The federal government has stopped allocating funds to professional organizations and councils, and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) has reacted.
While praising the gesture, ICAN President Innocent Okwuosa stated in a statement on Thursday that the organization had deliberately ceased accepting the government’s yearly N1 million and N5 million contributions 34 years earlier.
“We want to state that once upon a time, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) received an irregular meager budgetary allocation of between N1 and N5 million a year. In 1989/90 years, ICAN voluntarily returned the cheque for the budgetary allocation back to the Federal Government (FG), declaring itself a self-financed organization.
“I want to categorically state that since 1990, ICAN has been a self-funded organization and does not receive any budgetary allocation from the FG. ICAN relies on members’ subscriptions, Professional examinations, Continuous Professional Development (CPD) and Faculty programs’ net fees, other self-financing events such as Annual Accountants Conference (AAC), and financial support from organizations that identify with the ICAN brand.
“However, we do not support the discontinuance of budgetary allocations to some Regulatory Councils that function as parastatals example, the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRC) and National Council on Climate Change (NCCC).
“We will advocate for more budgetary allocations to the FRC to enable it to fulfill its many mandates. Similarly, given that climate change and energy transition are now burning global and local issues, the NCCC will need more budgetary allocations to execute its important mandate.”
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