Tag: Public finance

  • Skepticism as FG Budgets N6.69bn for Idle Ajaokuta Steel Company

    Skepticism as FG Budgets N6.69bn for Idle Ajaokuta Steel Company

    Stakeholders have expressed strong reservations and deep skepticism over the Federal Government’s decision to allocate N6.69 billion to the long-idle Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited (ASCL) in the 2026 Appropriation Bill.

    Speaking to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Abuja they warned that continued spending without production amounts to institutionalised waste..

    Established in 1979 and once envisioned as the backbone of Nigeria’s industrial revolution, ASCL has remained non-functional for decades, despite repeated promises, policy resets and billions of naira in public expenditure.

    NAN reports that the 2026 allocation represents a 4.9 per cent reduction from the N7.03 billion approved in 2025. Of the total amount, N6.04 billion is earmarked for personnel costs, N233.6 million for overheads, and just N410.8 million for capital projects — a breakdown critics say exposes the absence of a genuine revival strategy.

    While government officials argue that the funding aligns with President Bola Tinubu’s economic diversification agenda, several civil society leaders described the allocation as symbolic spending divorced from industrial reality.

    Mr Philip Jakpor, Executive Director of the Renevyln Development Initiative (RDI), said the steel plant had become a recurring budget line with no measurable outcomes.

    “For decades, administrations have poured billions into Ajaokuta with nothing to show for it. The mill has not produced steel for a single day, yet allocations continue. At this point, it looks less like industrial policy and more like a drain pipe for public funds,” Jakpor said.

    He alleged that ASCL had been repeatedly used by successive governments as a financial conduit under the guise of rehabilitation.

    Dr Abdullahi Jabi, Chairman of the North Central Zone of the Campaign for Democracy, Human Rights Advocacy, and Civil Society of Nigeria, said Nigeria’s industrial failure was being reinforced by what he described as budgetary inconsistency and weak implementation discipline.

    “Steel is not a ceremonial sector. You cannot industrialise through MoUs, press statements and budget speeches. Without strict execution, these allocations are meaningless,” Jabi said.

    He added that the continued neglect of technical expertise and specialised manpower had left Nigeria’s steel ambitions hollow.

    A former ASCL resident, Dr Emmanuel Shuiabu, described the current state of the plant as a national tragedy, recalling that Ajaokuta once symbolised Nigeria’s industrial promise.

    Shuiabu, who lived in the steel town between 1982 and 2002, said ASCL was formerly Nigeria’s largest employer, providing over 10,000 direct jobs, while its in-house power infrastructure supplied uninterrupted electricity to the host community for years.

    “Beyond political slogans, what is missing is decisive action. The original builders of the plant must be brought back, and experienced hands who ran the facility should be re-engaged. Anything short of that is cosmetic,” he said.

    Shuiabu, a finance expert, also noted that rising allocations often masked the reality that budgeted funds were frequently not released, further weakening implementation credibility.

    NAN recalls that the Minister of Steel Development, Shuaibu Audu, admitted in his New Year message that funds appropriated for the 2025 budget were largely not released, despite claims of sustained reform momentum.

    A Lokoja-based public analyst, who requested anonymity, said activities at the plant were limited to basic maintenance.

    “They are simply preventing total collapse — nothing more. It’s like keeping a patient on life support without any plan for recovery. The same pattern exists at the Jos Steel Rolling Mill,” he said.

    Mrs Victoria Ola, a former staff member who lived in the company’s quarters, said surrounding communities had deteriorated economically and socially as the plant remained idle.

    “Entire livelihoods vanished when the steel plant died. What remains are empty houses, broken infrastructure and lost opportunities,” she said, though she urged citizens to give the government time to deliver on its promises.

    A government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed that over 90 per cent of the 2026 allocation was devoted to salaries and upkeep, while capital expenditure accounted for just 6.1 per cent, a figure widely regarded as inadequate for any meaningful industrial turnaround.

    NAN further recalls that Prof. Linus Asuquo, Director-General of the National Metallurgical Development Centre, Jos, disclosed at the 2025 National Steel Summit that ASCL costs Nigeria over N1 billion annually in pensions, salaries, taxes and administrative expenses — despite producing no steel.

    In defence of the government’s position, Audu said Nigeria had advanced talks with prospective Chinese investors to revive the plant and disclosed that a 500-million-dollar investment by NNPCL and partners was underway to establish five mini-LNG plants within the Ajaokuta complex.

    He also said the ministry had signed an MoU with the Federal Ministry of Defence to establish a Military Industrial Complex and commence local production of military hardware at ASCL in collaboration with the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria.

