The National Assembly Joint Committee on Finance on Monday set up a special panel to investigate the revenue shortfall totalling N4tn due to indiscriminate waivers granted to agencies of government.
The resolution of the Committee, co-chaired by Senator Sani Musa and member, Abiodun Faleke, was adopted at a hearing to investigate the revenue profiles of Ministries, Departments and Agencies and Government-Owned Enterprises ahead of the 2025 budget defence.
The hearing was to enable the Senate and House of Representatives Committees on Finance to develop accurate and realistic revenue projections for 2025, with emphasis on Internally Generated Revenue and expenditure.
The resolution to investigate the shortfall followed the adoption of a motion moved by the lawmaker representing Kebbi Central Senatorial District, Senator Adamu Aliero.
Drawing the attention of his colleagues to the development, Aliero noted that “Due to the issue of waivers, there is a serious shortfall between what is supposed to be collected as revenue and what is actually collected.
“From our record, over N5.9tn was supposed to be the consolidated revenue fund of the federation. But we only have N1.9tn. We need to set up a special committee that will investigate this serious anomaly.
“We cannot continue to be allowing revenue agencies to be spending money without the National Assembly’s approval. If someone is given a waiver, we have to find out who gave that waiver. A shortfall of over N4tn is not a small amount. We found out that over N 4.9tn has not been remitted. We should set up an investigative committee that will probe all the money that has not been remitted,” he said.
Co-chairman of the Joint Committee, Senator Sani Musa, said the committee was aware that a lot of GOEs collect revenues from other sources without disclosing those sources.
“Some of them did not even disclose this to the budget office. We’ve been able to get some of them and we have done our scrutinisation. You can imagine an agency collecting revenue from and failing to remit same.
“Funds that are supposed to be remitted to the consolidated revenue fund are not remitted. I think from now on, we are going to block that leakage and we will do the needful. We will scrutinise the expenditures of these GOEs because a GOE will collect 100 per cent of revenue and in its expenditure, you see that it’s spending about 95% of that revenue it collected. This is the avenue at which we can find a lasting solution to those leakages,” Musa stated.
He further pointed out that President Bola Tinubu had, while presenting the 2025 Appropriation Bill before the National Assembly mandated Heads of MDAs to respect parliamentary summons.
Musa, who represents Niger East Senatorial District, threatened that any GOE that failed to give an accurate account of how its revenue and expenditure risks having a zero allocation in the 2025 budget proposal.
















