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How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsHow State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation (16946 Views)

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How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Blue3k(op): 1:42am On May 13, 2019
Nigeria’s 36 states and the federal capital territory, Abuja, have pocketed or diverted over N15 trillion federal allocation meant for local governments areas in the last 12 years, depriving the nation’s third tier of government funds for desperately needed developmental projects, data analysed by Dataphyte has shown.

Although that amount was allocated to the 774 local government areas in the country, there is no public information on what portion each local government received.

Local governments are a fundamental part of Nigeria’s political system, and should be closest to the people than the states and federal government. Yet, for years, revenues that should go to them have ended up with their state governments. This has happened because there is no real autonomy for that level of government, and its heads are often hand-picked by state governors.

Data analysis

Based on analysis of the 12-year data sourced from the websites of the National Bureau of Statistics and the Office of Accountant-General of the Federation, about N15.5 trillion (N15,505,489,701,816) has been transferred to the 36 states and the FCT on behalf of the 774 local government councils of the country.

Based on available data, an average of N20 billion accrued to local governments in Nigeria between 2007 and 2012, with the least council having a total of N12.8 billion and the highest having N56.3 billion.


The monthly LGA transfer is the statutory allocation distributed by the Federation Account Allocation Committee. While Abuja Municipal with the highest allocation has had a monthly average of N391.1 million or an annual average of N4.69 billion, Ifedayo local government in Osun State, with the least allocation, received a monthly average of N88.56 million or an annual average of N1.06 billion.

Lagos, Abuja LGs top earners list

Based on the analysis, the top 20 LGAs in the recipient list were Abuja Municipal – 56.32bn, Alimosho – 52.16bn, Kosofe – 49.96bn, Mushin – 49.31bn, Oshodi-Isolo – 48.85bn, Ojo – 47.49bn, Ikorodu – 46.43bn, Alkaleri – 45.46bn, Surulere – 45.16bn, Agege – 43.14bn, Ifako-Ijaye – 43.03bn, Shomolu – 42.02bn, Ajeromi-Ifelodun – 38.98bn, Ikeja – 38.96bn, Lagos Mainland – 38.74bn, Gwagwalada – 36.64bn, Lagos Island- 35.49bn, Kwali – 35.30bn, Kuje – 34.94bn, and Nassarawa (Kano State) – 34.25bn.

While the bottom 20 on the list in descending order were Igueben – 14.64bn, Isin – 14.62bn, Ogori/Magongo – 14.62bn, Bomadi – 14.50bn, Ogo Oluwa – 14.45bn, Ewekoro – 14.39bn, Ede South – 14.37bn, Nkwerre – 14.35bn, Ukwa East – 14.31bn, Udung Uko – 14.31bn, Patani – 14.30bn, Ila – 14.18bn, Ondo East – 14.18bn, Kwaya Kusar – 14.15bn, Atakumosa West – 14.09bn, Ijebu North-East – 13.86bn, Ola-oluwa – 13.84bn, Remo North – 13.76bn, Ilejemeji – 13.03bn, and Ifedayo – 12.75bn.

As revealed in the chart above, 13 out of the 20 top receiving local governments are from Lagos alone.

A further drill down shows that not less than 15 of the 25 local governments that receive the most from the distribution in the last 12 years are from Lagos. The obvious reason for this perhaps is the population preference given to the allocation of resource revenue. A prominent principle used in sharing FAAC is the populationof the local and state governments in the country.


However, only eight of the 13 local governments from Lagos would qualify on a nominal basis because they are among the 20 most populated local governments. It is unclear the rationale that drove the inclusion of the other five.

Some of the 20 most populated local governments like Nasarawa, Maiduguri, Ifo, Port-Harcourt, Ado-Odo/Ota, Surulere (Oyo State), Bauchi, Obia/Akpor, Jos North, Idemili North, Igabi did not make the list for other reasons only the RMAFC can explain as the commission.


The general notion about federal allocation is that aside from population factor, 13 per cent derivation, a concession given to oil-producing states, determine how much more a state and its local government get compared to counterparts.

An interesting insight from the analysis, however, reveals none of the local governments from the oil-producing states made the top 20 receivers list even when the local governments are among the most populous. For instance, the 2006 population census puts Port-Harcourt (538,558) and Obia/Akpor (462,350) local government in the 11th and 16th most populated local governments in Nigeria respectively.

Port-Harcourt, the capital of Rivers State, only made the bottom of the top 25 while Obia/Akpor was down at 42nd as per top earners. So why did these local governments not make the top earners list?


Possible reasons

The oil-producing states, especially those in the Niger Delta have continued to describe the nature of federal allocation to their regions as unfair and inequitable given the fact the revenue mainstay, crude oil, comes from their regions.

In a recent report, the governor of Bayelsa, Seriake Dickson, expressed the frustration that his state, as well as other Niger Delta states, are not given the control of their resources among other Federal controls such as oil licencing.

Though the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) strives to provide data on federal allocation about two months after the disbursement, the data tend to assume every Nigerian understands how the allocation committee came about the values.

