Despite the complete shut down of all academic activities in
the Imo State University as a result of unpaid allowances and salaries, the Governor
of Imo State Nigeria, has clearly said that his administration do not need
above 200 workers in the civil service.
In an interview in Owerri, Owelle Rochas Anayo Okorocha said
that the gargantuan wage bill of the
state amounts to shortchanging generations
unborn.
“I don’t need more than 200 workers at the civil service of
Imo State but I need more than 100,000 in the agricultural sector of the state.
It’s like if this nation makes $1 trillion every day and ends up paying
salaries with it, there still will be no progress,” he said, adding that
“unless we address those basic issues and get people to work in the productive
sector of the economy, we cannot make any headway.”
He said currently the state spends 70 percent of its total
revenue – internally generated (IGR) and federal allocation on workers and
pensions, while 30 percent goes for development.
“If I have 70 percent of money that comes to the state for
capital expenditure, Imo State would look like London in the next five years,”
he noted.
Okorocha explained that no civil service workforce requires
more than a 1000 at most 2000 persons to run its affairs under the present
technology driven world, lamenting that in most cases 12, 000 persons are in
the civil service, with 80 percent of them doing nothing.
“Public service is not welfarism, unless we are having a
welfare state, where people can sit down and expect money. We have what is called
governance by investment and not people sitting down and collecting money
because that money they collect does not aid production.”
Okorocha specifically cited the health sector which he said
is not working, which, according to him, he has spent over N16 billion in the
past four years.
“I found the health sector of Imo State not doing well and I
found out that I have spent over N16 billion within four years in paying health
workers, yet no hospital was working. Meanwhile, doctors have their private clinics
working very well and nurses have their shops working but none of the
government’s hospitals were working and people are dying.”
He said Imo State currently gets about N4 billion to N5
billion monthly as against some other states like Akwa Ibom getting up to N25
billion monthly, that 80 percent of the state fund goes for recurrent
expenditure.
“So, that’s the problem we have. And those people are not
being productive. We are not saying that people should not work. When they are
qualified, can they work in the productive sector of the economy rather than
the cashiering and consuming sector of the economy in the name of welfarism or
workers’ welfare,” he noted.
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