Thursday, 26 September 2013
Who Will Pay The Hardship Allowance Of 112 Million Poor Nigerians? By Alkasim Abdulkadir
In truth the cost of governance in
Nigeria is tragically appalling.
There are 112 million poor
Nigerians living below the poverty
line, some of them in abject,
debilitating penury according to
the national bureau of statistics;
however our national assembly in
a magnanimous show of self love
pays itself a plethora of the
following allowances Hardship,
Constituency, furniture,
newspaper, wardrobe, recess,
leave, severance gratuity
accommodation, utilities,
domestic staff, entertainment,
personal assistant, motor vehicle,
vehicle maintenance and duty tour
allowance.
For those who are familiar with
social media, young people in
Nigeria have decided to take the
conversation offline; they have
resolved to protest at the National
Assembly. The three arms zone
will receive those who are rightly
the proverbial leaders of
tomorrow in a bid to set Nigeria
path to redemption.
With this action they have not only
transited from the years of siddon
look, but have also transited
beyond what some call social
media rants on Twitter and
Facebook.
Stemming from a life time of
military rule, some components of
governance in Nigeria are still
shrouded in a veil of utter
secrecy. The opaqueness is so
alarming that government after
government have maintained the
status quo irrespective of their
progressive inclination. Take for
instance the NNPC, perhaps one
of the most opaque and shadowy
organisations in the world with a
labyrinth of accounting and
auditing parameters, or other
opaque government expenditures
like the security vote, the
ubiquitous financial pool to
maintain law and order in states
and local governments.
A while back at a convocation
ceremony in Benin the CBN
Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi,
had raised an alarm in his speech
where he challenged the deficit
reasoning in spending a whopping
25 percent of the countrys budget
on the national assembly. This
singular action no doubt created a
ripple in the polity.
The catalyst for this protest in my
opinion was the Economist
Magazines analysis that A
Nigerian legislator receives an
annual salary of about $189,000,
equivalent of N30 million, which is
116 times the countrys gross
domestic product (GDP) per
person.
Nigerian legislators beat their
counterparts in Britain who take $
105,400 yearly, as well as those in
the United States ($174,000),
France ($85,900), South Africa ($
104,000), Kenya ($74,500), Saudi
Arabia ($64,000) and Brazil ($
157,600).
In terms of lawmakers salaries as
a ratio of GDP per capita, the gap
is even much wider. While the
salary of a Nigerian lawmaker is
116 times the countrys GDP per
person, that of a British member
of parliament is just 2.7 times.
The report also said Britains
legislators pay is relatively
parsimonious when compared
with that of their counterparts in
poorer countries, including
Nigeria, who enjoy the heftiest
salaries by this measure.
According to the data, only
Australian lawmakers, with $
201,200 annual salary, receive
higher amounts compared to
Nigerian legislators, but their
salaries are only 3 times their
countrys GDP per person.
Other yearly salary details
published by the Economist are
those of
lawmakers in Ghana ($46,500),
Indonesia ($65,800), Thailand ($
43,800), India ($11,200), Italy ($
182,000), Bangladesh ($4,000),
Israel ($114,800), Hong Kong ($
130,700), Japan ($149,700),
Singapore ($154,000), Canada ($
154,000), New Zealand ($112,500),
Germany ($119,500), Ireland ($
120,400), Pakistan ($3,500),
Malaysia ($25,300), Sweden ($
99,300), Sri Lanka ($5,100), Spain
($43,900) and Norway ($138,000).
However, the RMAFC in a bid to do
damage control has said described
the lumping of all salaries and
allowances into yearly totals as
erroneous as some of the
entitlements were non-regular
and are paid only once in four
years.
According to the RMAFC each
Senator gets N 4 million while
each House of Reps member gets
N3.97 million. As vehicle loan
each Senator takes N8 million,
while Reps collect N7.94 million.
The furniture allowance for each
Senator is N6 million, while Reps
furniture allowance stands at
N5.956 million for each member.
Severance gratuity for each
Senator N6.09 million, for Reps, it
is N5.956 million. Like the vehicle
loan, severance gratuities are paid
only once in 4 years. The
commission however made it
known that accommodation
allowance is paid to each
legislator every year.
Other annual allowances include
those for motor vehicle fuelling
and
maintenance, for which Senators
are entitled to N1.52 million each
and their House of Reps
counterparts pocket N1.489
million. Constituency, Senators
get N5 million, Reps N1.985
million, domestic staff allowance
for Senators amounts to N1.519
million while each Rep takes
N1.488million.
Legislators are also given
allowance for personal assistants,
for each Senator, the figure is
N506,600 while for Reps it is
N496,303, for entertainment
Senators
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