Economists have long found Nigeria to be something of a conundrum. The macro picture has always appeared compelling - large population, oil reserves, mineral reserves, endless tracts of arable land, land and sea borders for regional domination. Indeed the absurdity of our underperformance is only surpassed by our ability to accurately quantify our losses and missed opportunities.
In
the short period that I have been privileged to serve as Minister of Finance, I
have observed that even the most basic systems and controls over the management
of our resources are in dire need of strengthening. While we are regaled with
and shocked by details of amounts stolen, diverted or wasted, we must face the
cold reality that such acts are facilitated by weaknesses in our systems. Even
if we successfully prosecute and jail every looter, ghost worker and other
economic saboteur, there is every risk that those caught will only be replaced
by persons who are just as bad, or worse - unless we radically strengthen our
systems and institutions.
Our
President’s brave and committed
fight against corruption and waste is as much an economic crusade as it is a
moral one. The objective is not just to stem the corruption and loss but to
execute an economic plan to channel those monies into much needed areas that
will support and reposition the economy.
In short, the fight against corruption is not about “retribution”
and meting out punishment, it is about releasing funds for our economy. I am
humbled to be part of the ongoing work on recovery and can report that the
urgency in the work, especially our interface with nations where our money has
been stashed, is propelled by our need for funds to invest into our economy.
Our
economic plans are not about austerity and frugality; if that were the case
then we would not be attempting an expansionary budget. We could have pursued
fiscal consolidation and maintained 2015 budget size, and then introduced
severe public spending cuts to balance the books by laying off workers and
cutting projects. Had we done so, we would by now be the darling of the IMF and
other multi-laterals.
Conversely,
we are undertaking an ambitious counter cyclical strategy to stimulate our
sluggish economy and expanding government spending with a focus on
infrastructure, the true catalyst for economic growth. This will have
contractors returning to site and re-engaging workers, it will see new projects
commencing, arrears released and economic activity reinvigorated across the
nation. We plan to take advantage of low
global prices for commodities and contract prices. Existing contracts are being
renegotiated downwards, with significant savings recorded and new projects priced
to reflect current commercial realities. Our spending stimulus is private
sector driven, supported by a robust procurement system that will see permanent
local capacity built in a number of sectors including oil and gas, housing
construction and agriculture. However, and this is the key differentiator, we
plan to spend in a disciplined manner that will extract the maximum value for
every naira spent.
The
process of building the internal control framework to support this need for
disciplined spending has begun in earnest. Our Efficiency Unit has reviewed
four years of detailed expenditure data to identify trends and is already
negotiating volume discounts that appropriately reflect the buying power of
government. Personnel remains our largest cost. In addition to the BVN driven
cleaning of our payrolls that has so far removed 23,000 fraudulent entries, we
have initiated significantly stronger controls over our payroll. These efforts will exert a constant downward
pressure on personnel costs until such a time as we have assurance that every
payment is accurate and valid. A similar process is now commencing in Pensions.
The N160 Billion spent monthly on personnel and pensions related costs demands
this as an absolute minimum.
The
revenue focus is non oil. We are revisiting historical decisions that are no
longer in the best interests of the national economy. The establishment of
various Boards and Parastatals to undertake the operational and revenue
generating business of government was a well-intentioned attempt to provide
separation from policy makers. However, as the economy has grown, so too has
the revenue earned in these agencies and their financial autonomy has grown in
a manner that no longer fully serves the public interest. Port charges, maritime
charges, airport landing fees, visa charges, passport charges, telecoms licence
fees, among many others, must be tracked and accounted for.
While the Fiscal
Responsibility Act was designed to provide control, actual compliance has been
poor. The result has been leakage on a staggering scale, as findings from our
ongoing audits suggest. This is a serious issue. The upside is a significant
revenue opportunity which the TSA implementation has given us sight of, and
which we are supporting with a proactive drive for improved accountability.
At
the same time, our traditional revenue sources are being supported to be more
effective.
