Governor Nasiru El-Rufa’i of Kaduna State, says his
administration has cut down overhead costs by 60 per cent as part of measures to
rescue the state from its precarious financial situation.
El-Rufa’i, in a broadcast to the people of the state on
Wednesday night, said the state was broke and had a debt burden of more than
N74.297 bn, comprising N28.840 bn domestic and N45.44 bn foreign debts.
He said the administration had also taken radical steps to
reduce costs of governance, shore up its internal revenue and block all revenue
leakages.
El-Rufa’i said, “It was obvious that running Kaduna the old
way is a recipe for disaster.
“One of the steps we took was to cut overheads spending by
60 per cent. I therefore directed the state accountant general to release only
40 per cent of budgeted overheads as we strive to improve liquidity and
prioritise spending for public goods.
“However, our efforts in this regard are not on the
expenditure side alone. As we cut costs, plug leakages and reduce wastes, we
need to grow our revenues and have more realistic budgeting in the state.
“We are therefore focusing on strategies to rapidly increase
our internally generated revenue.”
The governor said the reduction of ministries from 19 to 13
and the 50 per cent salary cut for himself and the deputy governor were also
targeted at reducing the cost of governance.
He emphasised that the administration would no longer spend
money on gifts, feeding and pilgrimages.
“In 2014, over 2,000 pilgrims were sponsored to the Hajj by
the Kaduna State Government and the 23 local government areas. Out of the 810
Christian pilgrims, 800 were sponsored by the same governments.
“All these cost the governments nearly N1.5 bn in just one
year. Our state simply cannot afford these expenses any longer.”
El-Rufa’i said N120m was saved from salaries paid to ghost
workers after the biometric verification of civil servants conducted by the
administration, adding that those involved in the fraud would be prosecuted.
The governor said, henceforth, the administration would
adopt the zero-based budgeting system.
“This means that every expenditure item will have to be
justified both in terms of its necessity, cost and availability of funds
vis-à-vis other competing needs before it can be included in the state
budget.
“There is no reason to legislate N200bn as annual budget
when the realistic revenue and expenditure capacity is less than N100bn.”
On tax reforms, El-Rufa’i said the government was studying
all options to improve its internally generated revenue and reduce dependence on
federal allocations.
He said their target was to generate IGR exceeding what the
government would receive monthly from the Federation Account.
No comments:
Post a Comment