10 Oct 2006 |
|
INTRODUCTION Currently, a crisis is brewing between the Education Ministry in Nigeria and the Nigerian Labour Congress over moves to "privatize" the 102 federal government colleges, aka Unity Secondary Schools, in the country. The controversy has led to the possibility of all staff of such schools going on indefinite strike [see attached news item] to protest the development. In an announcement by Education Minister Oby Ezekwesili, she disclosed that while only 120,718 students and 27,200 staff are in the 102 federal Unity Schools – out of a total national population of 6.4 million secondary school students and about 300 secondary schools - a whopping 78 per cent of Federal Government's budgetary allocation to the ministry goes into the Unity Schools. If that were the case, then in fact, there is a serious disequilibrium in financial resource allocation with respect to these unity schools which must be looked into and corrected immediately. As a result, a new public-private partnership might indeed ameliorate the situation. But what is the true situation? I went looking at the 2006 budget to answer that question. THE 2006 BUDGET AND EDUCATION For those who have the patience, the full 1190 page-budget will be found in: http://www.budgetoffice.gov.ng
whose publication on the Internet for any one who cares to read it must be regarded as one of the dividends of transparent democracy, a legacy left behind by former Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
The summary Appropriation bill approved by the National Assembly in February 2006 will be found in: More specifically, the Education Budget section of the 2006 budget will be found in: http://www.budgetoffice.gov.ng
which again has been summarized in Table 2 below. SO WHAT ARE THE TRUE FIGURES? Table 1 shows a total 2006 budget of N1.9 trillion, out of which the Education sector is N166.6 billion or 8.77%. This is far below the recommended 26% UNESCO international target, an issue which the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has been plaintively asking to be corrected for years now, and which continues to be a sore point between it and successive Nigerian governments. Thus, in fact, on a macroscopic scale, the Minister of Education should actually be loudly demanding for a doubling to tripling of the education budget.
Next, Table 2 shows that of that N166.6 billion for Education, payroll takes a whopping 69.5%, with capital projects taking only 22.4% and overhead rounding out the rest. The Table however shows that Unity Schools take up only about 11% of the total Education budget., with its own payroll (53.6%) and Overhead (27.9%) both taking up a Recurrent total of 81.5%, with the Capital project being about 18.5%..
It is ONLY this recurrent total of the Education budget that comes ANYWHERE close to the 78% mentioned by the Minister of Education, an observation that needs to be quickly clarified. One hopes that she has not been misinformed in her new position as Education minister.
WHITHER THE UNITY SCHOOLS? The above disclosures must be looked at separately from the desirability of the federal government to give up all of these Unity Schools onto new administration. Granted that the historical mission of the unity secondary schools has been to provide an early educational forum in country where young minds can interact with those from other parts of the country, as well as to provide models of excellence to other secondary schools, one questions whether it is ONLY the federal government that can ensure those desirable outcomes. After all, secondary education is really a remit of states in our 1999 Constitution rather than the federal government, and states too understand why unity schools are important.
Thus, rather than give the unity schools up to PRIVATE persons to manage or to own outright, one believes that the right of first refusal should be given to STATE GOVERNMENTS, since the 102 schools mean on average about 3 schools per state. This additional number of new schools under state administration will therefore not be an unusual burden to the states, particularly if a significant take-off fund is provided to the states by the federal government.
Finally, while we are discussing a change in management of unity schools, we might as well discuss reversal of management of mission and other private schools that were taken over in the fever of over-centralization of the late 1970s and 80s. As many as possible of those too should be handed back to their former owners by state governments – as has been done by Lagos State and more recently Rivers State - with possibly five-year transition agreements worked out so that staff salaries and pensions as well as the inevitable increase in students' fees will not lead to deleterious effect on the various stakeholders.
