By Fredrick Nwabufo
The flatulent size of the national assembly accents the
orthodoxies and paradoxes of Nigeria. Nigeria’s lawmakers are some of the
highest paid in the world, in a country where about 100 million people live on
less than a dollar per day, and where citizens are expected to be stoic and
exist in deficit while their representatives in parliament ensconce themselves
in surplus.
Is it not pharisaic that while the government insists on
burdening citizens with more taxes and increasing the yoke, there is no
reciprocity on their part? What is the government doing to shrink the cost of
governance?
Why will the government mull reintroducing toll-gates on
roads; initiating tax on phone calls; increasing VAT from 5% to 7.5%, and
introducing charges on deposits in banks without first curing its gluttony?
As a matter of fact, we run one of the most expensive
democracies in the world, and at the same time we are the global poverty
capital. How do you define irony?
Our elections are about the most expensive in the world,
with the cost ballooning from about N2 billion in 1999 to more than N240
billion in 2019, trumping India’s — a country much bigger in size and in
population than Nigeria.
On Tuesday, Italy’s parliament approved axing the number of
its members by 37 percent.
The country’s lower house passed a law to abridge the number
of representatives in both chambers to save cost. By the legislation, the
number of lawmakers in the lower house will be contracted from 630 to 400 while
that of the senate will be cut down from 315 to 200.
With each Member of Parliament and senator earning €230,000
and €249,600 respectively annually, the pruning is expected to save Italy about
€82 million every year. And the measure will streamline parliament and save the
country an estimated €1 billion.
So, do we need 469 federal lawmakers – 109 in the senate and
360 in the house of representatives?
I believe, a country in dire straits like Nigeria, where
there is chronic infrastructural challenges, does not need this prodigious
number and waste.
Here is how Quartz Africa telescopes this extravagance:
‘’Nigerian legislators, among the world’s top paid, receive
annual salaries of between $150,000 to $190,000 per annum depending on exchange
rates. At current exchange rates Nigerian lawmakers, would earn around $160,000
more than British MPs who make around $105,000 according to data from The
Economist. In fact, until plunging oil prices started putting pressure on the
Nigerian naira earlier this year, the Nigerian lawmakers were the second
highest paid lawmakers in the world. The average legislators’ pay is more than
50 times Nigeria‘s GDP per capita. In a country where millions live on less
than two dollars daily and minimum wage is set at $90 a month.’’
Also, Kayode Fayemi, governor of Ekiti state, has argued
against this prodigality.
‘’We do need to look at the size of government in Nigeria
and I am an advocate of a unicameral legislature. What we really need is the
house of representatives because that is what represents,” he said at the
Nigerian Economic Summit Group conference in Abuja.
“You have three senators from little Ekiti and you have
three senators from Lagos state. It’s a no-brainer that it’s unequal, I guess
the principle is not proportionality but that if you are a state, you get it
automatically but I think that we can do away with that. There are several
things that we can do away within the government.’’
I agree with Governor Fayemi that Nigeria needs a unicameral
legislature, but not on ‘’what we really need is the house of representatives’’.
I think, we can do away with the house of representatives
and retain the senate.
Here is why. First, the cost of running the house is much
more than that of the senate, if we are being practical about cutting the cost
of governance. As of 2017, the personnel cost of the house is N5 billion, while
that of the senate is N1.8 billion. Also, while the lower house had a budget of
about N50 billion in 2017, the upper house had N31 billion.
Second, there is more equity in terms of number in the
senate than in the house. Each state in Nigeria has only three representatives
in the senate — based on the principle of equal representation — while in the
house, the number is hinged on the bogus theory of proportional representation.
For example, while Anambra, a densely populated state and
commercial nucleus, has 11 representatives in the house; Katsina, which is of
little economic importance to Nigeria and which sizable portions of its
landmass are desert strips, has 15 members in the house.
Naturally, one side will have more votes in parliament than
the other. Clearly, this is uneven and unbalanced.
Nigeria is a delicate country and the sensitivities of the
variegated population must be considered in national matters. To date, the
south-east still wish for the creation of an additional state in the region,
where there are only five, to correct the imbalance in geopolitical
structuring.
So, we can do away with the house of representatives. Who do
they represent?
@FredrickNwabufo
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