Tag: Federal Ministry of Finance

  • Violation of Procurement Act: Adeosun, Okonjo-Iweala, others to appear before Reps

    Violation of Procurement Act: Adeosun, Okonjo-Iweala, others to appear before Reps

    Finance Minister, Mrs Kemi Adeosun and her predecessor, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, have been summoned to appear before the House of Representatives over alleged abuse and breach of the Procurement Act, 2007.

    The house’s Committee on Public Procurement, which invited the ministers, directed that they should appear before it on Tuesday.

    Others expected to appear before the committee are former Head of Service (HoS), Mr Steve Otunla and former Accountant-General to the Federation (AoGF), Mr Jonah Otunla.

    The committee had on Thursday summoned Adeosun and some others over alleged payment of N17 billion to five firms believed to be ghost companies as consultancy fees.

    The committee in an investigative hearing on Monday in Abuja said that summoning the top officials was to ensure proper investigation.

    Chairman of the Committee, Rep. Oluwole Oke (Osun-PDP), who issued the order inviting the officials, read the Riot Act to all Ministers and Accounting Officers of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).

    He said “the shortest way to Kuje prison is through breach of procurement laws.”

    Worried at the slow pace of the investigative hearing due to the poor attitude of civil servants towards releasing of vital documents, the committee attended to only those who made available necessary documents.

    The members decried the discrepancies between the submissions made by Federal Ministry of Finance and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    They observed that out of the 12 pre-shipment Inspectors and two monitors, who benefited from the N17 billion, seven were appointed in line with due process while five were appointed through the back door.

    Oke call for overhaul of the entire process.

    He pointed out that a former governor of Bauchi State and a former member of the House of Representatives, who were part of those who promulgated the procurement law were sentenced to five years imprisonment for infractions.

    He added that a former Chairman of Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) was also sentenced to two years imprisonment for breaching the Procurement Act “before the Supreme Court intervened’’.

    The chairman advised the invited stakeholders to bring before the committee Presidential Approvals, Letters of Awards, Agreements signed with the contractors and performance records.

     

  • CBN, SEC, others fingered in N450bn un-remitted operating surpluses

    CBN, SEC, others fingered in N450bn un-remitted operating surpluses

    The Federal Ministry of Finance said it constituted a committee to recover unremitted operating surpluses of agencies of government, running into N450billion.

    The committee led by the Accountant General of the Federation, Alhaji Ahmed Idris, was mandated to reconcile the operating surpluses of 31 revenue-generating agencies of government for the period 2010-2015.

    A statement from ministry of finance signed by Festus Akanbi, Special Assistant, media to the finance minister said “the findings of the committee so far, have shown under-remittance of over N450 billion, which has accrued within the period.”

    The Finance Ministry stated that staff of the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation have critically reviewed the accounting statements of these agencies, which include the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Petroleum Technology Development Fund, (PTDF), National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), among others.

    The Committee will therefore be inviting the management of these agencies to explain why their operating surpluses have not been remitted as mandated by the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007.

    Some of these agencies the ministry said “have incurred huge expenses on overseas training and medicals, and huge expenses on behalf of supervisory ministries and/other organs of government involved in oversight or regulatory functions without appropriate approval.”

    Other infractions include payment of salaries and allowances to staff and board members, governing councils, and commissions which are outside or above the amount approved by the Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Allocation Commission (RMFAC) and the National Salaries, Income and Wages Commission.

    The list also includes unacceptable expenses incurred on donations, sponsorships, etc; unfavourable contract signed for revenue collection by a third party; granting of staff loans that have not been repaid as well as sale and transfer of assets to board members, among others.

    According to the Finance Ministry, the overall effect of these practices is that operating surpluses of these agencies are lower than should be.

    As a result of this, the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun has directed the Accountant General of the Federation to issue a circular that will limit allowable expenses that can be spent as part of measures to ensure these agencies face strict monitoring.

    This development the statement said is part of the resolve of the Minister to ensure that leakages are tackled.

  • Recession: Coalition urges Soludo, Sanusi to support FG

    Recession: Coalition urges Soludo, Sanusi to support FG

    The President, Coalition of Civil Society Groups (COSG), Etuk Bassey has urged past Governors of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Prof. Charles Soludo and the Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi to shelve their blame games and support the Federal Government to managing the current economic recession in the country.

    Bassey said during a press conference, in Abuja that the apex bank at this critical time needed inputs from all financial institutions such as the Federal Ministry of Finance, Federal Ministry of Budget and National Planning, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment including the ex-CBN governors to develop innovative and workable plans to rescue the economy.

    He condemned the increasing inflation rates, unemployment and declining revenues of the federal government and its daunting effect on the public.

