One of the key functions the National Assembly are expected to dwell on is the consideration and passage of the 2014 budget proposal as present by Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for the Executive. Below are the sad details:
Apparently, our State House functions as an integrated town that must have every facility within. After all it has its own church (chapel) and mosque and even a zoo where N8m would be spent to upgrade and maintain it and an additional sum of N14.5m would be spent to purchase two beasts, all for the pleasure of its privileged patrons. And this is after we budgeted N7.5m for wildlife conservation in the State House last year. [Pure MADNESS]!
Still in the State House, there is plan to spend N76.3m to purchase 'crested cutlery, flatware and glassware'. Now, isn't that too much to spend on those items, for a State House that has existed for years and been playing host to several dinners? We don't dispose of dinnerware on a yearly basis, do we?
General maintenance in the State House will cost N1.19b of which N138.9 will go for motor vehicle and transport equipment maintenance, N907m for office and residential building maintenance; N17.4m for office furniture maintenance and N40m to maintain office and IT equipment (that comes to spending more than N3m each month to maintain office and IT equipment in the office of the president).
Recalling that only last year, we budgeted N90.9m for this item, it is bewildering why we plan to spend so much this year. Yet, this is aside N188.3m to be spent on office stationery and computer consumables (for which we budgeted N507.9m last year).
The first observation to make is that the budget proposal allocates 76.3% to recurrent expenditure and just 23.7% to capital expenditure. One interpretation of this is that the budget is meant to just keep the country and its institutions running with nothing spectacular to show for. A budget focused on massive development of infrastructure would assign more to capital rather than to recurrent which covers personnel and overhead costs.
About 42 ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) will spend more on their recurrent than on capital and in some instances the difference is so huge. Here are a few cases:
Zeroing in on the Interior Ministry's budget shows that the Prisons Service would spend N45.2b on recurrent and a mere N2.3b on capital. With such lopsided allocation, it is doubtful if our prisons infrastructure would be revamped from their current state of dilapidation and dehumanisation this year.
But why is the recurrent expenditure so huge?
Other heads of interest demanding explanation include:
There are even more interesting budgetary provisions elsewhere, including the State House. For instance, the State House Headquarters plans to purchase an embalming machine at the cost of N1.65m and a hydraulic post-mortem table at N4m. What morbid humour! Of course we know what embalmment and post-mortem are about, but in the State House Headquarters? No doubt there is a clinic in the State House, but I am not sure that clinic caters for a very large number of clients requiring it to have every kind of specialised units including mortuary. I am sure any such requirement for embalmment and post-mortem would not be routine and frequently required in a clinic in the State House and thus the said equipment cannot be seen as necessities. If and when such needs arise, referral could be made to larger state hospitals like the National Hospital.
A peep into the budget for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs brings its own excitement. For instance, we plan to spend money for the maintenance of plants and generators in several of our foreign missions, including the one in London. It's with the same incredulity that we notice the plan to spend money in fuelling boats and aircraft in virtually all of our foreign missions. As an example, we plan to spend N2.38m and N1.78m respectively for the above services in our Foreign Mission in Abidjan. As earlier mentioned the foreign ministry's headquarters would part with N201.7m for fumigation and cleaning services during the year.
Other interesting budgetary provisions proposed in this ministry include N40m for 'global power on women's empowerment, HIV and SRHR' and N9m to be spent by one of its agencies, the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution for 'building democracy as an instrument of peace'. And although every MDA budgets for health insurance subscription as well as medicals, there is still this curious budgetary head in the foreign affairs ministry known as 'cost of medical treatment for Mrs. XYZ (I have withheld the real names) at St. Andrews Burns Service at Broomfield Hospital' for the sum of N49.76m. [Medical bill of one woman N49.76m?] I am just curious why an individual's name is listed in a federal budget as a spending. Who is the person? Why is this cost not subsumed in other medical costs or covered by insurance?
Next, the Foreign Affairs ministry plans to spend N834.4m to purchase and freight 40 'representational cars' to 40 of our foreign missions. This translates to N20.86m as average cost for the cars. Wouldn't this cost be reduced if these cars are bought in the locations they are to be used?
The above are just some of the numerous scandalous items in the budget that one could query because they don't appear to show prudence in the management of our resources.
As the National Assembly considers the budget, it is hoped that they would be detailed enough to query these and more bogus and phoneey entries in the Appropriation Bill.
Written By Obo Effanga
He is Governance Manager at Actionaid Nigeria
Original source: EXPOSED: The Okonjo-Iweala's Scandalous 2014 Budget.
No comments:
Post a Comment