NEWS ITEM: FROM "THE NATION" NEWSPAPER
Privatisation: Unity Schools' teachers begin strike today 9/10/2006 By Dupe Olaoye-Osinkolu and Kofoworola Belo-Osagie Academic activities will from today be paralysed in Federal Government's Unity Schools, This is Labour's reaction to the proposed privatisation of the colleges. The Minister of Education Dr Obiageli Ezekwesili said the privatisation move is to free the schools from total collapse as "many of them (schools) lack basic infrastructure and have become sorry sight in the landscape of secondary education." She also disclosed that 78 per cent of Federal Government's budgetary allocation to the ministry goes into the Unity Schools which have a total student population of 120,718. Not only that, Dr Ezekwesili said: "Our greatest concern, however, is the fact that the ministry spends an inordinate amount of time and resources on these schools that constitute only 30 per cent of the secondary schools in the country. out of 6.4 million scondary school students, only 120,718 are in the 102 Unity Schools." Labour said many teachers and non-teaching staff would lose their jobs in the process of privatisation. The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President, Adams Oshiomhole described the planned privatisation as "perhaps the most retrogressive step ever taken in the history of education administration in Nigeria." The NLC President believes that the attempt to privatise the schools was targeted at the poor and the middle-class. "In the past, Unity Schools have enabled many gifted children of the poor to break out of the poverty cycle through quality and affordable public education. The privatisation of the schools was an escapist, simplistic, anti-poor and reactionary measure in the face of the problem that required bold steps," he said. Oshiomhole also warned the Minister to drop the idea of privatisation otherwise labour will mobilise Nigerians against the auctioning. "We wish to warn the Minister and those invisible forces outside driving this policy that we will mobilise progressive and patriotic Nigerians, parents, teachers, the poor, middle-class and indeed all Nigerians, against the auctioning of these schools," he said. The Minister, in response to Ohsiomhole's act burst had said the Unity Schools have already been privatised by poor management and the inefficiency of some people. "We are proposing public/private partnership management to restore the efficiency that is lacking in the schools. "Mounting propaganda against the proposal would not out of 27,200 staff of the Ministry of Education are employed in 102 Unity schools is a disservice to the country," she said The Secretary-General of the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN) Comrade Solomon Onaghinan last week appealed to Nigerians to rise against the proposed privatisation. "We are calling all well meaning Nigerians to rise up and stop their action. From Monday October 9 (today), there will be no more lectures in all the Unity Schools nationwide. We are giving parents long notice in order for children until the matter is fully resolved. "A week after (today), there will be no more services in the schools, there will be no service whatsoever. All the schools will be closed, so as to give everybody the opportunity to assess what is on ground. We have not seen any rationale behind what is being done by the minister. She can tell the parents what she means by wanting to privatise the schools." One of the parents whose children are at the Federal Government College, Ijanikin and who simply introduced himself as Mr Akinola, told The Nation that " this government does not want the children of the poor to be educated. They want our children to serve their (the rich) own children in future." "Anybody can come to Ijanikin and see the state of the FGC there. The Parents/Teachers Association (PTA) is doing its best in that school, so I don't know what the minister is talking about. "All I know is they should think about God and stop oppressing the masses," he said . Meanwhile, parents are set to withdraw their children from the schools because of the strike that begins today. Meanwhile, the Secretary General of the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria, Mr Solomon Olaghinon, told The Nation on phone that the strike would likely continue until the issue is resolved. He faulted claims by the Federal Government