In Customs, we are making the necessary investments in container
scanners and other equipment required to improve collection efficiency. This is
combined with the results of a compensation survey which will see the
introduction of performance related pay, to reduce corruption and create an
alignment of interest that will enhance revenue generation. With FIRS there is
a well-defined plan to enhance compliance by widening the tax net. Using data
to drive tax compliance, we will ensure that the tax regime is efficiently
administered and that everyone pays their fair share.
There
is a need for disciplined and effective system of managing our financial
resources to ensure maximum value. We will no longer measure performance by the
size of our budget or the amount disbursed; we must measure by the impact of
that expenditure on the lives of Nigerians. To measure and manage this we have
already made some key changes in the way funds are released. We have abandoned
the old system of capital releases that funnelled a proportional share of
available funds released to each Ministry, Department and Agency. We have a
robust system in place where funds are tied to specific outcomes as documented
by each agency. This is being supported by follow up reviews to ensure
implementation.
As
Benjamin Disraeli once said, “We
are not creatures of circumstance; we are creators of circumstance.” I am firmly convinced
that Nigeria is on the right path. The path of discipline will confront some
age old destructive habits. It will challenge some unwritten rules, and I
personally will step on some highly placed toes on this journey. All this I am
fully prepared for, and so I do not expect nor do I particularly want to be
popular.
However,
I will act in the best interest of all Nigerians to ensure that we build the
economy that we desire and richly deserve.
This is the
second of three articles by Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, Minister of Finance, Federal
Republic of Nigeria.

53 comments:
Noticed.
How much will this woman pay me to read this long epistle she just composed bikonu.. Next plzzz!!!😴💤💤
16+4=24
👀
Madam Minister there are situations when we can't help being creatures of adverse circumstances.
Whatever
After writing and talking still no solution.
Okay
... Merited happiness
another good essay,another promise,hmmmmmm madam minister,we have read and heard all these before,all these rhetorics are time consuming,please focus on the implementation of all your grand designs.
Madame stop yaning abeg. Ur incompetent
If talk did sh*t, Nigeria would be a world power
You've been positioned by God to play your part in the history of our nation, God wi
God wants you to play your part faithfully
On point. True, if Buhari jails all corrupt people, more bad people will fill their places if the system that allows the looting isn't restructured. But still, the fight on corruption has to go on to instill morals in the youth that are coming to take prominent positions in the government in future. I like this woman.
Can someone tell this beautiful woman to be reasonable and stop writing sermons. Our Economy is sitting on a wheel chair and you are here writing sermons instead of begging for help from real Economists. Under your watch PMB has practically destroyed our Economy with his obsolete ideas.
Cut the long story short and tell us how it would benefit Nigerians. Linda take note!
Nice one...we've long been seeing beautiful essays that brings hope to the plight of Nigerians,the problem is "implementation",its not about the beauty of the essays but,the effect on Nigerians is what counts
Good ideas. Sustaining them is the problem of our country. We have heard such comments of stepping into shoes many times. When compromise or the other factors relating to Nigeria comes in no shoe will be found to step into. Let us watch and see if tribal or regional influence will not affect the trial of Dasukigate personalities
Madam u re better on as a columnist not a finance minister. Your performance since assuming office is one over ten
This is in depth and insight into the efforts of BUHARI administration. God will help thembyo succeed, the era of overbloated contracts which gas built many people houses which i gate costs 10 to 20 million naiara ,impunity and celebration of thieves is over.The critics on this blog should go and Die so that this nation can move forward without them!
This is absolutely brilliant. Ride on my love.....
Carry go Mrs Adeosun. God bless your efforts #SaiBuhari
This is good one, hope it will not be heading the same way others have gone, good talk, write-up etc with nothing to show for it. I buy into the Nigeria project building and do hope it will be successful.
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What a piece! I pray that the Lord strengthens this government in the journey of transforming Nigerian Economy to an enviable position in the comity of Nations. Moving away from celebration of mediocrity to celebration of excellence.
Next
Next
Seen. Linda observe!