    However, critics insist that without timelines, transparency and production benchmarks, Ajaokuta risks remaining Nigeria’s most expensive industrial monument to failure.

  • Nasarawa Assembly Passes N545.2bn 2026 Appropriation Bill

    Nasarawa Assembly Passes N545.2bn 2026 Appropriation Bill

    The Nasarawa State House of Assembly has passed the 2026 Appropriation Bill of N545.2 billion into law, following deliberations at plenary in Lafia on Tuesday.

    The approved budget represents an increase of N27.6 billion over the N517.5 billion proposal earlier presented to the House by Governor Abdullahi Sule.

    Announcing the passage, Speaker of the House, Danladi Jatau, described the development as a major legislative milestone, noting that the budget would enable the state government to implement people-oriented projects aimed at driving overall development across Nasarawa State.

    According to Jatau, the approved estimates allocate N316.26 billion for capital expenditure and N228.72 billion for recurrent expenditure. He explained that the increase in the budget size was necessitated by the prevailing inflationary pressure, which has significantly affected the cost of projects and service delivery.

    He disclosed that security-related votes received an additional N14 billion, while the Ministry of Local Government was allocated an extra N7 billion. The Ministry of Information, Culture and Tourism also got an additional N3.7 billion, alongside funding approval for the 55-kilometre Lafia–Kwandere–Garaku road project.

    The Speaker commended the House standing committees for what he described as their diligence and thoroughness during the budget defence and review process. He urged the executive arm to ensure full implementation of the budget once it receives the governor’s assent.

    “A Bill to authorise the issue of N545.18 billion from the Consolidated Revenue Fund of Nasarawa State for the 2026 financial year has scaled third reading and passed,” Jatau said.

    He subsequently directed the Clerk of the House to prepare a clean copy of the bill for transmission to the governor for assent.

    Earlier, the Majority Leader, Suleiman Azara, moved the motion for the passage of the bill, which was seconded by the Minority Leader, Luka Zhekaba. The bill was unanimously adopted by members of the House.

    Governor Sule had presented the initial N517.5 billion budget proposal to the Assembly on November 26, describing it as the “Budget of Strategic Consolidation.”

    During the presentation, he commended the legislature for its consistent support, particularly in ensuring the timely passage of appropriation bills.

  • Forgeries, taxations and the reign of Rehoboam

    Forgeries, taxations and the reign of Rehoboam

    By UGO ONUOHA

    “A profligate regime should not expect Nigerians to willingly submit to a new tax regime that looks like an exercise in extortion. The administration gets its priorities wrong. At a time that virtually all federal highways have collapsed and become deathtraps, this government prioritises the construction of a N15 trillion coastal highway from Lagos to Calabar.”

    A little over three months into the presidency of Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu, on September 5, 2023, I wrote an opinion piece titled “100 days of Rehoboam” in this space and elsewhere. Rehoboam was a king of the divided kingdom of ancient Israel. He was the son of King Solomon and the grandson of King David, both of whom were also past rulers of a united Israel. Rehoboam caused Israel to be divided through policies that inflicted pains on his people. He was reckless. He was proud. He was unfeeling. He took counsel from his scatter head fellow young men. He told the Israelites that the privations they suffered under his father should be regarded as a child’s play. And that while his predecessors chastised them with a whip, he would chastise them with a scorpion. And he verily proceeded to do so. Rehoboam and Tinubu share similarities and dissimilarities. Rehoboam was a monarch. Tinubu is not a king in spite of his pretending to be one. Rehoboam was born into royalty. Tinubu was not. Indeed Tinubu’s birth and early years are still subjects of conjectures and controversies. Rehoboam was a young man when he ascended the throne of his fathers, and so could be excused on account of youthful exuberance. Tinubu was an old man when he was installed as president of Nigeria though his true age is only known to himself and himself alone. There’s no verifiable evidence of when he was born and where. Unlike Rehoboam, Tinubu takes no counsel from anyone. He said this much himself when, without consultations and without a Cabinet, he unilaterally removed the so-called petrol subsidy.