that allocations given to the schools are misappropriated, adding that for the past 15 years funds have not been given to the colleges for development projects. "All the things the government is saying they are wrong. For the past 15 years has the government given out money for contracts? They would allocate money but it would not get to the schools. Where do they want us to get money to develop the schools? Is it from our salaries? Let the government tell us which principal, director or minister carried away the money they allocated to unity schools," he said. For the next one week, Mr Olaghinon says teachers would keep away from the classrooms. He also confirmed that the association would likely organise rallies along the line. Dr Ezekwesili had in a parley with the media held in Lagos recently, debunked claims of the privatisation of unity colleges. Rather, she explained that the Federal Government was only going to franchise the brand to capable private managers but would still monitor everything that goes on in the colleges. ______________________________
For an earlier version of this Bill, see also: SUMMARY
Schedule Amount (in Naira currency) Schedule Part A - Statutory Transfers 91,610,000,000 Schedule Part B - Debt Service 289,500,000,000 Schedule Part C - Recurrent (Non-Debt Expenditure 961,108,775,596 Schedule Part D - Capital Expenditure 539,233,587,755 Grand Total 1,881,452,363,351 SCHEDULE PART A - STATUTORY TRANSFERS
TRANSFEREE 2006 APPROPRIATION National Judicial Council 35,000,000,000 Niger Delta Development Commission 26,130,000,000 Universal Basic Education Commission 30,480,000,000 Total - Statutory Transfers 91,610,000,000 SCHEDULE PART B - DEBT SERVICE
NATURE OF DEBT 2006 APPROPRIATION Domestic Debts 220,000,000,000 Foreign Debts 69,500,000,000 Total Debt Service 289,500,000,000 SCHEDULE PART C - RECURRENT (NON-DEBT) EXPENDITURE
MINISTRY/DEPARTMENT/AGENCY 2006 APPROPRIATION The Executive - Presidency 36,872,832,040 Intergovernmental Affairs , Special Duties and Youth Development 17,019,000,000 Police Affairs 1,552,000,000 Police Formation & Command 80,648,000,000 Women Affairs 1,231,143,160 Agriculture & Rural Development 15,415,828,655 Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation 1,897,594,082 Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Comm. 784,739,498 Water Resources 4,484,529,763 Defence/MOD/Army/Air Force/Navy 85,752,943,575 Education 129,232,212,676 Federal Capital Territory 0 Foreign Affairs 25,373,344,499 Finance 5,000,076,329 Health 67,777,199,998 Industry 2,596,613,054 Information and National Orientation 12,805,674,999 Internal Affairs 33,262,579,038 Office of the Head of Service of the Federation 2,987,678,379 Justice 5,023,610,691 Labour and Productivity 4,391,828,889 Power and Steel 3,382,764,019 Science and Technology 6,262,921,919 Sports and Social Development 3,573,325,483 Public Complaints Commission 922,150,000 Commerce 2,345,070,697 Ministry of Transport 3,549,948,963 Petroleum Resources 14,922,000,001 Works 18,281,685,246 Communication 4,584,013,432 Housing & Urban Development 5,163,500,001 Solid Minerals Development 2,765,701,297 Aviation 1,608,500,000 National Salaries and Wages Commission 161,686,183 Environment 3,313,286,129 Co-operation and Integration in Africa 618,500,000 Culture and Tourism 4,450,000,000 Office of the National Security Adviser 12,316,686,404 TOTAL - EXECUTIVE 622,331,169,099 FEDERAL EXECUTIVE BODIES - Police Service Commission 317,000,000 National Population Commission 3,211,555,260 Federal Civil Service Commission 644,750,000 Independent National Electoral Commission 12,170,509,272 Federal Character Commission 824,896,250 Revenue Mobilisation Fiscal & Allocation Commission 750,000,000 Code of Conduct Bureau 617,421,344 TOTAL - FEDERAL EXECUTIVE BODIES 18,536,132,126 THE LEGISLATURE (NATIONAL ASSEMBLY) - National Assembly Office 4,805,817,937 Senate 14,719,767,267 House of Representatives 21,692,062,193 National Assembly Service Commission 404,517,612 Senate Public Accounts Committee Secretariat 75,000,000 House Public Accounts Committee Secretariat 75,000,000 General Services 4,268,685,988 Legislative Aides 3,489,892,586 TOTAL - NATIONAL ASSEMBLY 49,530,743,583 CONSOLIDATED REVENUE FUND CHARGES-GENERAL - Pension - Pay As You Go 82,900,000,000 Life insurance for public servants 3,100,000,000 Transfer to the Redemption Fund 15,000,000,000 Arrears of 2005 Pension - Pay As You Go 16,900,000,000 0 SERVICE - WIDE VOTES 0 Petroleum Support Fund 75,000,000,000 Public Service Reform 43,123,000,000 Public Service Wage Adjustment (including 2006 Promotions) 10,000,000,000 Margin for Increased Costs 2,000,000,000 Contributions to International Organisations 6,000,000,000 2003 Arrears of Monetisation - Balance 1,400,000,000 Contingency 4,500,000,000 TOTAL OTHER RECURRENT (NON DEBT) 259,923,000,000 TOTAL RECURRENT (NON DEBT) 950,321,044,808 SCHEDULE PART D - CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
