2024 Budget: Ex-presidents, former VPs, others get N13.8bn upkeep allowance

The Federal Government has earmarked a total of N13, 805,814,220 for the upkeep of former presidents, vice-presidents, Heads of State, Chiefs of General Staff, retired Heads of Service, Permanent Secretaries, as well as retired Heads of government agencies and parastatals in the 2024 fiscal year.

The beneficiaries include former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo, Goodluck Jonathan and Muhammadu Buhari, as well as ex-vice-presidents Atiku Abubakar, Namadi Sambo and Prof. Yemi Osinbajo.

Also expected to benefit from the windfall are ex-military Heads of State, General Yakubu Gowon and General AbdulSalami Abubakar, as well as a former dictator and self-styled military President, General Ibrahim Babangida, and a former Chief of General Staff, Commodore Ebitu Ukiwe (rtd).

Also, N1trillion was provisioned for the public service wage adjustment for government Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), including arrears of promotion and salary increases, and payment of severance benefits and minimum wage-related adjustments).

A breakdown shows that the entitlements of former presidents/heads of states and vice-presidents/chief of general staff will cost N2.3bn, while N10.5bn is proposed as benefits for retired Heads of Service, Permanent Secretaries and Professors.

The payment of severance benefits to retired Heads of government agencies and parastatals is proposed to cost N1billion.

Other allocations include N65bn for the Presidential Amnesty Programme for the reintegration of transformed ex-militants; N1bn for the Office of the Presidential Adviser on Energy; and N108bn for unnamed special projects.

The Government is also proposing the sum of N40bn to offset electricity debts owed power distribution companies (DisCos) by all MDAs. The item listed as ‘Settlement of MDAs’ electricity debts’, was contained in the sectoral allocation details released by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Solomon Adeola.

According to Adeola, the details of the Budget have been released to allay the fears of lawmakers and Nigerians. He noted that the details had been circulated to allow lawmakers to study and see the allocations TO various sectors.

Meanwhile, the Executive Director, Association of Nigerian Electricity Distributors, Sunday Oduntan, had in January 2022 revealed that all the Federal Government MDAs and the Military owed the electricity DisCos at least N90billion. According to him, though discussions were ongoing as regards settlement, the debt had continued to pile up over the years since the power sector was privatised in November 2013.

In the proposed budget, the ministries of Works, Finance, Education and Defence and others got lion’s shares of the N8.7tn capital component of the N27.5tn 2024 budget as contained in sectoral allocation details. The Ministry of Works is allocated N521.3bn, followed by the Ministry of Finance with N519.9bn, while N308.2bn is earmarked for the Ministry of Defence.

Similarly, the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare is to get N304.4bn, while the Education ministry has an allocation of N265.4bn. Others are Ministry of Power, N264.2bn, government-owned enterprises, N820.9bn; Tertiary Education Trust Fund, N665bn; Housing and Urban Development ministry, N96.9bn; Water Resources ministry, N87.7bn; and Police Affairs ministry, N69bn.

The National Assembly, under Statutory Transfers, gets N198bn; the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), N324.8bn; Universal Basic Education Board, N251.4bn; National Judicial Council, N165bn; North East Development Commission, N126bn; and Basic Health Care Provision Fund, N125.7bn.

Under capital supplementation, zonal intervention – otherwise called constituency projects – for federal lawmakers, gets N100bn; special projects, N108bn; contingency (capital), N200bn; aid and grants funded projects, N685.6bn; and National Social Investment Programme Agency, N100bn.

Meanwhile, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, on Saturday expressed optimism that the 2024 budget would mark a transformative era in the country once it was passed by the National Assembly.

The Minister, while declaring open the Kaduna State chapter of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) Annual Public Lecture/Annual General Meeting, noted that the Budget signified a pivotal step towards the realisation of Tinubu administration’s ‘Renewed Hope’ agenda. 

In addition to its focus on development priorities, the Minister noted that the budget demonstrated a commitment to fiscal responsibility. According to him, the administration recognises the importance of prudent financial management as the foundation for long-term economic stability.

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