I find this article interesting and believe I should share it with my esteemed readers! Enjoy as you read.
Two weeks ago, I asked a question-Who Will Federate Nigeria? It was
actually a rhetorical question which was prompted by recent happenings
in the polity which exposed deficiencies in our current federal set up.
One of these recent happenings is the issue of unpaid salaries which has caused so much pain to individual families.
Having asked that question, it seems to me that I have a duty to answer
it and this piece will provide some ideas on how we can federate
Nigeria.
The issue of unpaid workers salary is a national
emergency. It is not an issue localized to a region. It is not an All
Progressive Congress or Peoples Democratic Party issue. It is a Nigerian
issue and it is an issue that deserves urgent and important action.
Throwing money at the issue is not the solution. In fact, it may even
worsen the situation. States must be independent of the Federal
Government.
President Muhammadu Buhari means well and should be
applauded by all for the bailout package he recently put together for
the states.
But what happens when those bailout funds are spent
and the fundamental issues that caused the inability of several states
to pay their workers is still not addressed?
If the states do not
develop their capacity to generate funds independent of the Federal
Government, it is only a matter of time before the FG has to intervene
again.
The issue of unpaid salaries is but an urgent reminder
that we need to reform our revenue allocation system and devolve powers
and responsibilities from the federal government to the states and local
governments.
The current revenue allocation formula where the
Federal Government gets 52% of national revenues while the 36 states get
26.72% and Local Governments get 20.60% is in need of a change.
It was rather inconvenient to bring this subject up during the
electioneering period but now is an expedient time to address it.
The Nigerian federal government is too big and powerful to the extent
that one has to be tongue in cheek to call our federal government
federal.
The word federal indicates that a system of government
is in place whereby several states form a unity but remain independent
in internal affairs.
Is this true of Nigeria? Certainly not! Our
states are dependent on the federal government, meaning that the federal
government is not federal. A better term would be a central or unitary
government.
Ideally, states gather together to form a federation
and that federation is of their making. But in our own peculiar
situation, the military class of 1966 and its successors banded together
at the federal level and created states and that is why our thinking in
Nigeria is that the center is the creator of the units instead of vice
versa.
But we cannot continue in this anomaly where the federal
government sets up a minimum wage and expects all states to pay that
minimum wage without taking into effect that though all states are
equal, they are not all uniform in their economic capabilities.
This economic inequality is not due to laziness or any other form of subjective incapacity.
No!
Take a state like Lagos or Rivers or Delta. It is not of their making
that one was a Federal Capital which for decades received the lions
share of capital development which attracted a population shift or that
others had oil which caused them to be an oil hub which positively
affected their economy.
These are providential circumstances
which made these states better able to perform economically and it is
thus not sound business sense to expect these states to compete with
others in such areas like salaries and what have you.
The 8th
National Assembly has to put on its thinking cap and device ways to
devolve powers and responsibilities from the federal government to the
states and this must come with a review of the allocations formula in
favor of the states.
Our situation has changed from what it used
to be in the military era. Today's states are entirely responsible for
education from primary to secondary level and jointly responsible for
tertiary education with the federal government.
If the federal
government builds roads, they build roads too. If the federal government
constructs power plants, they build their own Independent Power plants.
If the federal government builds airports, they build their own state
airports.
Other than the military, police, paramilitary and
foreign affairs, there is nothing that the federal government does that
the states do not do.
Conversely, there is plenty that the
states do that the federal government does not do including building
markets, constructing and servicing intercity roads, providing social
services for orphans, indigent residents and the elderly. With all
these, they also have to pay teachers salary and run a healthcare system
while ensuring that intra and intercity transport services are up and
running.
Is it conceivable that they can do all these on just a paltry 26.72% split amongst 36 states?
Something has to give. We must generate ideas to help the states
survive and be better able to pay salaries and provide social services
otherwise we could have an Arab Spring on our hands.
I proposed matching grants as a way of helping our states help themselves.
Let us reduce the allocation to the federal government to 30%, however,
we should not add the 20% that will be taken from the FG to the
allocation to the states.
Rather, that money should go to an
escrow account and be used for matching grants to encourage states to
increase their Internally Generated Revenue.
So, every month, the
federation accounts allocation committee, FAAC, disburses the 80% of
the federally generated revenue, thereafter, states now present to the
FAAC their Internally Generated Revenue figures which must be
verifiable. After verification, the FAAC then gives each state an amount
equal to the IGR they generated to be taken from the 20% in escrow.
States that do not generate any IGR will simply get their monthly allocation and nothing else.
This will spur states to explore alternative sources of income and wean them off their current dependency on oil.
Because, let us face it, the days of oil are numbered.
Ideas are ruling the world and Nigeria must prepare for that new world
or prepare to fade away. I don't know about you, but I do not want to
fade away.
Apple momentarily displaced ExxonMobil as the world's
most valuable company then dethroned permanently Coke as the worlds
most valuable brand proving that the days when the world relied on
minerals and commodities is going.
An ideas revolution is taking over the world.
And Nigerian youths are part of this ideas revolution that is taking over the world.
We need to reform Nigeria so she is better able to give our youths the
platform they need to turn their ideas from negatives like 419,
terrorism and kidnapping to ideas this generate billions.
We gave the world Chinedu Echeruo who recently sold his app to
Apple for a billion dollars.
Just this past Monday, Her Majesty, the Queen of England honoured four
Nigerian youths as part of her inaugural Queen’s Young Leaders (YQL)
program.
Nigerian Youths need the right environment. There are
many Chinedu Echeruos among our youth who can turn ideas to billion
dollar apps. We just need to reform Nigeria's structure in such a way
that the her federating states are better able to provide that right
environment for all to thrive in.
Reno Omokri is the founder of
the Mind of Christ Christian Center in California, author of Shunpiking:
No Shortcuts to God and Why Jesus Wept and the host of Transformation
with Reno Omokri (Thursday at 10pm on the Impact Network, Chanel 268
DISH andMonday at 12am on San Francisco's KTLN, Chanel 25 on Comcast).
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