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The “Big Big” Salaries of the “Diaspora”
Ministers
By
Mobolaji E. Aluko
Burtonsville, MD, USA
March 2, 2003
INTRODUCTION
Nigeria is a funny place – and
a dangerous one to boot. The ongoing controversy over the “big big”
differential pay being offered to AT LEAST two ministers in the Obasanjo cabinet
(notice that I write “at least”) could easily degenerate into allegations of
sexism (“Ehen, is it because she is a woman?”) or ethnicism (“Ehen, is it
because she is Igbo?”) or elitism (“Ehen, na jealousy: is it because she went to
Harvard and you went to Bowling Green?”) That would be a big disservice to the
world-class Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala who I have known since
childhood.
Luckily, the name “Adeniji”
(beneficiary Minister of Foreign Affairs) is also in the sweet pot – he is
male, non-Igbo, non-Harvard – so the allegations will not stick.
Quite frankly, things are not
as complex as they seem. This is about only four issues - due process
(transparency & accountability), partisan politics, constitutionality (rule of
law) and collegiality.
I will take each seriatim, but
first some disclaimers.
DISCLAIMERS
This issue is not really about
the personalities Okonjo-Iweala or Adeniji or all those others who may be
getting “big big” salaries from the so-called “Nigeria Diaspora Trust Fund”.
Nigeria is in a fine economic mess, and ANYBODY who can help us out of the woods
is very welcome to try his or her hands, provided he or she does not make our
situation worse. We all agree that Nigeria desperately requires people of
impeccable worth to serve in certain positions, and not all of them can
SACRIFICE equally as others because of their special circumstances. In fact,
that President Obasanjo, well known for his stinginess (sorry, frugality!) can
employ people who are getting so much more money than himself – assuming he is
not being supplemented himself by some Diaspora-like Trust Fund – is a measure
of that desperation.
On a personal note, with my
present level of financial commitments and family obligations, provided my
family of seven (wife and five children) remains back in the United States, I
could not survive on less than 80% of my American salary any where in the
world. To go to Nigeria to work for government with my family back here in the
US would even force me to negotiate a HIGHER salary than I am getting now, first
because I even feel underpaid where I am, and secondly because I would have to
travel up and down! I am patriotic, but I am not foolish.
So any salary negotiations by
anybody, whether Diaspora or Home-Based, is fine with me.
At the same time, I state
without any fear of contradiction that if I COMPLETELY uprooted from the US to
Nigeria, family and all, with all my mortgage and car note paid for, I could
more than easily survive on the equivalent of less than one-fifth of my US
salary back in Nigeria. 99% of Nigerians survive BELOW that salary, I believe,
so why can’t I?
What I am getting at are as
follows:
(i)
salary negotiations are in order, particularly if you want to attract
certain persons, whether home-based (some of who may actually be earning more
than the official minister’s salary) or Diaspora-based (many of who would in
general be earning more than that salary).
(ii)
Each person determines the level of sacrifice that he wishes to live with
in terms of financial obligations, family commitments and residency.
DUE PROCESS
One of the major problems with
the disclosure is the lack of transparency and accountability which surrounds
the Nigerian Diaspora Trust Fund. As an engaged member of the Diaspora who has
spent the past two years in Nigeria, on sabbatical for about 7 months and
traveling in and out over five times last year, I never heard of this NDTF, and
would like to read from some one who has. When was it set up? How much is in
it? Who are its trustees? Who else is paid from it? Is somebody suddenly got
an idea and stated that President Obasanjo’s salary is also supplemented from a
fund LIKE it because he was SPECIALLY “begged” to become president, would there
not be an uproar?
In fact, the Nigerian Diaspora
Trust Fund is a laudable endeavor, but opportunities to use it must be opened
up to many: it should not be used like a slush fund sub-rosa.
