...beat MPs in US, Britain, S/Africa, Brazil, Japan
Nigerian federal legislators receive much higher salaries than their
counterparts in wealthier countries and key developing nations,
according to an analysis published by the Economist magazine.
A Nigerian legislator receives an annual salary of about $189,000,
equivalent of N30 million, which is 116 times the country’s gross
domestic product (GDP) per person, says the publication which was posted
on the magazine’s website on Friday.
The figures put salaries
collected by Nigerian senators and members of the House of
Representatives way ahead of those received by fellow parliamentarians
in the 29 countries whose data was analysed by the Economist.
In
terms of volume of cash earnings, the Nigerian legislators beat their
counterparts in Britain who take $105,400 yearly, as well as those in
the United States ($174,000), France ($85,900), South Africa ($104,000),
Kenya ($74,500), Saudi Arabia ($64,000) and Brazil ($157,600).
In
terms of lawmakers’ salaries as a ratio of GDP per capita, the gap is
even much wider. While the salary of a Nigerian lawmaker is 116 times
the country’s GDP per person, that of a British member of parliament is
just 2.7 times.
The report said Britain’s legislators pay is
“relatively parsimonious” when compared with that of their counterparts
in poorer countries, including Nigeria, who “enjoy the heftiest salaries
by this measure.”
According to the data, only Australian lawmakers,
with $201,200 annual salary, receive higher amounts compared to
Nigerian legislators, but their salaries are only 3 times their
country’s GDP per person.
Other yearly salary details published by
the Economist are those of lawmakers in Ghana ($46,500), Indonesia
($65,800), Thailand ($43,800), India ($11,200), Italy ($182,000),
Bangladesh ($4,000), Israel ($114,800), Hong Kong ($130,700), Japan
($149,700), Singapore ($154,000), Canada ($154,000), New Zealand
($112,500), Germany ($119,500), Ireland ($120,400), Pakistan ($3,500),
Malaysia ($25,300), Sweden ($99,300), Sri Lanka ($5,100), Spain
($43,900) and Norway ($138,000).
Secretive
The National Assembly
has been secretive with the specific amounts members collect in
salaries and allowances, refusing to provide information to journalists
and activists even when requests are made under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA).
A total of N150 billion was voted for the
National Assembly in the 2013 national budget but there is no breakdown,
which should have shown at least a summary of the legislators’
earnings.
Months ago, Daily Trust wrote a letter under FOIA
requesting for the National Assembly’s budget breakdown but this was
refused.
However, Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal
Commission (RMAFC) documents in possession of Daily Trust show that a
senator is entitled to N35 million and member of the House of
Representatives N29.28 million in the first year of each legislative
session when they receive allowances that are payable once in four
years—accommodation, furniture and car allowances.
The annual salaries are supposed to be lower for the next three years of a parliamentary session.
But given the secretive nature of the parliament’s finances, there have
been claims, including by RMAFC leadership, that the lawmakers receive
much more than this amount in padded allowances.
Based on the RMAFC
documents dated February 2007, which are the subsisting approved
packages for National Assembly members, the lawmakers’ allowances
include accommodation (Senator N4m, Rep N3.97m), vehicle loan (Senator
N8m, Rep N6.948m), furniture (Senator N6m, Rep N5.956m) and severance
gratuity (Senator N6m, Rep N5.956m), which are due once in four years.
Other allowances, which are payable every year, are car maintenance
(Senator N1.52m, Rep N595,563), constituency (Senator N5m, Rep N1.687m),
domestic staff (Senator N1.5m, Rep N1.488m), personal assistant
(Senator N506,600; Rep N496,303), entertainment (Senator N202,640, Rep
N198,521), recess (Senator N202,640; Rep N198,521), utilities (Senator
N607,920; Rep N397,042), newspaper/periodicals (Senator N303,960; Rep
N297,781), house maintenance (Senator N101,320; Rep N99,260) and ward
robe (Senator N405,280; Rep N397,402)
There are also estacode
(Senator $600, Rep $550) and duty tour allowance (Senator N23,000; Rep
N21,000) payable per day when a lawmaker is on official trip.
“Untenable”
In February 2009, then-President Umaru Yar’Adua initiated a process of
reducing the pay packages of public office holders on the ground that
the amounts were untenable in view of government’s finances.
Months
later, then-chairman of RMAFC Engr. Hamman Tukur presented a report to
Yar’Adua, containing reviewed pay packages for federal, state and local
government political, public and judicial office holders.
In the
report, Tukur said the affected government organs were flouting the
remuneration provisions made by the commission through frivolous foreign
trips, arbitrary appointment of aides and use of excessively large
motorcades. He warned that this must stop.
Based on the
constitution, RMAFC has the final say on the remuneration package of
National Assembly and State Houses of Assembly members, while a law
needs to be enacted based on the commission’s proposals regarding the
pay packages of executive and judicial office holders.
But Daily
Trust understands that the National Assembly and other arms of
government have refused to implement the reduced packages on the grounds
that the constitution says earnings of political officers should not be
reviewed to their disadvantage.
Source: Daily Trust

No comments:
Post a Comment