    According to him, the bailout funds, bi-monthly Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meetings, intervention funds in the agriculture, power and aviation sectors of the economy appeared less effective in the face of the recession.

    “It remains the duty of Nigeria’s economic managers to re-balance the economy and see us through these challenges so that we can emerge a better economy. Yet, it seems to us that those entrusted with the management of this economy are bereft of creative ideas on way forward or, worse still, do not understand the complexities of the current challenges.

    “However, it is important to note the unsavory and divisive comments by ex-Governors of the CBN, particularly Prof. Charles Soludo and HRH Sanusi Lamido, condemning some decisions and actions of the Bank. We are of the view that, save for mischief and cheap publicity, these individuals ought to approach their successor and share their views on an appropriate way forward for the benefit of the masses,” Bassey added.

    However, he advised the Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to put on their thinking caps and design implementable fiscal policies, structural policies and industrial trade policies to complement the monetary policy of the apex bank.

    Speaking on the roles of state governments, the coalition advised individual states to look inward and develop business models that would boost state Internally Generated Revenues (IGRs), rather than continuous reliance on bail out funds and federal allocations.

    “We find it insulting that some of these state governors shamelessly blame other people for the dwindling performance of the economy,” he added.

  • N1.2billion allowance not in budget, says Adeosun

    N1.2billion allowance not in budget, says Adeosun

    Workers of the federal ministry of finance have been told to forget the N1.2 billion Special Overtime Allowance they are asking for.

    A statement from the ministry signed by the Special Assistant to minister of finance Festus Akanbi said the minister Mrs Kemi Adeosun has ruled out paying that allowance.

    According to Festus Akanbi, the finance minister had told the protesting workers of the ministry that, “the N1.2 Billion Special Overtime (SOT) payment being demanded by workers, which had been discontinued since 2014, is neither in the 2016 Budget of the Federal Ministry of Finance nor the Federal Inland Revenue Service from where the funds to cover the allowance had hitherto been sourced.”

    The payment of SOT the minister said “was stopped by the previous administration on the grounds that it was not listed in any extant government Circular, Financial Regulations or the Public Service Rules.”

    Adeosun reminded that workers that “many people across the country were struggling to find work and that the priority for the government had to be getting the whole economy back on its feet.”

    She therefore urged the workers to be patient and understand the current challenges facing the Nigerian economy.

    The Minister, who had at Wednesday’s meeting listened to the workers’ requests, confirmed that contractual obligations are being met by Government and promised that all genuine complaints and administrative issues will be promptly reviewed.

     

     

  • FG shuts down NERFUND

    FG shuts down NERFUND

    The federal government has shut down the Nigerian Economic Reconstruction Fund (NERFUND).

    This is contained in a letter to all staff and management of NERFUND signed by the Permanent Secretary, Mahmoud Isa-Dutse, Federal Ministry of Finance.

    The letter noted that “following the recent developments in your organization and the failure to reconcile the differences, but the Executive Management, Senior Management and staff and in spite of interventions by the Federal Ministry of Finance, the ministry has decided to close down the organization with immediate effect.

    The letter advised “all staff and management to proceed on compulsory leave.” When contacted, Festus Akanbi the Special Adviser to the minister of finance confirmed the development.

  • Import duty waivers: In whose interest?

    Import duty waivers: In whose interest?

    As the granting of import duty waivers remains contentious, so are the figures tied to it. The figures on waivers from the Federal Ministry of Finance and Nigeria Customs Service do not tally. Customs officials say most of the waivers issued since the return of democracy are out of place. Maritime Correspondent OLUWAKEMI DAUDA reports.

    The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) intends to generate about N1.2 trillion this year. To many operators, this will remain a wishful thinking if the government continues to grant waivers to agencies and individuals not listed under, or covered by Schedule Two of the Common External Tariff for import duty exemptions.

    For Customs to surpass its projected revenue for this year and beyond, government agencies, operators say, should be mandated to pay for all imports made by them to reduce revenue shortfall. A senior Customs officer, who craved anonymity, told The Nation that most of the waivers issued since the return of democracy are questionable.

    “Since the army returned to the barracks, the import duty waivers given from 1999 to date should not have been granted. Apart from military hard wares, hospital and agricultural equipment, educational materials and projects that can create jobs for the millions of unemployed youths, no other import under whatever guise deserves duty waiver,” the officer said.

     

    How waivers are used in other countries

     

    The President, Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA), Alhaji Olayiwola Shittu said that import duty waivers are mechanisms used by countries to meet their economic goals, especially in protecting local industries, creating jobs, promoting exports, generate and preserve foreign reserves.