PARTISAN POLITICS:
POLITICIAN vs. TECHNOCRAT
I just cannot imagine how an
international development fund can be used to fund not a TECHNOCRATIC position
but a POLITICAL position such as a Minister of Finance and Minister of Justice,
etc., or any Minister who must be a card-carrying member for that matter, one
presumes. No one would quarrel if this differential money were paid to a
Technocrat - and this is where all reasonable people must agree - but to pay
this to a political appointee in a political position is an OUTRIGHT abuse of
the process.
CONSTITUTIONALITY
It is a cardinal concept of the
respect for THE RULE OF LAW that “The END does not justify THE MEANS”. As I
stated before, whoever negotiates a salary scale commensurate with his or her
market worth and obligations is COMPLETELY entitled to do so, and his or her
hirer is entirely free to do so – but within the law. In this case, the
CONSTITUTION of the Federal Republic of Nigeria CLEARLY and UNAMBIGUOUSLY
outlined a list of public servants and executive appointees whose salary must be
fixed by another constitutionally-sanctioned body – the Revenue Mobilization
Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC). Mind you, it did not specify a
uniform salary, but simply that such salary should be fixed by the RMAFC.
Nigeria IS A COUNTRY under law, not a Banana Republic, and such a clear and
unambiguous letter of the law must be obeyed.
In this case, the President has
clearly VIOLATED the law of the land.
COLLEGIALITY
The fact that the salaries of
the two ministers are above that of the President himself remove those other
ministers from the grumbling orbit: if whoever invited them to “work and eat”
is prepared to sacrifice his financial ego, who are they to complain?
Yet, the human mind is a frail
one, and nothing destroys collegiality more than the realization that a person
of comparable responsibility is being paid so much more than yourself. [I would
even imagine that Adeniji himself would not be too happy with the disclosure,
that a fellow Diasporan is being paid twice his salary!] In fact, I think that
it is a disservice to Okonjo-Iweala for all this brouhaha to happen the way it
has.
WHAT PRESIDENT OBASANJO
SHOULD HAVE DONE
So what should the President
have done? I outline four options below:
1. He should have gone to the
RMAFC to ask for the ability to have certain DIFFERENTIAL PAY scales for certain
cadres of appointees. He need not even specify those portfolios ahead of time.
It may even be a secret deal, but provided the RMAFC gives its imprimatur, then
everything would be kosher if it became public information. If the RMAFC does
not agree, then the president can appeal to the National Assembly, otherwise no
deal.
Mind you, he can still at this
time appeal to the RMAFC for retroactive approval of this particular “big big”
salary.
2. He could have taken
control of the particular ministry himself, eg OBJ could have appointed himself
Minister of Finance, but put the putative appointee as the SUBSTANTIVE minister
by putting him or her in the most senior administrative position there,
explaining EXACTLY why he is doing what he is doing. In effect, a technocrat
would have been appointed to do the work of a minister.
The president can still do this
– revert the Ministers in question to Technocrats - to display his desperation
at keeping them on their jobs.
3. A wrinkle to Part (b) is
for the president to revert the high-salaried ministers as Technocrats along
with willing Ministers other than he himself. It is not likely that either
minister will agree to this.
4. The neatest solution would
be for the president to pay the favored Ministers their constitutional salaries,
but let the RULING POLITICAL PARTY – the Peoples Democratic Party in this case –
to supplement their incomes to the tune that they agree to.
EPILOGUE
The key issue in all of the
above suggestions is that WE ALL still achieve what we want: competent people,
whether home-based or Diaspora, properly compensated according to agreed terms
- but WITHIN the LAW.
Let me repeat: the end DOES
NOT justify the means. We are NO LONGER in a military dictatorial regime, and
no ambition of ours should allow us to wink and to nod at the law. Our
president should NOT be allowed to do “right” things in a clumsy manner, for us
to hail him, to applaud him. That does not promote democracy.
Finally, we do not want
anything to be done to embarrass such competent persons as Okonjo-Iweala and
Adeniji and discourage them and those like them who might aspire to
conscientiously serve. More importantly, we do not wish to drive a wedge
between Diasporans and Nigerians at home. If not properly handled by us in the
Diaspora, it could do just that. This applies to petitioners for and against
these “big big” salaries.
I rest my case.
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