ELEVEN STEPS ON HOW TO PAD THE NIGERIAN BUDGET AND BECOME A BILLIONAIRE!
The public row between the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, and his erstwhile ally and former chairman of the House Appropriation Committee, Abdulmumin Jibrin, has provided a glimpse into how lawmakers routinely make billions of naira by inserting fictitious projects into the national budget each year.
Nigerians have been appalled at the scale of alleged fraud perpetrated in the National Assembly, as revealed by Mr. Jibrin.
PREMIUM TIMES’ digital lead, Emmanuel Ogala, who covered the National Assembly for years, compiles some of the spilled secrets that summarily highlight the many ways crooked lawmakers steal from the nation’s commonwealth.
Here are 11 steps to get rich quickly through the budget:
STEP 1. Get elected into the National Assembly –you can go to Senate or House of Representatives. It doesn’t really matter.
STEP 2. Be a good friend of the Speaker or Senate President, and the respective chairpersons of appropriation committees. That is the legislative committee that vets the budget.
STEP 3. Think up some flimsy projects – say, boreholes to provide water for your poor constituents. It is called constituency project.
STEP 4. Look for a government agency or ministry that can smuggle that project into the budget for you and lobby the target Minister or DG. Of course the respective committee chairman in the National Assembly must know.
STEP 5. Set up a company. Or get your spouse, brother, sister, or loyalist to register a company that can execute your chosen project.
STEP 6. Plead with the chairman of the Appropriation Committee to edit the budget and include your project under the agency or ministry that you lobbied. Because budget figures are usually large, this may seem like adding a cup of water to River Niger. If appropriation chairman refuses to play, lobby the Speaker or the Senate President.
STEP 7. Say ‘aye’ on the day the budget is put up for debate. (This step is not very critical. You can decide not to show up and it will be bundled with the entire budget and passed. Almost all of your colleagues are in it.)
STEP 8. After the Ministry of Finance has released funds, approach the head of the agency to award the contract for your project to the company in #5. Most heads may require their share upfront. You can’t trust anyone in this business!
STEP 9. The company gets cash deposit from ministry or agency. It is withdrawn and handed to you. You can share with anyone that helped the process, but you’ll sure retain the bulk of it.
STEP 10. Sink a borehole in your community with a very tiny fraction of the money and call national TVs to come cover the “commissioning of your constituency projects”.
STEP 11. Plan for next year.
Source: PREMIUM TIMES.
Published on 27th July 2016.
70% of June FAAC Allocation from Non-Oil Sector- Fowler
The Chairman, Joint Tax Board, JTB and Executive Chairman, Federal Inland Revenue Service, FIRS Mr. Tunde Fowler has said that 70 percent of over N500 billion raised for the Federal Accounts Allocation Committee, FAAC, in June came from non-oil sector.
Hear him, “of the sum, 70 percent came from non-oil sources while only 30 percent came from oil sources. It was the first time in 2016 that the Federal Government shared over N500bn among the three tiers of government during the Federal Accounts and Allocation Committee (FAAC) meeting”.
“We are proud of the development and we tell ourselves that this is the time to fund the budget of the Federal Government from non-oil sources”, Fowler said.
Fowler spoke in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital, when he led 36 state Chairmen of the State Boards of Internal Revenue, SBIRs to the Governor’s Office in Abeokuta.
An elated Ogun Governor Senator Ibikunle Amosun, who came to declare open the 135th Meeting of the JTB at Park Inn hotel told the FIRS Chairman: “Whatever you, Customs and others did last month that ensured that we ( Federal, States, shared over N500 billon at FAAC—(the Federal Accounts Allocation Committee.), please continue to do it. It is good for the Federal Government. It is good for states. It is good for Local Governments. It is good for the nation.
Fowler noted that FIRS tax revenue collection is seasonal, but a combination of massive new taxpayer registration drive, tax education and engagement through the establishment of the Federal Engagement and Enlightenment Tax Teams, FEETT, audit of five key sectors: banks and the financial sector, aviation, power, telecoms and oil and gas is beginning to yield result. He said that FIRS has also added over 700,000 new corporate accounts in since he assumed office.
Nigeria, he said has a cumulative figure of 10 million registered taxpayers if you add the number of taxpayers of States Boards of Internal Revenue and the FIRS. JTB, Mr. Fowler said has given itself a target to register at least 10 million additional taxpayers by December 31st 2016.
“We have commenced tax enforcement too. We are happy that the efforts of the FIRS in collaboration with revenue stakeholders are already yielding positive result.
The FIRS Chairman said the FIRS and the SBIR identified collaboration to register more taxpayers, across states, data sharing, exchange of information, joint audits to improve efficiency and tax yields from audits, capacity building through joint training programmes and exchange of personnel.
Fowler saluted the Ogun State Governor for being the first State governor to approve to FIRS’ request on another on automated deduction and remittance of Value Added Tax and Witholding Tax, from the point of payments to contractors in states. Said Fowler: “Pursuant to implementing the collaboration framework, FIRS requested for an approval of State Executive Governors to allow automation of the process of payments on taxable transactions to enhance the deduction, at source, particularly of Withholding Tax and Value Added Tax. It is important to note and acknowledge that the Executive Governor of Ogun State was the first to acknowledge and approved the implementation of the process. I thank His Excellency, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, for demonstration of his total support towards our effort of making the Nigerian tax system for efficient”.
Fowler also praised Governor Amosun’s efforts on Internally Generated Revenue, IGR and in transforming the Ogun state Board of Internal Revenue: ““We have come to basically to discuss the issue of revenue. We monitor the performance of every state and we appreciate the excellent revenue performance of Ogun State. Ogun State is Number One.
“It is on record that the State annual IGR grew by 50 per cent in the year 2015 thereby making the Ogun State occupy the 4th position in performance collection rating of states and first in IGR growth. I therefore urge the Service not to relent in IGR efforts and continue to work hard to justify the encouragement received by the State Government.
Governor Amosun said the ability of the Federal Government to collect more than N500 billion last month shows that Nigeria can generate more if everyone is determined to explore other sources of revenue apart from oil.
“It has come to a point we should say, okay, let us leave oil aside. Let us face non-oil sources. This is the first time in the recent times, the Federal Government shared the excess of N500 billion and 70 percent of that sum came from non-oil sources. That means that we can do more if we are determined. All hands must be on deck to grow our tax revenue. We must find a way of bringing the rich people into the tax net.”
Amosun, who declared the JTB meeting open said although states like Ogun and Lagos are doing well in terms of Internally Generated Revenue, he would not say that all is well until others states are able do same.
“Yes Ogun State can pay salaries as at when due and we have been able to do some projects. We did not depend on the Federal Allocation to do that. However, we must continue to work together with the Joint Tax Board till every state will be able to pay salaries and be comfortable”
The Joint Tax Board is the umbrella body for State and Federal tax authorities in Nigeria and was established in 1961 to promote uniformity and harmonisation of Personal Income Tax Administration across the country.