NEW REVENUE SHARING FORMULAR
Revenue formula: Govs to demand 42% of federal allocation
…seek more cash for salaries, security, roads, others
…want FG’s share slashed from 52.68% to 37%
…review committee to be inaugurated on Thursday
Olusola Fabiyi, Mudiaga Affe,Ihuoma Chiedozie and Tunde Ajaja
Ahead of the review of the revenue
sharing formula scheduled to start on Thursday, there are strong
indications that state governors may demand 42 per cent of the federal
allocation as against the 26.72 per cent they currently get.
The governors are also asking that the
share of the Federal Government be slashed from the current 52.68 per
cent to 37 per cent, while requesting that the share of local
governments be increased from the current 20.60 per cent to 23 per cent
in the new formula.
The Chairman, Revenue Mobilisation
Allocation and Fiscal Commission, Mr Elias Mbam, had on Tuesday revealed
that the commission would set up a committee in the coming week to
review the revenue sharing formula for federal, states and local
governments due to the current economic realities.
The current revenue sharing formula was
designed during the tenure of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, who
ruled between 1999 and 2007.
But, ahead of the inauguration of the
review committee on Thursday, a highly placed source privy to the
pre-meeting discussions among governors told one of our correspondents
on Thursday that the governors might adopt the recommendation of a
report earlier submitted by a sub-committee set up by the forum to
review the formula.
The source, who asked not to be named,
said, “A committee was set up by the forum and that is the position of
the forum on the matter of the revenue formula. The sub-committee met as
far back as 2011 and it was made up of six governors, headed by the
then governor of Lagos State, Mr Babatunde Fashola.
“The members were Murtala Nyako of
Adamawa State; Sullivan Chime of Enugu State; Babangida Aliyu of Niger
State; Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State and Aliyu Wamakko of Sokoto State.
“From the report they submitted to the
forum, they recommended that the Federal Government should now get 35
per cent; states should get 42 per cent and local government should get
23 per cent. That was the recommendation and that is what we have
continued to push for.”
When asked what the governors based
their proposal on, the source said they looked at their quest to be able
to pay the minimum wage; the need for more resources to fight
insecurity and the decaying infrastructure in their domain, which,
according to him, the states do not have the funds to address.
He said, “The governors noted that
managing states today is becoming very expensive and they mentioned the
issue of security. Even though there is a central police system, the
responsibility is falling on state governments to inject funds to help
the agencies and so they have been involved in one way or the other.
“The cost of securing the states has
simply become more expensive and the burden is now heavy on the states.
The population has also increased over time and these people are in the
respective states.
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“So, when the governors said they needed
some adjustments done with the revenue formula in order to defray the
increase in the minimum wage, the new formula I mentioned to you was the
formula they were referring to. The report was adopted and it was sent
to the Federal Government but nothing was done about it.
“During the negotiation for this minimum
wage, the governors again presented their position. They were initially
reluctant to agree to the N30,000 but eventually, that was why they
said if it (minimum wage) must be implemented with ease, there must be
an adjustment, and so the report was again sent to the Federal
Government but nothing was done about it.”
When asked if the NGF would stick to the
2011 recommendation, he said, “I’m tempted to say yes, because there
had been no cause to reconstitute another committee to review it, so
even though it’s relatively old, as far as we are concerned, that is the
official position.”
“Yes, we know there has been this talk
about states boosting their IGR and that they should be able to use that
to take care of their recurrent expenditure, but the infrastructure for
making that happen is not there.
“If there is no security and the states
are not safe, how do businesses make money and how do you generate
revenue from them? The management of the power sector is still
substantially controlled at the centre and so if you can do something as
a state to address the power problem, it could change a number of
things.
“On one hand, they are called the chief
security officers of their states but on the other hand, the resources
they need to make it happen are inadequate. So, we looked at all of
these to arrive at that formula and that is our position.”
State governors had at the National
Economic Council meeting on January 18, 2019, renewed their call for a
review of the nation’s revenue sharing formula, saying it was necessary
for them to be able to pay the N30,000 new National Minimum Wage.
At the meeting, which comprised state
governors and some key Ministries, Departments and Agencies of
government and chaired by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, an official
privy to the NEC meeting, said, “The governors are asking for a review
of the revenue sharing formula and government is looking at that. The
Minimum Wage Technical Advisory Committee that was inaugurated recently
is also looking into the revenue sharing formula.”
Over time, the formula has generated
controversies and remained a key factor in the clamour for true
federalism or restructuring.
Meanwhile, members of the Nigeria
Governors’ Forum have said they are ready to share their perspectives on
how to have a new revenue formula with the revenue commission if
invited.
Chairman of the Forum and Governor of
Ekiti State, Dr Kayode Fayemi, told one of our correspondents that the
NGF had yet to take a common position on the issue.
“No decision on this yet, but if the RMAFC approaches us, we will share our perspective with them,” he said.
However, a governor who spoke to
Saturday PUNCH on strict condition of anonymity, said members of the NGF
would soon meet on the matter.
He said even though a report on the
issue by the NGF was being studied and would be reviewed before
presentation to the revenue commission, he said the governors would
demand between 40 per cent and 45 per cent of the nation’s revenue.
He said, “We already have a template.
The template is that we want between 40 and 45 per cent. This demand is
based on realistic responsibilities that have been put on our neck by
the constitution. Apart from this, there are instances whereby the
Federal Government has abdicated its responsibilities to the states.
“For example, states have taken over the
funding of police. Apart from the payment of salaries and uniform for
the policemen, it is the states that are almost solely responsible for
their operations.
“We are doing half of that for other
security agencies. Look at the roads, states have been responsible for
the maintenance and even reconstruction of federal roads in our states
as well. Even federal hospitals have been abandoned to us.”
Meanwhile, in response to enquiries by Saturday PUNCH,
the spokesperson for the RMAFC, Ibrahim Mohammed, confirmed to one of
our correspondents that a review committee would be inaugurated on
Thursday.
Even though he did not disclose the time
to be given to the committee to conclude the assignment, Mohammed
explained that the committee was a “standing committee” whose work was
constitutional.
Our correspondent also learnt that the
three tiers of government and other bodies would be expected to make
presentations and submit proposals to the committee.
“We (RMAFC) will invite memoranda from
not just the states, but also from civil society organisations and even
the media,” he added.
He explained that at the conclusion of its work, the committee would forward its report to the President.
Mohammed added, “When we collate the
data, we will subject it to subjective and objective analyses and then
forward it to the President. Subjectively, we talk to some people, and
objectively, we look at the economy and economic indicators.”
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The RMAFC spokesperson was, however,
silent on whether the commission had any projected take-off date for the
revenue sharing formula that would be adopted. Rather, he said, “We are
starting with the committee first – when the committee is properly
constituted, that will set the ball rolling and it is then that we can
start talking of timelines.”
Meanwhile, efforts to get the position
of the local governments on the review were unsuccessful as the National
President, Association of Local Governments of Nigeria, Mr Alabi David,
declined comment on the matter, while the National President of the
National Union of Local Government Employees, Mr Ibrahim Khaleel, did
not answer several calls to his phone.
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