The Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, said on Thursday in Lagos that
the N165 billion monthly salaries to federal civil servants was
overbloated and could no longer be sustained by government.
The minister spoke at a meeting with the Newspaper Proprietors
Association of Nigeria, hosted by her counterpart in the Ministry of
Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed.
Adeosun, who spoke on the economic reform agenda of the government, said
the N165 billion being paid to federal civil servants monthly
represented 40 per cent of the total spending of government.
She said the figure was too high and government was pursuing aggressive
measures to detect and prosecute ghost workers and other saboteurs in
the system.
She said: “We spend N165 billion every month on salaries and when I came in, there was no checking.
“Now, we have created a unit assigned with the sole responsibility of
checking the salaries and catching those behind the over bloated
salaries.”
Adeosun said the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System
introduced by the previous administration were faulty and sabotaged by
the element benefitting from the salary fraud.
She said many Federal Government establishments, including the Police, were yet to be captured in the system.
According to her, it is shocking that the Nigerian Railway Corporation,
which was not fully functioning, still had 10,000 workers in its payroll
serviced by government.
The minister promised that government would correct the anomalies in the
payroll system and weed out all ghost workers in the service.
Adeosun said the fiscal focus of the administration was to ensure an
economic growth that would be measured on job creation and productive
sectors.
She said: “The economy is not measured by how many private jets we have but how many jobs we create.
“People must be productive for the economy to grow.
“We have been a consumer economy, but we want to be productive and stop buying everything from abroad.
“We have been borrowing to pay salaries for years and that has to stop because it is not sustainable.
“Last year, we spent N64 billion on travelling and only N90 billion on roads.
“Travelling does not grow the economy and this must also stop.”
The minister said the compound GDP of the country had been growing
negatively in the last 10 years and the administration was working to
correct the trend.
Adeosun promised that the administration would be the most discipline
government the country has ever had in terms of fiscal accountability
and responsibility.
Also speaking at the meeting, the Minister of Agriculture, Audu Ogbeh,
said government would reposition the agricultural sector to become the
mainstay of the economy.
Ogbeh said: “The ministry will give policy direction and coordination to
make farming attractive and for people to practice it as business.
“Government will put policy in place to recover the $22 billion which is
floating out of the country’s resources to sustain farms in other
countries back to our villages.
“Government will also ensure that bank review the two digits interest rate on loan to farmers and other productive sector.
“The change promised may appear to be slow, but it is actually taking place.
“In this year, we have harvested million tons of rice.”
The Minister of the Environment, Amina Mohammed, said government would
complete the clean-up of Ogoniland in the next one year and ensure the
degraded land was revived for productive purposes.
Mohammed said the Great Green Wall project of planting trees to control
desert encroachment would also be given priority by the administration.
Source: NAN
No comments:
Post a Comment