Salaries of workers and overhead
expenditure such as the procurement of stationery will cost the Nigerian
Maritime Administration and Safety Agency over N86bn this year.
Overhead cost takes the lion’s share of N69.24bn, while the salaries and allowances of NIMASA’s workers will claim N15bn.
The figures are contained in the abridged
version of the agency’s 2014 budget attached to the national budget,
which is before the House of Representatives.
But, on the capital side, the agency
plans to spend N1.82bn. Listed as a capital expenditure item is the sum
of N1.71bn, proposed as direct transfer to the Consolidated Revenue Fund
of the Federation.
The document shows that though the agency
targets a revenue sum of N66.96bn, it will spend about N97bn this year
on both recurrent and capital proposals.
NIMASA is one of the agencies described
as “big spenders” by the House. It is grouped with the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, Central Bank of Nigeria, Nigerian Ports
Authority and 27 others accused of not submitting their budget details
to the National Assembly.
The Nigerian Communications Commission will spend N7.42bn on personnel cost, while its total overhead proposal is N5.26bn.
On its part, the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency has a personnel bill of N6.82bn.
The budget of the big spenders has remained a source of conflict between the National Assembly and the Executive over the years.
It will be recalled that the budget
details of the agencies had delayed the debate on the 2014 budget at the
House two weeks ago.
The House only agreed to debate the
budget on the condition that the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, would make the details available before it would be
passed.
The Federal Government proposed to spend N4.6tn this year.
The budget is now before the committees
of the House where various Ministries, Departments and Agencies will be
invited to defend their individual proposals.
Last Thursday, lawmakers suspended plenary up until March 11, to give the committees enough time to work on the budget.
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