    A waiver, Shittu said, is also used to exclude local industries from paying import duty on certain goods for a fixed period. Countries such as Malaysia, Japan, India, China and others, at various times, have used import duty waivers, concessions and exemptions to protect and build up their local manufacturing, agricultural, textile and motor industries. Today, he said, all these countries have become export-led economic power giants.

     

    Indiscriminate issuance of waivers

     

    Part of the objectives of the waivers in Nigeria, the ANLCA chief said, are to boost local industries, make the much-needed raw materials, or goods available in the short-term and generate employment.

    But for many years, he said, none of these lofty objectives has been achieved. He observed that most of the local industries have closed shop for lack of raw materials, resulting in the growing army of unemployed youths in the country.

    Also, an industrialist, Mr Muyiwa Olabintan said an enquiry by the House of Representatives, found that former President Olusegun Obasanjo, over time granted about 1,843 waivers with several billions of naira lost by Customs. The enquiry, he said, alleged that not only were some of these waivers “illegal and indiscriminate,” they were given to “totally undeserving firms and individuals”.

    Investigations by the House, Olabintan said, showed that some organisations that got waivers for equipment, used them to import furniture, cars, clothings and other luxuries that have no direct bearing on the economy.

     

    Abuse of waivers

     

    Olabintan said import duty waivers, exemptions and concessions which are used to protect local businesses and jobs elsewhere, have been abused many times in Nigeria, causing huge losses to the economy.

    He added that those responsible for granting the waivers have abused the system, and denied the country and the economy of the much-needed revenues and the usual benefits associated with it.

     

    Waivers, foreign companies and loss of jobs

     

    The granting of waivers to foreign companies by the Federal Government has led to loss of several billions of naira and millions of jobs, the Managing Director, Nigeria Gas and Steel Limited, Hasib Moukarim, has said.

    He urged that the issuance of waivers and concessions to importers of finished products must stop, stressing that such waivers are depleting government’s earnings while enriching some companies abroad.

    He said for the Customs to meet its revenue target this year, the Federal Ministry of Finance, the Budget Office and the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment must synergise and ensure that the waivers achieve its objectives.

    He urged Nigerians to defend the interests of local manufacturers against government unfavourable policies and foreign domination of the nation’s robust market.

    “When finished goods are brought into the country duty free, we are directly creating employment for workers of the foreign companies because such goods imported with waivers will become cheaper than the locally produced goods and this will escalate the demand and sales of the foreign manufacturers,” Moukarin said.

    He said by giving waivers to foreign companies, locally produced goods have become more expensive and demand for them shrinks, noting this threatens the survival of local companies which the waivers were fashioned to protect.

    “This type of scenario has forced many companies to retrench substantial percentage of their work force with the consequence of worsening the unemployment situation in the country,” he said.

     

    Ways to grant waivers

     

    Moukarin suggested that for waiver or concession to be given to any applicant, thorough investigations must be carried out by the Federal Ministries of Finance as well as Trade and Investment to verify the authenticity of the items the beneficiaries intend to import into the country without paying duty.

    Nigerian manufacturers had complained in the past that some forein companies are abusing waivers by importing more than what they need for their projects and flooding the markets with the surplus, thereby killing local industries.

    Foreign firms, the manufacturers alleged, have been obtaining waivers from the Federal Government to build airports, roads and other projects, but end up importing more products than they deserved.

     

    Contradictions between Minister of Finance and Nigeria Customs Service

     

    There were contradictions between the amount given as waivers by the Comptroller General, Nigeria Customs Service, Alhaji Dikko Abdullahi and the Coordinating Minister of Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to the National Assembly.

    Abdullahi spoke when he was invited to explain to the parliament the shortfalls in projected revenue last year.

    The Customs boss said the country in the last three years, lost a staggering N1.4 trillion to import waivers, but the Finance Minister said the amount was N171 billion.

    A senior Customs officer, who does not want his name in print told The Nation that more than 65 percent of beneficiaries received the grant for goods not approved by the government, which ordinarily should be limited to raw materials, machinery and spare parts.

    But in a new memo signed by the Minister of State, Finance, Yerima Ngama, and dated December 11, 2013, says the Federal Government has expanded the scope of the Negotiable Duty Credit Certificate (NDCC) to cover “other goods,” a decision, Mr. Ngama said was reached by the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

    Investigation however, revealed that the list of beneficiaries include private individuals and businesses whose imports appear not valuable to the economy.

     

    Questionable waivers

    The Customs officer said there were so many questionable waivers. For instance, he said, a total of N91.506 billion was given as concessions to 290 beneficiaries between January and December 31, 2011.

    He said one of the firms (name withheld) which he claimed was the biggest beneficiary, got N32.774 billion, stating that there was no indication about the line of business for which it was given the incentive.

