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We Run A Very Large And Expensive Government – Osinbajo

2 min read

Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo says the country must do something to reduce the current cost of governance.

He said this while speaking at a webinar hosted on Zoom by Emmanuel Chapel on Friday, describing the governance structure as “large and expensive”.

Muhammadu Sanusi, former emir of Kano, also a panellist at the seminar, said there was a need to “reduce structural cost and make government more sustainable over the long term.”

 

Responding, Osinbajo agreed with Sanuai on the need to reduce cost, but said it may be a little difficult considering the structure of the constitution.

 

 

“There is no question that we are dealing with a large and expensive government. But as you know, given the current constitutional structure, those who would have to vote to reduce government, especially to become part-time legislators, are the very legislators themselves. So, you can imagine that we may not get very much traction if they are asked to vote themselves, as it were, out of their current relatively decent circumstances,” he said.

 

“So, I think there is a need for a national debate on this question and there is a need for the will to ensure that we are not wasting the kind of resources that we ought to use for development on overheads.

 

 

“At the moment, our overheads, as you know, are almost 70 per cent of revenues. So, there is no question at all that we must reduce the size of government.

 

“Part of what you would see in the Economic Sustainability Plan also and several of the other initiatives is trying to go, to some extent, to what was recommended in the (Steve) Oransaye Report; to collapse a few of the agencies to become a bit more efficient in terms of how we use current MDAs and those that we do not need anymore, and also, generally speaking, trying to make government much more efficient with whatever it has.”

 

 

He cited the use of the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) and how it has helped to address the menace of ghost workers.