    On September 5, 2023, I wrote this about Tinubu and Rehoboam. “[Tinubu at 100 days in office] has been like that proverbial bird that perched on a tree branch – the tree branch has remained unsettled and the bird can’t stop dancing to unheard sounds. Since his inauguration [as president] on May 29 [2023], exacerbated hopelessness has been the lot of Nigerians and Tinubu himself can only pretend to have had peace of mind. If he has had the presence and prescience of mind, he would not have been enmeshed in serial fumbling from one policy somersault to another from the removal of the so-called petrol subsidy, [devaluation of the Naira], student loan and [the] proposed payment of N8,000 per month for six months to a specified number of poor Nigerian families, and planning to lead the Economic Community of West African States [ECOWAS] to war on Niger Republic [when the military in that country seized political power]”… In Igbo Tinubu is a classical case of ‘akwu rere ere n’ikwo puru epu’ which transliteration in English language will roughly read: rotten palm fruits being pounded inside a decayed mortar. The finished product is better left to the imagination…”

    When Rehoboam became the king, the older advisers in the palace pleaded with him “to heed the cry of the people and lighten the heavy load of labour and taxes that Solomon had laid on them, but the younger elements who had grown up with the new king counselled otherwise. He took the counsel of his mates. The consequences of the actions of the new and rash King Rehoboam are well documented in the chronicles of the kings of Israel in the Holy Bible book of 1Kings. In Tinubu’s rash and irrational decisions [on] the first day and [subsequent] weeks of his reign, he appears to have borrowed a leaf from the wicked and unthinking  King Rehoboam”. One of the undoings of Rehoboam was that he insensitively raised taxes on his people and so lost more than half of his kingdom. The northern part of Israel split away, taking its own path separate from the southern kingdom of Judah. But Nigeria is not a monarchy and bears no resemblance to the old kingdom of Israel. Does that mean that Nigeria splitting is unthinkable?

    With the new tax laws set to come into effect in a matter of days, Tinubu who rules like a monarch may yet be treading the path of King Rehoboam. Rehoboam raised taxes on his people at a time they were already complaining of privations and pains, Tinubu is poised to also raise taxes on Nigerians at a time the people are groaning under the weight of a multiplicity of harsh economic policies of the regime. And he appears not to be bothered. He is irritated by wise counsel that he steps on the brakes and allows Nigerians to breathe. Instead, he empowers the relevant agency of government to execute a secret contract with a so-called tax consultant in France which may lead to handing over Nigeria’s tax data to a foreign company. Tax data is a national security issue that should not be traded as a favour to a friend. Tinubu and the president of France, Emmanuel Macron, are known to be buddies. The frequent ‘working visits’ of our president since he assumed office a little over two years ago had been to Paris, France, unlike his predecessor, Muhammadu Buhari, who made London his tourism and medical destination, and the former archbishop of Canterbury his bosom friend. And a go-to man.

    A profligate regime should not expect Nigerians to willingly submit to a new tax regime that looks like an exercise in extortion. The administration gets its priorities wrong. At a time that virtually all federal highways have collapsed and become deathtraps, this government prioritises the construction of a N15 trillion coastal highway from Lagos to Calabar. To add insult to injury, the contract for the road was not subjected to an open and transparent bidding, no public tendering, no definite and finite route, and no environmental impact assessment report. To cap it up, the highway contract was awarded to a known long time friend and business associate of Tinubu. The president’s son, Seyi, is alleged to be a significant shareholder in some of the companies in the Chargouri Group which owns Hitech construction company which was awarded the opaque Lagos – Calabar highway contract. This is a classic and glaring case of abuse of office. The argument by the regime that much of the money for the execution of the road contract would be borrowed does not make the smell of the contract less pungent and offensive. Even the money to be borrowed will still have to be paid by Nigerians. By you. Or by me. Or by our children and grandchildren.

    As the government preps to extract more taxes from us, it is telling us that we should be the people to fund their ostentatious, obscene and provocative lifestyles including, committing billions of Naira to build or to refurbish mansions for the president and vice president, buy hundreds of foreign manufactured sport utility vehicles [SUVs] for ministers, a coterie of advisers, lawmakers, local government chairmen, and even for the wife of the president whose well appointed office of the first lady is not known to any law in the land. Members of the boards of MDAs [ministries, departments, and agencies] are usually not left out of the largesse. Ours is probably the only country in the world where government computers, vehicles, websites, and the like, are replaced every year. The debauchery includes procuring a fleet of armour – plaited presidential limousines every four years with the advent of a new president and a presidential jet in tow. Of course, the issue of looting the public treasury has been normalised. It’s so brazen that public servants routinely send their children to schools abroad where the fees are charged in millions of the United States dollars. If you want to be reminded of how decadent the system is, do not look further than the annual budget provisions for the feeding of our president and his family. It runs into multiple billions of Naira. We give the president a rent-free accommodation, we afford him and his family pro bono top rate round-the-clock security, gift him a fleet of high-end luxury vehicles, fuelled and maintained at our expense, top it up with a presidential jet, and then turn around to pay him millions of Naira every month as salary. Not even the United States of America, the biggest economy in the world, does that.