    Other beneficiaries, he also alleged, included the Aluminium Smelter Company of Nigeria, ALSCON, Ikot Abasi (N47.789 million) and (N13.715 million), despite the fact that it has not being producing since 2007.

    Besides, about N389.15 billion, he said, was granted to 149 entities in 2011 through concessions on fuel, lubricants and allied products businesses.

    the list, he said, included major oil marketers that received over N145.7 billion worth of waivers, adding that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and a few other companies received about N143 billion as waivers.

    For 2012, the customs official said a total of N191.545 billion was granted to 416 beneficiaries, including individuals and private businesses. He said another 287 beneficiaries, got a total of N83.260billion in concessions and waivers for imports between January one and September 30, last year.

    During the year, he alleged that one firm, ANL, was granted N8.588billion concession for importing kola nuts, while another was granted N5.643million to import tables, kitchen and household articles made of cast iron.

    Similarly, he alleged that while one Ayo Adeju got N2.035million for importing iron/steel wool, pot scourers and polishing pads and gloves, another, Asif Mohammed was allegedly paid N4.148million for importing tables and kitchen household articles.

    He alleged that a major motor dealer was granted N698.177million for importing fully built four-wheel drive motor vehicles, motorised tanks and other armoured fighting vehicles.

    Between 2010 and 2013, records showed that the motor firm received about N2.46billion concession from the government for the importation of vehicles valued about N7.932billion.

    Factional Secretary, National Council of Managing Directors of Licensed Customs Agents (NCMDLCA), Ben Ndee, said import duty waiver in Nigeria only serves as a tool to enrich politicians and should therefore be scrapped.

     

    Do we need the waivers?

     

    Ndee said import duty waiver in the country is a tool to enrich politicians and should therefore be scrapped, adding that “customs duty waiver speaks volume of profligacy in our country.” He said the Nigeria Customs Service should “be positioned to check this fraud to enhance its revenue target and boost the economy”.

    Chairman, Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA), Ikorodu Chapter, Chief Tomi Aloba, said since duty free imports are sold in the market at expensive prices like those with payable duty, the benefiits of import duty waivers, he argued, are lost and therefore, needless.

    “A manufacturer importing raw materials that was given duty waiver sells his products at the same price as the same commodity imported without waiver, so, what is the need? There is no need for it,” he said.

    Another clearing agent and a chieftain of the National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders (NAGAFF), Ugochukwu Nnadi, also said the import duty waiver has been abused and should be scrapped.

    However, a member of the Ports Consultative Council (PCC), Ajanowu Vincent, said there are certain categories of imports for which waivers should be granted to boost local industries and their productive capacity.

     

    Effects of waivers on consumables

     

    Investigation revealed that in recent months, waivers granted to some individuals were used to import refined vegetable oil, soya bean meal and related products. This has put local vegetable oil producers on the verge of total extinction.

    For instance, investigation has shown that most of the oil mills in Kano, including Nigeria Oil Mills, Kano Oil Mills and PS Mandrid, located in Bompai Industrial Estate, have closed down with the attendant loss of over 20,000 direct and indirect jobs.

    Also in Lagos, Port Harcourt and Jos, where there are oil and related mills, the spokes-man of the producers, Mr Alaba Salau, said they were not finding it easy with many imported vegetable oil in the market.

    “While few of us are just managing to survive, many others are making arrangement to close down and start importation, but that is not a good omen for the country because one of the by-products of vegetable oil mill is used for animal feed by poultry farmers.

    “The irony of granting waivers is that while the Federal Government tells Nigerians of its resolve to promote made-in-Nigeria goods, in secret and under closed doors, it gives waivers to political associates and cronies to import and make cheap money, undermining local production,” he said.

     

    Task before the National Assembly

     

    Shittu said the National Assembly needs to wake up to its responsibility as a constitutional organ for checks and balance. The Constitution, he said, empowers the parliament to make laws and approve all public spending. Where the government serially flouts the laws, the lawmakers, are empowered to correct the situation.

    Olabintan also said the lawmakers must continue to perform their oversight functions and should not allow the Executive to carry on as it pleases. Such laxity, he said, had caused Customs to say that the country lost a staggering N1.4 trillion on import waivers through fraudulent manipulation of the Export Expansion Grant in the last three years.

    Since the waiver system has been so misused and abused, other operators said the National Assembly should stop the Presidency, the Finance Minister and the Customs from granting waivers except they are approved by the parliament.

    Government and its agencies, operators alleged, are doing little or nothing to stop corruption and cannot be trusted to transparently manage such discretionary powers. The operators, therefore, called on the National Assembly to protect the nation’s economy by forbidding import duty waivers.