THISDAY

Senate: 60 Agencies Failed to Remit N3tn into Federation Account

Ahmed: Affected parastatal­s now paying back

- Deji Elumoye in Abuja

The Senate has disclosed that no fewer than 60 federal government agencies failed to remit over N3 trillion generated revenue into the Federation Account from 2014 to 2020.

This is just as the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs Zainab Ahmed, said that some of the affected parastatal­s have started crediting government coffers with the outstandin­g revenues they generated in the last six years.

The Senate Committee on Finance headed by Senator Olamilekan Adeola made the allegation in the course of investigat­ing revenue remittance­s by MDAs between 2014-2020 and payment of one per cent Stamp Duty on all contract awards by the MDAs within the same period.

Although the committee did not categorica­lly mention the agencies involved but THISDAY findings revealed that almost all the revenuegen­erating agencies of the government failed to remit generated fund into the coffers of the government.

Adeola explained that over N3 trillion of generated revenue of the government were trapped with the MDAs, which might have spent them on frivolous expenditur­es contrary to the provisions of the 1999 Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (As amended) and the 2007 Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act (FRA).

The ranking Senator spoke at the weekend when the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed; Director-General of Budget Office, Mr. Ben Akabueze; Auditor General of the Federation, Mr. Idris Ahmed and other heads of agencies appeared before the committee over the ongoing investigat­ion into revenue remittance­s by MDAs between 2014 and 2020.

According to him, from submission­s already made and calculatio­ns from the Fiscal Responsibi­lity Commission, about 60 Government Owned Enterprise­s (GOEs), may have about N3trillion of government revenue still unremitted in their coffers or already spent on frivolous expenditur­e contrary to the Constituti­on and Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act, 2007.

He said: "The reconcilia­tion done so far by the Office of Accountant General of the Federation is in excess of over a trillion naira going to like two, three trillion Naira or thereabout­s and these monies are still hanging in the hands of these agencies and we have asked the office of Accountant General to get the money into the government coffers and we discovered that they are giving them a payment notice without necessaril­y following up this process.

"We have noticed that in the so-called 80 per cent of operationa­l surplus the agencies refer to, many of these agencies proved frivolous expenditur­e and they have taken advantage of the current system and refuse to remit this amount as at when due. We tried to audit the account of these agencies year in year out for the past five years and some of the revelation are scaring. How do we explain that an agency of government that has a provision in the budget for Capital, Overhead and Personel, in their audited account, they have gross revenue of N500 million and they are asking for N200 million?".

He added that since the commenceme­nt of the investigat­ions some agencies have complied with the committee's directive with some of them paying back tens of millions of Naira with receipts to show from the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation.

“There is no gainsaying the fact that if these revenues are paid to the Consolidat­ed Revenue Fund (CRF) for proper appropriat­ion by the parliament during budget considerat­ions, we are going to reduce dramatical­ly the size of our deficit and hopefully, minimise our borrowing. “We cannot continue to run government business as we used to do in this time when there are huge demands for government to fund needed infrastruc­ture and other socioecono­mic programmes”.

Adeola stressed that the minister and other top officials were invited to get their full buy-in and also brief them on the revelation­s unearthed by the over fourweek-long investigat­ions with many agencies committing all manner of illegaliti­es relating to the expenditur­e of government funds that should rightly be paid into the Consolidat­ed Revenue Fund (CRF).

The minister, in her contributi­on, confirmed that in recent times a good number of agencies have been directed to pay back revenues collected on behalf of federal government as required by the law.

Ahmed added that the executive arm of government is also scrutinisi­ng the applicatio­n of the template of calculatin­g and deducting operating surpluses by agencies of government to ensure that the right amount is paid to the government.

On his part, the DG, Budget Office, Akabueze clarified that the issue of operating surpluses does not apply to any government agencies that are fully funded by government, stressing that all revenue generated by such agencies must be paid in full into the CRF as it is illegal to spend out of such money without appropriat­ion by the National Assembly.

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