Abuja makes N1.19b from expatriate quota fees

Expatriates work in many sectors of the Nigerian economy

Abuja makes N1.19b from expatriate quota fees, surpasses budget

By Jeph Ajobaju, Chief Copy Editor

Abuja anticipated N600 million as revenue from issuance of expatriate quotas in  2023 but has nearly doubled it, having garnered N1.19billion in the first 10 months of the year to October (M 10).

Interior Minister Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo disclosed during the defence of the ministry’s budget before federal lawmakers that in both 2022 and 2023 fiscal years, the ministry surpassed its revenue targets on expatriate quotas and marriages.

Which means that although Nigerians are trooping abroad, nationals of other countries come to Nigeria and see it as a good place to live and work.

Also, as Nigerians marry foreigners when they go abroad, foreigners Nigerians also come to Nigeria and marry its citizens.

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Fees from expatriate quotas and marriages

Tunji-Ojo told the joint Senate and House of Representatives  Committee on Interior Ministry charges for issuance of expatriate quotas alone in 2023 fetched N1.195 billion by October, per reporting by Vanguard.

“Aside the projected revenue from expatriate quotas that has been surpassed by about N600 million, the N380 million projected revenue from marriage has also been surpassed by over N500 million with N892.774 million realised as at October 31, 2023,” Tunji-Ojo explained.

The committee took on the ministry on the issuance of expatriate quotas, saying it  serves as an avenue for stealing jobs from Nigerians.

But Tunji-Ojo assured the lawmakers the ministry has already launched a project called Expatriate Employee Network (EEN) that will project local jobs from being taken by expatriates and also prevent expatriate workers from evading tax payment.

At least 1,197 Nigerian doctors have left for UK since Tinubu became President

Expatriates come to Nigeria just as Nigerians also go abroad to work, but there may be far fewer inflow than outflow.

At least 1,197 Nigerian-trained doctors have relocated to the United Kingdom alone since Bola Tinubu became President on May 29, continuing the exodus that escalated in the Muhammadu Buhari years of the locust.

The new figure puts Nigeria on the cusp to overtake Pakistan as the country with second highest number of doctors working in the UK, where there are also plans to recruit 300,000 doctors into the National Health Service (NHS) in the next couple of years to boost healthcare delivery.

India currently has the most doctors in the UK, followed by Pakistan and Nigeria, according to data compiled by the UK General Medical Council (GMC) the public body in charge of the official register of medical practitioners in the country.

About 1,197 doctors trained in Nigeria were licensed in the UK between 29 May and 1 December 2023, but their total number in that country is now 12,198 – excluding Nigerian doctors trained in the UK and other countries.

Yearly rate of emigration to UK

The yearly rate of the emigration of Nigerian-trained doctors to the UK from 2015 is as follows:

  • 2015 – 233
  • 2016 – 279
  • 2017 – 475
  • 2018 – 852
  • 2019 – 1,347
  • 2020 – 833
  • 2021 – 932

The number of some Nigerian-trained doctors practising in different medical fields in the UK is distributed as follows:

  • Anaesthetics and intensive care medicine – 73
  • Emergency medicine – 61
  • General medicine – 241
  • Obstetrics and gynecology – 207
  • Occupational medicine – 17
  • Ophthalmology – 16
  • Pediatrics – 164
  • Pathology – 50
  • Public health – 35
  • Psychiatry – 357
  • Psychiatry – 29
  • Surgery – 135

Nigerian may soon be forced to import doctors

The rate of exodus of medical personnel is of great national concern, with the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) lamenting the country may have to import doctors in the future.

“Some African countries are also beginning to poach from Nigeria,” said Emem Bassey, a professor and Chairman of the Committee of Chief Medical Directors of Federal Tertiary Hospitals.

“The West Coast is looking for our specialists. So many people are now going to places like Sierra Leone and Gambia and the wages they earn are $3,000 to $4,000.

“It is about three to four times what they earn back home. So we are beginning to see that people are leaving for other African countries too.

“The health sector is currently undergoing a major crisis in terms of manpower. What we are seeing is that medical specialists, not just doctors, even nurses, even more nurses, are leaving.

“Doctors, nurses, laboratory scientists, physiotherapists, radiographers and all manner of health professionals are leaving the country in droves.”

Jeph Ajobaju:
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