NEITI’s Fiscal Allocation and Statutory Disbursement, FASD, on the other hand tries to show the aggregate breakdown as seen in the image below. However, it can be assumed that the values of this criteria change, and citizens and policymakers— at least at the local government level—do not have supporting documents to help them understand the recurring breakdown.

The implication is that the 774 Nigerian local governments are forced to rely on assumptions from historical data when factoring federal revenue into their budget planning, as they lack supporting documents that explain the decision making process federal allocations.


As much as anyone can extrapolate based on the 40 per cent equality share and 30 per cent population quota, the data used to determine other criteria such as school enrollment, amount of rainfall, water supply spread, amount of internally generated revenue, on a rolling basis is not known to the public. Even the population figure is not a clear indicator of federal distribution as its unclear whether FAAC is working with the 2006 Census figure or adjusts this on an annual basis.

Nigeria’s 1999 constitution empowers the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) to allocate revenue to the three tiers of government.

The challenge posed with assuming the rationale for sharing necessitates a proactive approach from RMFAC to publish the proportion and rationale for allocating FAAC and when it changes, should oblige itself to make the information available to the public.

According to an expert, Adetunji Ogunyemi, lopsidedness in the constitutional division of legislative jurisdiction and the allocation of tax powers, coupled with the failure to develop the best and accepted principles and criteria for the vertical and horizontal distribution of revenues remain the most contentious and intractable challenge in Nigeria’s post-independence.

State Governments and impunity

There has been controversy about the moral standing of state governments to receive and manage LGA allocations from FAAC. The FAAC makes transfers of the statutory allocation of local governments to their respective state governments.

This is in accordance with the 1999 constitution of Nigeria which established the Federal Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) and the Joint Allocation and Accounts Committee (JAAC) for the pooling and distribution of Local Government Revenue among state and local governments.

However, federal allocations to local government, for the most part, are just additional revenue for the state governments who then determine how to redistribute in terms of developmental projects across local governments.

It is very clear, to the agitation of civil society, that the state governments are neither transparent nor accountable about the redistribution of FAAC to the municipal executives and legislators with statutory mandates. This is especially worrisome given that state governments always have a hand in local government allocations. Only the governor of Bayelsa has claimed not to touch the local governments’ allocation for his state. The statement is yet to be verified.

Nearly all the 774 local governments’ executives never got the exact amount distributed to them and many times accuse their state governments of misappropriating the funds received on their behalf while also interfering in the running of the affairs at the grassroots level.

This is contrary to Nigeria’s legal framework that makes it mandatory for the state governments to allocate 10 per cent of its internally-generated revenue to the local councils.


An OECD report decried how state governments have taken over most local government functions in order to justify spending funds earmarked for councils in the Joint Revenue Account, and funds from the Federation Account do not reach the local level.

This is largely because most resources are owned and managed by the federal government, and almost all states and local governments rely on allocations or shares from federal revenues.

Two other positions Mr Ogunyemi noted consistently trouble the realisation of fiscal federalism are illegal custody and disbursement of federally collected revenue and the refusal to act upon audit reports by prosecuting indicted federal officers who deal corruptly with the federations’ treasury.

Section 162 (6), (7) and (cool of the 1999 Constitution offer some directions as to the legality of the state government to withhold or deduct from the local government’s share of the allocation.

(6) Each State shall maintain a special account to be called “State Joint Local Government Account” into which shall be paid allocations to the local government councils of the state from the Federation Account and from the government of the state.

(7) Each State shall pay to local government councils in its area of jurisdiction such proportion of its total revenue on such terms and in such manner as may be prescribed by the National Assembly.

(cool “The amount standing to the credit of local government councils of a state shall be distributed among the local government councils of that state and in such manner as may be prescribed by the House of Assembly of the State.not for the other.


A recent report indicated the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit, (NFIU) promised to go after banks who pay local government allocations to state governments.

Though this sounds like a step in the right direction, the dilemma lies with the legal rights for NFIU to dictate how governments exercise their constitutional mandates of resource distribution.


Way forward

A key development in social accountability arena of Nigeria is the use of public data to demand accountability and unearth corruption in the Nigeria budgetary and procurement process.

Civil society organisations including PTCIJ, PPDC, ICIR, Connected Development, BudgIT, and Value for Money, working with the media have used available data to expose corruption and equip citizens to demand service delivery in their various communities.

It is important therefore for the RMAFC, working with state governments, to provide accessible, accurate and descriptive details of monthly revenue distribution across the states and the 774 local governments of Nigeria.

The auditor -general at the federal and state levels need to beam light into revenue disbursements and spending across the country and ensure the audit report is available to the public and anti-corruption agencies

There is need for deliberate and timely interventions to address issues of local government autonomy in the country.

There is hardly any local government budget in the public space, which may allude to the lack of any municipal level of budget planning and implementation. This hampers grassroots development and constitutes the usurping of the constitutional role of local governments by state and federal governments of Nigeria.