Ok #Noted
Damolia.DEW
Linda mkn money snc 2000
-D great anonymous now as Vivian Reginalds
If i hear...
Abeg Dis woman shuld just shut up, all d moni dat buhari has looted from past corrupt govt, where is d moni?
This is lovely and well articulated.
May the Lord help you Kemi.
Kemi the educated illitrate, shut up.
I am appreciative of this opportunity to know the mind of our finance minister. i think your vision and ideas should also go to everyone who will be in positions to take financial decisions within this period of your tenure. i hope we can know what fundamentally nigerians can do to enable this system work and the implications that would follow. it is said that once you see the storm from afar you stand a better chance of dealing with it
Most times people blame the government which is rightly due but a lot of times us Nigerians are also the catalyst of our problems. Just reading most of the comments on blogs and online news portals you can tell the average Nigerian was satisfied with how the country was run before and even a few decades. We need to play our part, we need to make our leaders accountable for their wrongs wether they are from the same tribe, I mean after all most of us are not benefiting from all the thefts these people stole and are still stealing. And I'm pretty sure if you come to any of them for help you won't even get close to them. In most countries leaders are accessible but not in Nigeria even some as small as a LG chairman. Us the youths need to stop this glorification of poor leaders and start taking charge collectively
That if u have naira to count.....
This olodo minister has come again,after all this long sermon bottom line is that you can't hire an accountant to do a ministers job,clueless president,clueless minister #theblindleadingtheblind
Nice article. This is inspiring.
This our country people self! We shud learn how to appreciate people. Must we rubbish someone for an idea & informations passing across. @davofall daveofall I like u man! lets leave sentiment. We shud appreciate & stop calling names. Guyssss wake up. Criticise constructively
I think she knows what shes doing as time goes on her policies will take full effect rome was not built in a day.
I think she knows what shes doing as time goes on her policies will take full effect rome was not built in a day.
Am officially in Love with this woman. I look forward to a better Nigeria. God bless Nigeria
Just like you can't type simple English.
That is exactly the problem.The Nigerian youths is lost! If it was prick & toto matter,you would have read & commented immediately. yet you'll come here & say the leaders are old & selfish & won't allow the youths a chance to lead.We simply are not ready or equipped to lead.
God bless u
People like u v nothing to contribute to nation building other than complaints. WAKE UP and create ur own innovative ideas that will bring about positive change to u and the nation at large.
e ko oshi lo jo...... chains people
Gbam! Nice one
So I heard some people are crying that our Finance Minister should be replaced, with who and what? I have an answer for you: "We plan to take advantage of low global prices for commodities and contract prices. Existing contracts are being renegotiated downwards, with significant savings recorded and new projects priced to reflect current commercial realities. Our spending stimulus is private sector driven, supported by a robust procurement system that will see permanent local capacity built in a number of sectors including oil and gas, housing construction and agriculture." What other expertise or professional do you require to do what Kemi Adeosun is presently doing well?
Please let's stop distracting this woman, she is fully loaded to restore sanity in our financial sector. The noise and the criticism should change to support, contribution and prayers. We do not need another headache, she has what it takes and is already doing what she has sworn to do when she accepted to be our Finance Minister.
Please my dear Nigerians, Kemi Adeosun is reaching out to us to play our part and change our story. She's asked us to spend and carry out all financial matters and transactions in sincerity and discipline.
There you have heard it from the horse's mouth, our revenue focus in Nigeria is non oil. Anything that is not in the interest of our national economy will be distinguished, this is brilliance at its peak!
All apc govt keep doing is talk talk talk, when will they finally put the blocks on the ground. All this verbosity we already know, no need to over emphasis the state of things..change the state of things Biko..if not bring back Mr clueless let him continue.
Linda how far?
Nollywood is a non oil sector that can create thousands of jobs for the youth. The govt. should put its money where it's mouth is and Support the industry, help them get the right equipments, handle the Pirates with jail time and real action, and watch as more jobs are created and entrepreneurs are born.
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