    In spite of the foregoing proclivity of this regime to extort citizens, it still cannot be satisfied and appeased. It is a leopard that cannot change its spot. The information last week was that the administration had allegedly fiddled and rigged the tax reform laws passed by the national assembly [NASS]. Last week Rep. Abdulsamad Dasuki  [PDP, Sokoto] raised the alarm, alleging discrepancies between the tax laws passed by NASS and the versions subsequently gazetted and made available to the public. He said the rigging of the laws should be concerning because some provisions were deleted and strange and terrifying provisions illegally inserted. Hon. Dasuki had said during plenary on the floor of the House that his legislative privilege had been breached by the fact that the content of the tax laws as gazetted by the executive arm of government did not reflect what lawmakers debated, voted on, and passed on the floor of the House. “I was here, I gave my vote and it was counted, and I am seeing something completely different”. He said that he obtained copies of the gazetted laws from the ministry of information and found them to be inconsistent with what was approved by both the House and the Senate. Dasuki said that there had been ”a serious breach”, and warned that allowing laws different from those duly passed by the national assembly to be presented to Nigerians would undermine the integrity of the legislature and violate the Constitution.

    “Mr. Speaker, I will be pleading that all the documents should be brought before the Committee of the Whole [House]. Thank you. The whole members should see what is in the gazetted copy and see what they passed on the floor so that we can make the relevant amendment. Mr. Speaker, this is a breach of the Constitution”. Consequent upon the alarm, the House raised a committee of seven persons to probe the allegations. However, Nigerians are not fooled. The current administration across board, from the executive to the legislature and the Judiciary, is populated by people who are adept at rigging and forgery. The NASS and the executive, working separately or in collusion, routinely rigged our national budgets. The 2025 fiscal document is the latest of fiddling with budgets. It was reported and never denied that about 6,000 illegal projects were inserted into the budget with accompanying billions of Naira allocations. We complained and grumbled and then moved on as usual. In effect, the NASS is the least morally competent to cry foul on the issue of rigging and forgery of documents. The same can be said of the judiciary where court judgements, especially of political hues, are routinely awarded to the highest bidder or to the most powerful and connected. So our system thrives on rigging or “mago mago” or “wuru wuru” to use the local lingo.

    But whether rigged or not the implementation of the new tax laws should be suspended, if it cannot be scrapped. It’s inhuman and inhumane to tax poverty. The majority of Nigerians are dirt poor. The other day, a top federal government official said that about 80 million citizens do not know where their next meal would come from. And a little over two years ago, the national bureau of statistics [NBS] determined after its study that over 130 million Nigerians were dimensionally poor. Certainly, the figure should be higher today given what Nigerians have been subjected to since May 29, 2023. And by the way, there has been no concrete evidence that any country has engendered or engineered economic recovery by taxing the poor. Instead putting more money in the pockets of citizens could help to reflate the economy as long as it is done in a manner that will not trigger inflation.

    UGO ONUOHA, a Veteran Journalist, was the Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief, Champion Newspapers Limited

  • Gov Otu Presents N250bn 2024 Budget For Cross River

    Governor Bassey Otu of Cross River on Thursday presented a budget of N250 billion for 2024 to the state House of Assembly for approval.

    Presenting the budget titled: “The Peoples First Budget’’, Otu said that the figure was made up of N154billion capital expenditure and N96billion recurrent expenditure.

    He said that the budget was aligned with the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) goal 11, which focused on zero hunger, goal 111 which focused on good health and wellbeing and goal 1V which focused on quality education.

    “The 2023 budget of quantum infinitum which my administration inherited sought to transform as well as empower citizens through wealth creation and employment generation, improvement of educational standard, access to healthcare among others.

    “So, we intend to consolidate on the gains made by my predecessor as well as deliver quality service to our people.

    “For the 2024 fiscal year, the government is expecting N133 billion from the Federal Allocation Account (FAAC) while independent revenue is estimated at N35 billion,” he said.

    Otu said that the budget would priotise agriculture, education, healthcare delivery, environment, infrastructure, youth and sports development, security, tourism and general administration.

    The governor said as a newly elected governor, he would continue from where the previous administration stopped by continuing with some of priority projects while adding some innovative ones.

    “The 2023 budget of quantum infinitum which my administration inherited sought to transform as well as empower citizens through wealth creation and employment generation, improvement of educational standard, access to healthcare among others.

    “So, we intend to consolidate on the gains made by my predecessor as well as deliver quality service to our people.

    “For the 2024 fiscal year, the government is expecting N133 billion from the Federal Allocation Account (FAAC) while independent revenue is estimated at N35 billion,” he said.