The refusal of the National Assembly
to approve the 2013 budgetary allocation of the Securities and Exchange
Commission is taking a heavy toll on the finances of the organisation.
Investigations by our correspondent
on Wednesday showed that SEC had not paid March salaries of its workers.
It was learnt that if the zero
allocation continued, crisis of confidence might hit the stock market.
Top management officials of SEC, who
spoke on the condition of anonymity owing to the sensitive nature of the
matter, told our correspondent that the development was causing a delay in the
payment of salaries and allowances.
For instance, one of the officials
stated that workers had yet to get their March salaries due to lack of funds.
Prior to the resolution of the
lawmakers not to allocate money to SEC, it was learnt that members of staff of
the commission usually got their salaries between the 24th and 27th day of
every month.
Investigations also revealed that the
delay in the payment of salaries and other allowances was affecting the morale
of the workers.
The source said, “The bickering between
SEC and the National Assembly is beginning to affect our operations. As I speak
to you now, we have not been paid our March salaries.
“We normally get our salaries latest
24th of every month before this problem started, but all that is history now.
When you are working hard and you don’t get you salary at the end of the month,
it affects productivity and that is what we are experiencing here at the
commission.
“Staff morale is becoming low by the
day and when such things happen, the stock market, which we regulate, may feel
the negative impact.”
Another senior official of the
commission confirmed the development and added that the zero allocation was
causing a crisis confidence in the capital market.
The source said, “The only thing I
will confirm to you now is that the zero allocation is causing confidence
crisis because people are beginning to wonder about the regulatory capacity of
SEC.
“There are resource inputs that we
get to regulate the (stock) market and these inputs are paid for. But the
problem we have now is that people who provide these services now are beginning
to question our capacity to meet our obligations to them.”
Continuing, the source added, “The
commission has in the last few years worked very hard to reposition the capital
market and the results have started manifesting before this issue of no
allocation.
“If there is low staff morale, then
it will affect our regulatory and market development function over the capital
market.”
The House of Representatives had in a
letter to SEC’s Director, Finance and Administration, warned the management of
the commission not to spend any fund on its operations this year unless approved
by the National Assembly.
The letter, which was written by the
Chairman, House Committee on Legislative Compliance, Mr. Moruf Akinderu-Fatai,
also stated that spending any fund without the authorisation of the National
Assembly would be a breach of the 2013 Appropriation Act.
The letter appeared to be a move by
the House to enforce its resolution demanding the sacking of the
Director-General, SEC, Ms. Arunma Oteh, on the grounds of not being qualified
to head the agency.
When contacted, the Communications
Adviser to the SEC DG, Mr. Obi Adindu, said the issue was being addressed by
the management of the commission.
“This issue is above my pay grade. It
is a matter my bosses are handling,” he said.
The House of Representatives’ letter,
which was copied to the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; Secretary
to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Pius Anyim; and SEC’s governing board,
read in part, “I write in the above regard to put the board and management of
the Securities and Exchange Commission on formal notice of the fact of the
House of Representatives resolution on the Securities and Exchange Commission.
“You will recall that the
Securities and Exchange Commission had submitted its budgetary proposal for
2013 to the House. You will recall that no approval was passed back to the
Securities and Exchange Commission.
“Further to this, and most importantly, the National
Assembly had vide the 2013 Appropriation Act, item 9, Part E, Clause 10, stated
thus: ‘All revenues, however, described, including all fees received, fines,
grants, budgetary provisions and all internally and externally generated
revenue shall not be spent by the Securities and Exchange Commission for
recurrent, capital purposes or for any other matters, nor liabilities thereon
incurred except with prior appropriation by the National Assembly.’
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