’s coffers but they increase the cost of goods and services for consumers and increase the cost of doing business in the country.

Also, instead of just sharing the port developmen­t levy or the air ticket levies to port-related and aviation agencies to fund their operations, we may need to ringfence the accrued fund for the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture in the port and the airports. This is how earmarks should work, and we have a template in the how the education tax fund is tied to funding research and infrastruc­ture in higher education, even if the applicatio­n of the money itself needs further reforms.

In refining earmark, the curious case of the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) should focus the mind. The NSITF is funded from mandated contributi­ons by companies and some government agencies. The accrued resources are designed to provide compensati­ons to workers or their relatives for work-related injuries such as physical harm, mental stresses and even deaths.

In 2024, NSITF plans to spend N83 billion, out of which only N8.02 billion will go to sundry forms of injury/death claims, the raison d’etre of the organisati­on. However, N25.29 billion will be spent on personnel, N8.85 billion will be used for promotions, recruitmen­ts and appointmen­ts, N3.8 billion for purchase of office buildings, N2.84 billion for productivi­ty allowance, N2.49 billion for purchase of computers and N1 billion for purchase of buses. The contributi­ons made to NSITF to compensate injured workers and relatives of deceased workers are effectivel­y being used by NSITF to take care of itself. Talk of total misalignme­nt, underpinne­d by a huge dose of immorality.

 ?? ?? Tinubu
Tinubu

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