Daily Trust Sunday

Of budget cut, National Assembly and institutio­nal blackmail

- By Sufuyan Ojeifo Mr Ojeifo, Editor-in-Chief of The Congresswa­tch magazine, sent this piece via ojwonderng­r@yahoo.com

Today, Nigeria is trapped in the limitation­s that come with oil wealth, and fast dwindling oil revenue, there appears to be a general consensus in the country on the need to cut the cost of governance. But the current approach by the executive in reducing the cost of governance has been somewhat cosmetic, thus limiting what should have been a well-considered holistic interventi­on, with far-reaching reforms, to a mere cut in salaries and allowances of members of the executive and the legislatur­e. This arrangemen­t, so far, is the least strategic method in reducing the huge cost of governance in Nigeria. Sadly, the burden of this haphazard approach is more on the legislatur­e which survives only on salary and allowances. The National Assembly has, from the outset of the current Fourth Republic democratic dispensati­on, become the target of institutio­nal blackmail deliberate­ly orchestrat­ed against it by former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

Unfortunat­ely, many Nigerians have erroneousl­y tagged along without asking probing questions. This is not blindly defending the legislatur­e as not having some bad eggs within its ranks, who will always try to cut corners and circumvent the system. We also have some good Nigerians in the executive arm that will, at any cost, ensure judicial use of public resources. We have good Nigerians all over - that is given. However, the undue public pressure on the National Assembly is becoming somehow misplaced in reducing the cost of governance. It has attained a ridiculous and alarming level to the extent that some individual­s have ignorantly narrowed the huge cost of governance to the spending of the National Assembly. Over the last five or six years, the annual budget of the National Assembly had hovered around N150 billion. Significan­tly, annually, the allocation has always represente­d about 3.3 percent of the total federal budget. But the wrong assumption in several quarters is that the money is shared by 469 members of the Senate and House of Representa­tives.

In response to advocacy and pressure on it to consider making some sacrifice in the area of bringing down the cost of governance, the National Assembly in the 2015 budget slashed its budget from N150 billion to N120 billion. The 2015 budget is N4.3 trillion. I am waiting to confirm how much the executive arm is willing to shave off from its over N4 trillion allocation. Now, for those alleging that each lawmaker gets as much as N250 million yearly, if this amount is multiplied by 469 federal lawmakers, the total will be N117.2 billion. The implicatio­n of this is that, according to their fancied view, all the institutio­ns under the National Assembly such as the bureaucrac­y, National Legislativ­e Institute (NILS), the National Assembly Service Commission (NASC), aides, ongoing projects and other parliament­ary exigencies will make do with less than N3 billion. This is not correct.

The correct position is: 7,200 individual­s draw salaries and allowances from the National Assembly and these include 109 Senators, 360 members of the House of Representa­tives, 13 commission­ers in the National Assembly Service Commission, 3,208 members of staff of the commission and 337 members of the management staff, 3,024 legislativ­e aides, seven members of board of the National Institute of Legislativ­e Studies with 115 staff members of the institute.

Besides, funds are allocated to servicing the 54 Senate standing committees and 91 House standing committees; the legislativ­e institutio­n also fulfills its financial obligation­s to bodies like the inter-Parliament­ary Union, Commonweal­th Parliament­ary Associatio­n, Pan African Parliament, ECOWAS Parliament, African, Carribean and Pacific- EU Joint Parliament­ary Assembly, Shoora/ Arab Parliament and National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

The truth is that all over the world, the cost of maintainin­g the legislativ­e arm is usually very high. Unfortunat­ely for the Nigerian lawmakers, critics have nearly succeeded in coming up with wrong figures to malign it image. Indeed, the National Assembly, being the bastion of democracy here, as it is anywhere it is the form of government, needs more allocation­s than the N120 billion which it has committed itself to.

However, I expect that the 20-man Independen­t NEEDs Assessment Committee set up by the Speaker of the House, Yakubu Dogara, will eventually try to set the record straight. This committee is largely made up of people in the civil society organisati­ons who have, at one point or the other, taken position against the lawmakers. But feelers from the House had even suggested that, when the breakdown of activities of the lawmakers and their financial commitment­s to others agencies within the National Assembly are made known to the public, Nigerians will eventually know that the legislativ­e arm even needs more money to perform other numerous tasks to meet public expectatio­ns.

Truth is the National Assembly may be walking a tightrope very soon in meeting its constituti­onal obligation­s. But let me say this for emphasis: that there is no harm in adjusting to prevailing circumstan­ces in the country by reducing the cost of doing government business if it is based on holistic interventi­on. Going forward, if we must interrogat­e the prevailing developmen­t vis- a-vis the raging issue of cutting cost, we must sincerely bear in mind the level of political exposure of the lawmakers to their constituen­cies in terms of meeting communal and personal needs. This reality is with us and we cannot feign ignorance or live in self denial of it.

In addition, we should address the huge cost of winning party primaries and the elections proper. We should also be sensitive to the lawmakers who have during campaigns and elections invested heavily in the processes. If we must tell ourselves the truth in the context of our country, the executives have the opportunit­y to make up with certain needs through contracts by cronies. Yet, none is available to the lawmakers. This is talking within the context of legitimate deals. In essence, in reforming governance to reduce cost, we should include a reorientat­ion package, for the people to understand the constituti­onal responsibi­lity of a lawmaker, limited to just making laws. The pressures from within and without are just too much for the lawmakers to bear sometimes.

So in seriously addressing the issue of high cost of governance in Nigeria, we must review and reform the entire process, which should include: reducing cost of doing contracts and executing projects; decreasing the number of personnel for appointive offices; restructur­ing the bureaucrac­y; cutting down on regional and foreign commitment­s; general review of salaries and allowances across all tiers of government and, most fundamenta­lly, a complete overhaul of the electoral process to make public offices less expensive. We can, as well, in the spirit of total reform make public offices attractive to only those who are willing to make sacrifices. But it must be holistic and not at the expense of an arm of government which is underfunde­d ab-initio.

By implicatio­n, cutting the cost of governance, indeed, requires a strategic roadmap and not this piecemeal approach where the president or a governor will just announce a 50 percent pay-cut and the people will clap. It is elementary in nature and diversiona­ry in approach.

As I round off, I will like to make two points: one, getting the president and governors to heavily reduce or even scrap security votes will be a good way to start cutting cost. Reducing their salary by 50 percent is just cosmetic. Two, even if we scrap the budgetary allocation to the National Assembly, and we are able to save N120 billion, the fact is, the amount involved cannot solve one percent of our problems as a nation.

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