Monday 25 July 2016

Lagos will start generating N30bn monthly by 2017 – Commissioner

ambode44
The Lagos State Government on Sunday said it will reduce dependence on federal allocation by increasing its Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) to a monthly target of N30 billion in 2017.
It also said that it would increase the IGR to N50 billion monthly in 2018 and that it targeted a yearly budget of N1 trillion by 2018.
This is contained in a communique issued at the end of a four-day retreat for members of the State Executive Council, Body of Permanent Secretaries and Heads of Government Agencies and Parastatals in Badagry.
The communiqué said the retreat had the theme “Reflect, Reappraise, Restrategise: Raising the Bar of Governance’’.
On the budget plan, it said the Commissioner for Economic Planning and Budget, Mr Akinyemi Ashade, described the target as ambitious, adding that appropriate measures were being adopted to achieve the plan.
“Yes, it is ambitious, it requires thinking and what we are going to do differently is to ensure that we use technology to drive it in terms of automation and collection.
“What we are also going to ensure is that the whole reform around consumption taxes is really taken to another level.
“The land administration system will support this initiative,’’ the communiqué quoted Ashade as saying.
It said that the government had resolved to scale up and run efficient revenue collection machinery through the convergence of the Ministries, Departments and Agencies operations and utilisation of cutting edge technologies.
It also said the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr Steve Ayorinde, noted that participants agreed to achieve 100 per cent budget performance with a 58 per cent to 42 per cent ratio for capital and recurrent expenditure.
It added that it was also resolved that efforts should be redoubled at reducing cost and blocking leakages.
“Meanwhile, it was resolved that those MDAs who are not yet integrated into the Treasury Single Account be brought in before the end of third quarter of 2016.
“Participants pledged to ensure timely preparation of the 2017 budget and its passage into law by the end of October 2016.
“This will facilitate the implementation of the budget from Jan. 1, 2017,’’ it quoted Ayorinde as saying.
He communiqué said that participants deliberated on the six pillars of Lagos State Development Plan which included infrastructure development, sustainable environment, finance, economic development, social development and security and governance.
“As a government of inclusion, participants identified the need for partnership with persons and organisations that will create positive value to enhance the quality of life and standard of living of residents,’’ it said.
The communiqué said other conclusions included the need to improve on the performance of Lagos Water Corporation in the production of water and collection of water tariff.
It said that participants resolved to also encourage private sector investment in production and supply of portable water and mapping out strategies toward food security.
On tourism, the communique said that participants acknowledged the imperative and need to invest more in the sector.
It said that they emphasised the need to improve on the technological capacity of the Lottery Board to create jobs and increase revenue generation.
The communiqué said the government also urged individuals and corporate organisations to take ownership of its Tree Planting initiative to mitigate the effect of climate change by nurturing and ensuring survival of trees. (NAN)
SOURCE: dailypostng

Institute, ministry to include sector as subject in school curriculum

Lady Isioma Chukwuma
The Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria (CIIN) has revealed plans to partner the Federal Ministry of Education in the teaching of insurance as subject in schools.
The institute has also implored insurance professionals to volunteer as teachers and lecturers, so as to make up for the dearth of insurance teachers and lecturers in the nation’s academic institutions.
President of the CIIN, Lady Isioma Chukwuma, who stated this recently at a press parley in Lagos, added that the institute has aided in the study and teaching of insurance by providing support to institutions across the country through donation of course books, equipping libraries with study materials and equipment.
She noted that the institute’s train-the-trainer programme was designed to upscale insurance education and to ensure that insurance teachers possess the required skills for imparting the necessary knowledge to the future generation of insurance practitioners.
She said the programme was first carried out in Lagos and Ogun states and has since been replicated in other parts of the country, stressing that the institute is presently engaging some states that it had visited to fashion out modalities to host the programme in such states.
Chukwuma noted that the train-the-trainer programme has been well received and many states are enthusiastic about partnering the institute and the college in this regard.
Speaking on the drop in insurance sales, the Deputy President, CIIN, Mrs. Funmi Babington-Ashaye, said, “it’s only when you have a lot of money to spend that you remember insurance; even corporate organisations have a lot of issues regarding their bottom line.
“Prices have gone up and you see some of them that are even insuring in the past, comprehensively, have started insuring third party. Even individuals are not renewing at all. You can imagine the negative impact on the bottom line of insurance firms.
“Also talking about aviation and oil and gas, we are aware of how it’s been.
SOURCE: guardianng