0
Following the global slump in crude oil
prices, the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, has said the Federal
Government will henceforth focus on raising non-oil revenues.
She told the Financial Times
that stricter enforcement of earnings collection from federal agencies
and more diligent bookkeeping were the types of “micro” issues her
ministry would focus on to mitigate the effects of crude prices that
have remained below $50 a barrel.
Her message chimes with what President
Muhammadu Buhari told his new cabinet colleagues at a retreat before
they were sworn in; cut down the costs of running government ministries
through simple cost-saving measures such as cutting travel and the
number of vehicles in convoys.
“Forget about oil, we don’t control the price of oil. That’s not where our problems lie,” Adeosun said.
For years, she explained that a mind-set
that the country had oil meant that Abuja had practically given up on
collecting the right amounts from other state bodies, as she rattled off
a list of federal agencies she said had habitually under-reported their
revenues.
“Because of oil, we’ve ignored everything else,” she said.
The minister added that she had already
begun “drilling down into the details” with ministry staff members to
assess how much parastatals remit to the government.
She also praised the lack of pomp and
circumstance at the ministerial swearing in ceremony, a sharp contrast
to state ceremonies of past governments.
“The programme was a piece of paper, that’s it,” she said.
“I don’t want to say we’ve been
undisciplined. But I’d say, when you have the money, you can be
extravagant, flying first class instead of business [class], business
instead of economy,” Adeosun said.
No comments:
Post a Comment