MINISTRY/DEPARTMENT/AGENCY 2006 APPROPRIATION The Executive - Presidency 18,057,233,523 Intergovernmental Affairs , Special Duties and Youth Development 1,221,000,000 Police Affairs 0 Police Formation & Command 5,335,000,000 Women Affairs 1,268,856,840 Agriculture & Rural Development 15,397,562,345 Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation 402,405,918 Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commissions 315,260,502 Water Resources 75,761,000,940 Defence/MOD/Army/Air Force/Navy 15,699,001,188 Education 37,389,441,082 Federal Capital Territory 53,400,000,000 Foreign Affairs 6,126,873,766 Finance 3,018,676,534 Health 39,162,800,002 Industry 407,300,000 Information and National Orientation 2,144,325,001 Internal Affairs 8,487,420,962 Office of the Head of Service of the Federation 3,020,966,261 Justice 808,107,122 Labour and Productivity 796,114,135 Power and Steel 74,710,240,083 Science and Technology 7,187,078,084 Sports and Social Development 1,726,674,517 Public Complaints Commission 77,850,000 Commerce 1,929,929,303 Ministry of Transport 2,177,096,941 Petroleum Resources 1,078,000,000 Works 72,793,314,755 Communication 2,415,986,568 Housing & Urban Development 2,831,499,999 Solid Minerals Development 4,544,358,091 Aviation 3,641,500,000 National Salaries and Wages Commission 38,313,817 Environment 2,742,061,049 Co-operation and Integration in Africa 481,500,000 Culture and Tourism 4,050,000,000 Office of the National Security Adviser 3,183,313,596 TOTAL - EXECUTIVE 473,828,062,924 FEDERAL EXECUTIVE BODIES - Police Service Commission 18,000,000 National Population Commission 6,788,444,740 Federal Civil Service Commission 55,250,000 Independent National Electoral Commission 42,329,490,728 Federal Character Commission 175,103,750 Revenue Mobilisation Fiscal & Allocation Commission 350,000,000 Code of Conduct Bureau 257,578,656 TOTAL - FEDERAL EXECUTIVE BODIES 49,973,867,874 THE LEGISLATURE (NATIONAL ASSEMBLY) - National Assembly Office 1,776,520,353 Senate 1,288,375,509 House of Representatives 2,110,051,000 National Assembly Service Commission 80,000,000 TOTAL - NATIONAL ASSEMBLY 5,254,946,862 CAPITAL SUPPLEMENTATION - Payment to Local Contractors 25,000,000,000 Counterpart Funding 2,000,000,000 Adjustments to Capital Costs 1,000,000,000 Recapitalisation of Development Banks Nigerian Agricultural & Cooperative Bank Limited 3,500,000,000 Bank of Industry Limited 3,500,000,000 Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria Limited 3,500,000,000 Millennium Development Goals - Monitoring and Evaluation 1,000,000,000 TOTAL - CAPITAL SUPPLEMENTATION 39,500,000,000 TOTAL - CAPITAL EXPENDITURE 568,556,877,659 GRAND TOTAL 1,899,987,922,467 Signed by the Senate and House February 16, 2006 Assented to by the President February 21, 2006 Re-compiled from the PDF version by NigerianMuse.com TABLE 2: Education Budget 2006 (In Naira)
Source: http://www.budgetoffice.gov.ng
Payroll Overhead Capital Total Percentage MAIN MINISTRY 2,200,171,738 495,142,011.9 4,910,666,084 7,605,979,833.9 4.56% OTHER PARASTATALS 6,021,121,007 2,270,546,162 8,139,985,900 16,431,653,069 9.86% UNIVERSITIES 68,955,116,361 2,735,237,916 7,080,757,723 78,771,112,000 47.28% COLLEGES OF EDUCATION 10,278,966,116 1,117,728,354 4,974,433,523 16,371,127,993 9.83% POLYTECHNICS 18,375,638,799 1,454,423,067 2,121,000,019 21,951,061,885 13.17% UNITY SCHOOLS 9,749,658,463 5,071,225,757 3,367,771,783 18,188,656,003 10.92% UNESCO 159,827,511.9 282,409,413 45,411,300 487,648,224.9 0.29% UBE PROGRAMS 0 0 6,749,414,750 6,749,414,750 4.05% CPRCN 36,999,999.9 28,000,000 0 64,999,999.9 0.04% Total 115,777,499,995.8 13,454,712,680.9 37,389,441,082 166,621,653,758.7 100.00% Percentage 69.49% 8.08% 22.43% 100.00%
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||







Your Comments
Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.