Aregbesola, Osun State and unpaid salaries

It is no longer news that Osun is one of the 24 states that are currently feeling the brunt of the current national economic crunch occasioned by the theft of 400,000 barrels of oil daily, and slump in global oil price, which subsequently led to the reduction in monthly allocations to states. The 24 states reportedly owe their workers several months’ salaries.

 

Rauf Aregbesola

Expectedly, in some of the states, workers are agitating. In Osun State, for instance, the state civil servants recently began an indefinite strike action, “due to the failure of the government to accede to our legitimate demands, as contained in our letter to the government dated May 12, 2015.”

 

Local government employees are not owed any salary arrears except in delayed allocation. As it is now, things are a bit more complicated for the people and government of the state. Coping with dwindling resources, unpaid salaries and labour unrest is not, in any way, a palatable experience for any government. Sadly, this is what Rauf Aregbesola is currently contending with in Osun.

 

It is, however, distressing that the current development is aimed at dwarfing the commendable and selfless service that Aregbesola has so far rendered to the good people of Osun. The governor, while inaugurating the sixth House of Assembly had gone down memory lane, recounting how in less than 100 days in office his administration engaged 20,000 youths in public works through the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES). Through innovative financial engineering, the administration was able to restructure a weakening loan it met and put the state on a healthier financial footing. Not only that, the administration also embarked on infrastructure renewal and development, which transformed the state in all sectors.

 

The government has equally helped to develop the local economy.

 

Unfortunately, in an attempt to score cheap political points with the current economic situation in the state, some people have been accusing the state government of financial recklessness. Contrary to this mischievous claim, however, it needs to be stressed that Aregbesola has run, perhaps, the most prudent and transparent government in the country, thus far. The governor in his address to the sixth Assembly recalled that for nearly a year, after he reclaimed his stolen mandate, he did not constitute a cabinet. This shrewd move enabled his government to make some savings that were later put into good public use in public education, agriculture, job creation, road construction, culture and tourism, environmental sanitation and beautification, flood control, rural development among others.

 

The fact of the matter is that Osun, just like many other states in the country, is currently facing economic challenges whose nature transcends local rationalisation. Prior to the dawn of this present national economic predicament, the state had faithfully discharged its responsibilities to its workers. For not less than 30 months, there was no record of rancorous moment with its workers. Indeed, the state, despite its lean purse, is one of the few in the country that paid its workforce a 13th-month salary every December. Definitely, it won’t be fair to label such a government as anti-worker.

 

In reality, the current situation began in 2012 when the state’s overheads outlay increased because of the federal government’s arbitrary increase in minimum wage without recourse to the capacity of the states to meet up. The state was caught in the web of this increase and eventually had to increase junior workers salary. This ultimately led to the increase of total emoluments from N1.4 billion to the N2.7 billion, an increase of almost 100 per cent. A few months later, the wage bill rose to the N3.5 billion. Ironically, despite the rise in wage bill, the statutory allocation of the state was N2.5 billion by December 2012. By July of 2013, the wage bill was N4 billion, while statutory allocation decreased to the N2.1 billion. By now, the minimum wage increase was extended to senior workers.

 

Therefore, one would canvas that the workers in the state call off their strike and team up with the governor to find a lasting solution to the financial crisis in the state. Their cause is a justified one, and they deserve their wages, but the strike option would only worsen the parlous financial situation of the state. It is simply a counter-productive alternative. Since the state government did not hide the facts concerning the finances of the state from them, the rational thing to do is to put faith in the already existing line of communication between them and government. Aregbesola is yet to constitute a new cabinet as a respect for the understanding he reached with the workers to cut the cost of governance.

 

In an earlier article on this subject titled ‘Unpaid Salaries: A Major Challenge for Buhari’, I suggested that we could revisit the concept of global taxation for all citizens. We have relegated this major source of funding government to the background and over the years relied more on oil. I just hope we have learnt our lessons. Osun, until Aregbesola got to the saddle, was predominantly a civil servant state where little or no other industry thrives. This means that the source of government revenue is limited to the taxes the civil servants pay. If every eligible resident does their duty to the state, I am convinced we would readily put this ugly scenario behind us. Government the world over runs on the taxes paid by its citizens; we cannot be an exception. The rent collection era is gradually disappearing. I still hope President Muhammadu Buhari would still find a way to provide succour to the financially-distressed states in the form of bailout. If we could bail out the banks, we should be able to bail out the states. The Greek bailout programme is a good reference.

 

On a final note, it is important to stress that the allocation that goes to each state from the federation account is for the entire state, not for the public service alone. It is meant to provide infrastructure, provide basic services and not for the payment of salaries alone. The public workforce, in any state, does not constitute up to 20 per cent of the entire population. Therefore, it would be undemocratic to spend the bulk of a state’s resources on wage bills. After paying salaries, government cannot fold its arms to security, and it cannot close its eyes to health care and other critical issues. As bad as the situation seems, Osun workers should tread a cautious path by working with the government to straighten things out. What currently obtains is just a temporary set-back that definitely won’t last forever.
• Raji wrote in from Lagos State.

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