Ekiti State has moved up from the 24th position ir attained in 2018 to 4th in the States Budget Transparency Index 2020 Ranking.

Consequently, the state government is pleased of this uncommon feat, even as the state has been independently adjudged to regularly make public its State Draft Budget Estimates, State Budget Appropriation Law, State Approved Estimates, State Citizen’s Budget, State Quarterly Reports, State Mid-Year Review, State Accountant General’s Report, and State Auditor-General’s Report.

The Sub-National Budget Transparency Survey, SNBTS, is a project implemented by the Civil Resource Development and Documentation Centre, CIRDDOC, and funded by the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, FCDO, formerly known as DFID/UKAid.

The general goal of the SNBTS is to encourage transparency in the budgeting process across the 36 states of the federation by focusing on key indicators,which include: public availability of budget information; public participation in the budget process; the strength of the oversight institutions; and public availability of procurement information.

According to the report, majority of states improved their 2020 scores on the State Budget Document Availability Index, but Ekiti and five other states were exceptional for scoring above 60 points, and performing very well in the democratisation of access to budget information.

Executive Director, CIRDDOC Nigeria, Ral Nwankwo-Obioha, said, “CIRDDOC developed the SNBTS project with the objectives to compare the degree of budget transparency across states; promote international best practices with regards to the budgeting and budget process in the states, and to inspire and encourage the spirit of ‘competitiveness’ amongst states towards promoting budget transparency and government accountability.”

Significantly, and in line with the objectives of the report, Ekiti State has played host to many states in a bid to understudy the John Kayode Fayemi Budgetary Model, and apply the principles in their respective states.

In his first term in office, Fayemi introduced a unique approach to participatory budgeting in sub-Saharan Africa, which entails ensuring all communities in the state have inputs in the preparation of the budget during town hall meetings conducted across the state, and this revolutionary model ensures that communities have a say in determining their priority projects, and are also empowered with the resources to directly implement and supervise them in their respective communities.

This model accounts for Ekiti’s very strong showing in the assessment report.

On the ‘Availability of Key Budget Documents’ section of the survey, Ekiti scored 71 points, a fitting testimony to the efficiency of the Fayemi Budgeting Model, that mandates all state contracts to be published on the government’s website – www.ekitistate.gov.ng – which has been widely adjudged as one of the best public sector websites in the country, for proactive disclosure amongst other positive attributes.

Under Fayemi, all state government contracts are published online, and anyone can access information on any matter along the entire government procurement chain.

Reacting to the new Ekiti ranking, the state Commissioner for Budget and Planning, Mr. Femi Ajayi, said, “This feat is a landmark testimony to the Fayemi administration’s open, transparent, and participatory approach to governance. The government of Ekiti State, Nigeria is the pioneer state to domesticate the Freedom of Information Act, FoIA, and the first state in the South-West to sign up to the Open Government Partnership, OGP. We are certain that with the reforms in the budgeting process that has further taken roots in the state, we would claim the first position in next year’s ranking, like we did in 2015 at the end of the Fayemi administration’s first term in office.”

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