SENATORS
KICK AGAINST GOVERNMENT’S ASSETS SALE
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The senators, who spoke on the floor of the senate during a debate on the state of the economy, also called for constitutional amendment to stop sharing of all revenue accruable to the federation account.
NAN reports that a business mogul, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, had called for the sale of the assets.
Senate President Bukola Saraki also made the call in his welcome address at the resumption of legislative activities by the Senate on Tuesday.
However, Deputy Senate President Ike
Ekwerenmadu and Sen. George Akume cautioned against the sale of the assets
during the debate.
According to them, no country
resorts to selling its assets as a way out of economic recession.
Ekwerenmadu said: “UAE does not even
allow you close to oil wells let alone selling them.
“For a country like Saudi Arabia,
its budget each year is run by investments from oil revenue.
“Other countries are investing; I am
sure we will not be fair to the next generation if we sell off our assets.
“If we must sell, we have to sell
the non-performing assets so that people can turn them around and create
employment.”
He said that the recession had
buttressed the importance of savings, and called for amendment of the revenue
sharing formula between the federal and state governments to encourage savings.
Akume said that the country should rather focus on industrialisation through agriculture.
The senator also called for the review of the revenue sharing formula to encourage savings, saying that states should not insist on sharing revenue.
Sen. Shehu Sani (APC Kaduna Central) also urged review of the revenue sharing formula.
He said that sharing all revenues contributed to Nigeria’s economic crisis.
“The situation whereby states come to Abuja every month to collect cheques and then go back to execute capital and recurrent expenditure has made impossible any initiative to boost our economy,” he said.
Sani called on state governments to look into ways to improve their internally generated revenue rather than relying on the federal allocation. Read more
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