FOCUS ON MY ACHIEVEMENTS, LEAVE THE HUGE DEBTS
Governor of Lagos state, Babatunde Fashola has called on
Lagosians to excuse the huge debt he’s leaving behind and instead focus
on the achievements of his administration, during the past eight years.
Fashola made the comment during an interview session with Punch
newspaper, when asked about the N418bn debt his administration is
leaving behind.
He said, ”I have answered this question many times and it seems
people just dwell on debt, but in the context of debt, let us look at
the assets too. I am leaving behind hundreds of kilometres of roads,
bridges, schools, hospitals, courtrooms, social services, skill centres,
streetlights and traffic lights.”
Governor Fashola added that “I am leaving behind also people who
now have jobs, who did not have jobs seven years ago. I am leaving
behind a stronger security force; a stronger LASTMA, a stronger KAI.
That is where the money went. I am leaving behind a rail system. I am
leaving behind so many assets for the continuity of life. I am also
leaving behind a bigger workforce – a better equipped workforce. I think
we should talk less about debt and more about development.”
He spoke on the potentials of the state generating revenue to cater
for its expenditures as well ”Lagos State Government still has to
continue to raise more money and this takes me to the Internally
Generated Revenue that you are talking about. The IGR – standing on its
own – is averagely N20 billion. Let us do the math. Some months it is
more than that, some months it drops. The monthly allocation from the
Federation Account is averagely N10 billion; sometimes it goes up to N11
billion, sometimes it drops to N9 billion. Let us use an average of N10
billion, even though in the last few months it dropped to six and half
(N6.5 billion). If we have averagely N30 billion, do the math, divide it
by 21 million people. You will get one thousand four hundred and
something naira per person in Lagos. It is easy then to say let us
collect the IGR you think is big but you are seeing the IGR alone and
not seeing the responsibilities.
”Our population has also grown by forced migration in terms of the
Internally Displaced Persons across Nigeria. I just sent a team to
somewhere in Apapa where there are people displaced from the North-East
of Nigeria in camps. We have to go and intervene; we cannot leave them
there without help.
“The sanitary condition there is horrendous. If we want a
government that only deals with what is available, then every month is
the government going to tell everybody, ‘go and take your N1,400; go and
build your roads, go and build your schools, go and build your
hospitals, manage your security?’ But we have to be futuristic, we have
to think ahead. The IGR that you also talked about does not come as N20
billion to us. It comes when somebody pays N1 million for land today,
somebody pays for his vehicle registration tomorrow,
and somebody pays his ground (land) rent. It is because we are
accountable that we always announce at the end of the month, ‘this is
what we got.’ If we wait for 30 days for the money to accrue, it means
we won’t do any work.
”People should understand that we won’t do any work because the
money has not accrued. What do we do? We borrow against it. The banks
which we collect it from know that we will pay because the money (IGR)
comes through them. So, we take a loan. But we don’t borrow to pay
salaries; we don’t borrow for recurrent expenditure, we borrow for
capital investments.
“I cannot go and tell the person who is waiting to take his child
to the hospital and there is no hospital space; that they should ‘wait, I
am waiting to collect money.’ If I give you the contract to build a
hospital, I cannot tell you ‘take one naira today, I am waiting for two
naira tomorrow.’
It is not a way to plan construction. You must gather your building
materials and you must move men to the site. We borrow from the banks.
When the monies come, the banks deduct them.”
”The borrowing you are even talking about, measure it against the
assets. We took N275bn bond over eight years. The first thing we had to
do was to repay the old bond of N15 billion because the Lagos State
Government drew N15 billion out of the N25 billion bond. We had to repay
that so that we could take the full benefit of what we were planning to
do, which was going to be issued in series. And we did all these in
public.
Fashola went ahead to justify the spending “What did we use these
monies to finance? We used them to finance infrastructure. As the
monthly IGR is coming, we are returning 15 per cent of the IGR into a
consolidated debt service account. We can’t touch it. Take out 15 per
cent of N20bn. We have over a N100 billion in that account to pay the
debts. Those who are saying we owe, the system for paying bond is
secured. We just paid the second bond, which was the first that I took.
We paid it last year. The next bond will be due in 2017 and it is about
N60 billion or N70 billion but we have N100 billion in the account. In
any event, we have over-secured our liabilities as far as the bonds are
concerned. As far as the local short-term loans from banks are
concerned, we were able to pay.
”If we don’t want a life of debt, then Lagosians must agree that we
reduce our budget to what we earn. We have a budget of about N489
billion. Let us use our IGR as an example: N30 billion multiplied by 12
months is N360 billion. We are already in a hole of about N119bn. If
Lagosians want us to reduce it, then will Lagosians agree to stop
demanding more services? Certainly, no! Thus, this is the context. And
when you look at the countries we aspire to be like: America owes $16
trillion – they owe the whole world – but they have the best space
ships, aircraft and army, and they can decide what our military does
with the debt they owe the world.
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