This is N1.69bn or 13.65 per cent higher than the N12.38bn, which the MDAs earmarked to spend on the same items in 2013.
Prominent among the MDAs is the Ministry
of Transport, which earmarked N1.55bn for the purchase of computers in
2013 and N2.1bn for the same purpose this year. This means that in the
two-year period, the ministry set aside N3.65bn for the acquisition of
computers alone.
According to the 2014 budget proposals
currently before the National Assembly, the expenditure of the MDAs is
in five sub-heads: acquisition of computers, maintenance of office and
IT equipment, acquisition of software, acquisition of office
stationery/computer consumables as well as IT consulting.
The budget proposals, however, do not
include expenses on networking, Internet access, satellite broadcast and
telephone charges.
They do not also include the expenses of
some agencies and institutions that have separate funding systems. Such
institutions include the National Assembly, Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, Independent National Electoral Commission, Raw Materials
Research and Development Council of Nigeria and the Nigerian
Communications Commission.
Analyses of the IT budget by our
correspondents showed that 25 per cent or N3.52bn of the sum would go
into the purchase of computers; maintenance of computers and office
equipment will gulp N2.43bn or 17.3 per cent of the total expenses;
while the acquisition of software will consume N4.22bn or 30.02 per
cent.
Stationery and computer consumables will
gulp N3.22bn or 22.89 per cent of the total figure, while IT consulting
services will take N673.24m or 4.79 per cent.
The total expenditure is driven by
agencies and ministries that have some seemingly high expenses for
components of the IT purchases.
The Ministry of Transport, for instance,
proposed to spend N2.1bn on the purchase of computers, while the
National Intelligence Agency hopes to spend N1.56bn on Microsoft
application licences.
The Ministry of Defence proposed N405.96m
for the maintenance of office and IT equipment, while the Nigerian Air
Force proposed N193.99m for the maintenance of its own IT equipment.
The Ministry of Mines and Steel
Development proposed N255m for the acquisition of software, while the
National Population Commission plans to spend N223.58m on the
acquisition of computer software and N63.75m on stationery and computer
consumables.
The Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and
Fiscal Commission also hopes to get N115m to be spent on software
acquisition and another N35m on computers.
If approved by the National Assembly, the
Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation will spend N141.39m on
the purchase of computers, while the Ministry of Finance will expend
N97.35m on stationery and computer consumables.
The Ministry of Communications
Technology proposed N250.29m for the acquisition of software, N150m for
the deployment of tools for the ICT professional cadre and N23.02m for
the computerisation of its accounting department.
The Ministry of Mines and Steel
Development hopes to spend N255m on the acquisition of software; the
National Broadcasting Commission, N119.8m on the purchase of computers;
and the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation, N141.39m on
computer acquisition.
On sector aggregate basis, the Ministry
of Information and its agencies proposed N234.8m for the purchase of
computers, N35.79m for maintenance of IT equipment, N291.73m for the
acquisition of software, N80.5m for consumables and N221.19m for IT
consulting.
The Ministry of Science and Technology
and its agencies proposed to spend N236.95m on computer consumables;
N81.9m on the acquisition of computers, N64.6m on the maintenance of
office and IT equipment; N37.84m on IT consulting; and N15.7m on the
purchase of software.
The Ministry of Mines and Steel
Development and its agencies will spend N337.94m on software
acquisition; N92.67m on computer consumables; N29.5m on maintenance and
N6.5m on the purchase of computers.
Similarly, the Ministry of Communications
Technology and its agencies plan to spend N261.31m on the acquisition
of software; N173.02m on computers; N20.24m on computer consumables;
N8.68m on maintenance and N8.17m on IT consulting.
The Ministry of Finance and its agencies
proposed N328.38m for computers; the Ministry of Industry, Trade and
Investment and its agencies, N106.16m for the same purpose; and the
National Planning Commission, N61.34m.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and its
agencies will spend N627.99m on computers. This, however, excludes what
the over 100 embassies abroad will spend.
The Ministry of Education and its
agencies will spend N506.76m, excluding what the universities under it
will spend on the subject.
The Ministry of Youth Development and its
agencies will spend an aggregate of N344.35m on computers; Ministry of
Defence and its agencies, N1.3bn; Ministry of Niger Delta, N170.47m;
Ministry of Labour and its agencies, N75.23m; and the Ministry of Health
and its agencies, N431.75m.
The Presidency will spend N546m on
computers. Details of the proposals showed that N188.4m will go to
office stationery/computer consumables; N42m for maintenance of
office/IT equipment; and N186.1m for the purchase of computers and
accessories; while computer software acquisition will gulp N105.6m.
In the office of the Vice-President,
N80.8m will be spent on stationery/computer consumables, while N13.8m
will go to IT consulting.
On aggregate, the Presidency and the
agencies under it will spend N925.53m on computers and related
expenses. The purchase of computers will take N165.6m; computer
consumables, N436.5m; maintenance, N98.7m; software, N196.4m; and IT
consulting, N28.33m.
An analysis of the 2013 budgetary
provision for IT showed that N3.73bn or 30.09 per cent will go into
consumables; N2.26bn or 18.28 per cent for maintenance; N478.72m or 3.87
per cent for IT consulting; N2.76bn or 22.29 per cent for software;
while N3.15bn or 25.47 per cent will be for the purchase of physical
computers.
Bureaucracy watchers are worried that the
regular expenses on computers do not translate into efficiency in the
MDAs. Some argue that a higher percentage of the money ends up in
foreign lands to acquire foreign technologies, while part of the
remaining is misappropriated.
However, the Director-General, National
Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion, Dr. Umar Bindr,
justified the huge expenditure on computers on the grounds that the
Federal Government’s bureaucracy was large.
Bindr argued that the present
administration was serious about e-government, adding that there was no
way this could take shape without huge expenses on computers and related
activities.
“We cannot say that the technologies are
completely imported or unreasonable. However, while we are importing
these technologies, it is important that we empower research agencies
and institutions like the National Information Technology Development
Agency so that we can domesticate these capacities and equip our youths
to make money,” he said.
The President, Institute of Software
Practitioners of Nigeria, Mr. Chris Uwaje, said the proposed expenses
were not enough to galvanise the software industry in the country.
He said, “Simply evaluated, it shows that our national IT vision is still matchbox in its thinking.
-The Punch
5 comments:
i hope this actually true not just a publicity to decieve us
if it actually true then its a good one
its really sad that we no longer trust our Government
see has Nigerians no believe in their Government again
all these na scheme to take deceive us against 2015
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