As student await the news to the end of ASUU indefinate strike,
Federal Government on Tuesday said it did not have the resources to
meet the N92bn financial demand by the Academic Staff Union of
Universities...
Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, at the opening of a two-day meeting of Commissioners of
Finance and Accountants-General of states, said the N92bn being demanded
by the university lecturers was not within the reach of the Federal
Government.
She said, “At present, ASUU wants the
Federal Government to pay N92bn in extra allowances, when the resources
are not there, and when we are working to integrate past increases in
pensions. We need to make choices in this country as we are getting to
the stage where recurrent expenditures take the bulk of our resources
and people get paid but can do no work.
“Since I assumed office, the share of
recurrent expenditure in our total budgets had increased astronomically.
In fact, recurrent expenditure accounted for about 77.2 per cent of the
federal budget and we are now working to re-balance this ratio.”
The minister added, “The country is
still suffering from the effect of the 2010 increase in salary. Do we
want to get to a stage in this country that all the money we earn is
used to pay salaries and allowances?”
She said, “If the demands of the
university lecturers are met and we continue to pay them salaries and
allowances, we will not be able to provide infrastructure in the
universities.”
The minister also lamented that Nigeria’s over-dependence on oil had resulted in deterioration of the nation’s non-oil tax.
She said that non-oil taxes accounted
for 74 per cent of Nigeria’s Government revenues in 1970 but by 2012, it
had declined to only 30 per cent.
She said many states and local
governments were also dependent on monthly revenue allocation from the
central government. “On the average only 11 percent of sub-national
revenue was obtained from internally-generated sources,” she added.
Meanwhile, the negotiation between the
Federal Government and striking members of the ASUU ended in a deadlock
as both parties rescheduled the meeting to Monday next week.
No comments :
Post a Comment