Closely related is the need for civil society advocacy and citizen education to drive grassroots demand for transparency and accountability in the disbursements and management of local government allocation. This would involve the publishing of statements of account showing receipts of transfers into local governments’ accounts and monitoring the implementation at the level of councillors and caretaker committees.
Source: https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/329460-analysis-how-nigerian-state-governments-pocketed-n15-5-trillion-lga-allocations-in-12-years.html

Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by bakila: 5:08am On May 13, 2019
N15.5Trn can change a lot, a huge lot of underdevelopment to modernity.
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by nairalanduseles: 10:24am On May 13, 2019
Una go quiet now.....stupid Nigerians but if na yahoo una go get erection.......mofos
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by MrsNwaAmaikpe(f): 10:25am On May 13, 2019
shocked shocked


At times I wonder the weed Luggard and his wife must have taken that gave them the motivation to create a poo hole entity called Nigeria.


The earlier Dubai investors come and buy this country and the money shared amongst all citizens the better .
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Queenboy123(m): 10:26am On May 13, 2019
Corruption
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by 15ssDRIVE(m): 10:26am On May 13, 2019
Imagine oh. Dem Dey chop.

My people go dey here,Dey curse each other 4 natin.

EFCC should go after those politicians same way they are going after the Yboyz.
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Bigblogman(m): 10:26am On May 13, 2019
Just imagine if this wicked beasts we have as leaders, actually utilized even 50% of the allocation in each of the local governments areas, Nigeria would have been a much better place today. Rather this wicked souls used the money to make themselves billionaires and the people in return worship them. In a sane world the Nigeria story will be too unimaginable even for a fictional movie.
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by gurunlocker: 10:26am On May 13, 2019
grin grin grin


This country is fxcking rich! We really deserve better than what we are getting from our leaders!
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by ugochukwufrenzy: 10:27am On May 13, 2019
just see d kain money wey dem de call....money wey fit cause high BP.which way Naijahuh
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Kendumazy(m):
Mheen! The best gift our leaders can give to us if they do really want progress for this country is capital punishment for any corrupt leader but the question is will they ever agree to such? No!

Men long sleeve shirt from India for sale at #2000.
Check link https://www.nairaland.com/5159718/
clearance-sales-nice-colors-men
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by oduademonest: 10:29am On May 13, 2019
Shomolu my shomolu

Idi araba boy!!!

We dey there
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by donsheva: 10:29am On May 13, 2019
The problems of Nigeria are just too much
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by biggerboyc(m): 10:29am On May 13, 2019
Ok
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by jordyspices: 10:29am On May 13, 2019
Abeg how much wey obio akpor don collect
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Vicmareal: 10:30am On May 13, 2019
Wow...the current political structure is not supportive of development. China, India and Indonesia were underdogs in the early 80s and 90s...the rest is history. Nigeria needs a private sector-driven economy where States produce what they can based on comparative advantage. How about if this is put up like a league table and results published on quarterly basis?
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by originally(m): 10:30am On May 13, 2019
Complaining online won't solve it. Only way is to hit the streets. Just pity for Nigerians
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Amanew(m): 10:31am On May 13, 2019
where are EFCC?
if it a boy that want to survive with his YAHOO business you guyz will start ranting but I know you all gonna keep mute on this!

That's why nothing Good can come out from Nigeria!
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Olyroks: 10:31am On May 13, 2019
Local Government Autonomy is the sure way to go, Atleast we can hold those around us accountable
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Olalekank(m): 10:32am On May 13, 2019
I laugh when I see world richest men list
This country ehn, it's God that'd save us. We have our part to play also.

15.5 trillion is 42.47 billions dollars. Read it again

Only 19 people (who have worked hard for many many years) in the world has that sort of money and that's how much some people have literally eaten.

Are you still questioning why we're still where we are?
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Gennip2: 10:32am On May 13, 2019

Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by Mikeslow: 10:32am On May 13, 2019
Another Job for EFCC
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by greall12(m): 10:32am On May 13, 2019
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by bluefilm: 10:32am On May 13, 2019
Corruption everywhere!!!

Nonsense. sad
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by FuckDaMods: 10:33am On May 13, 2019
gurunlocker:
grin grin grin


This country is fxcking rich! We really deserve better than what we are getting from our leaders!
If you share the money looted from this country by both the past and present over corrupt leaders each person will get at least 1million. This country is fucking rich! It's just the greedy leaders that is messing us up, why can't they loot small and work at least? Why loot everything? They are doing absolutely nothing with the money allocated to them for development apart from using it for themselves. The kind of money Nigeria had/has was/is more than enough to tar every road in the country.
We had what it takes to be better than Switzerland sef no matter the population.
Bill Clinton once said if he had the opportunity to rule a country like Nigeria, it will be the world's power.

What is even annoying me the most is that the youth we are thinking will make things better in the future are the worst!
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by GOFRONT(m): 10:33am On May 13, 2019
wink

Upon all our money, we still dey our 58 missionary journey
Re: How State Governments ‘Pocketed’ N15.5 Trillion LG Allocation by IvyGRush: 10:35am On May 13, 2019
I Only Need N2Trillion to Touch the Lives of 10Million Nigerian Youths and Women over a Ten year Period Sustainably by my Project Design.

But the Politicians lacks these foresights.
Embezzle till Eternity is their Watchword.

I blame them not but the youth of this nation.
1 2 Reply

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