The Federal Executive Council on Monday adopted the Steve Oronsaye report on the reform of the civil service to cut cost of governance.
Minister of Information and National Orientation Mohammed Idris disclosed this at the end of the council meeting on Monday in Abuja.
He said that some Ministries, Departments and Agencies would be scrapped, merged or subsumed into relevant organisations of government.
Idris, however, said that the aim was only to cut costs and not throw Nigerians into the labour market.
The minister, who said that details of the affected MDAs would be made available soon, disclosed that a committee had been set up for its implementation.
Recall the Oronsaye report was submitted in 2012 to the Goodluck Jonathan administration.
In 2014, the Jonathan government released a white paper on the report.
The Muhammadu Buhari administration, after re-examining the white paper, also released a second white paper in August 2022 but did not implement the report.
However, the Tinubu administration has decided to take the Oronsaye report a step further and tackle the monster of high governance cost by implementing elements of the report.
TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the implementation will involve merging, subsuming and scrapping agencies with similar functions.
An 8-man committee has a 12-week deadline to ensure that the necessary legislative amendments and administrative restructuring needed to implement the reforms are effected in an efficient manner.
The committee comprises Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Head of the Civil Service, Attorney General and Justice Minister, and Budget and Planning Minister.
Others are DG Bureau of Public Service Reform, Special Adviser to the President on Policy Coordination, Special assistant to the president on National Assembly.
TNG reports the Cabinet Affairs Office will serve as the secretariat.
An analysis of the Oronsaye report showed 541 identified parastatals, commissions and agencies of the FG with 929 MDAs currently in the FG budgeting structure.
The number of statutory agencies would be reduced from 263 to 161, following the report. Fifty (50) of the identified agencies have no enabling laws. Thirty eight (38) federal agencies would be abolished.
Fourteen (14) agencies are to be reversed to departments in the federal ministry and 52 institutions are to be merged.
Key recommendations for implementation:
National Salaries, Income and wages Commission to be subsumed under Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Commission. The National Assembly will need to amend the constitution as RMAFC was established by the constitution.
Infrastructure Concession and Regulatory Commission to be merged with Bureau of Public Enterprise and be rechristened as `Public Enterprises and Infrastructural Concession Commission
National Human Rights Commission to swallow Public Complaints Commission
Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate(PTAD) to be scrapped and functions to be taken over by Federal Ministry of Finance
NEMA and the National Commission for Refugees to be fused to become the National Emergency and Refugee Management Commission
Border Communities Development Agency to become a department under National Boundary Commission
NACA and NCDC to be merged
SERVICOM to become a department under the Bureau for Public Service Reform(BPSR)
NALDA will return to the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security.
Federal Ministry of Science to supervise a new agency that combines NCAM, NASENI and PRODA
The National Commission for Museums and Monuments and the National Gallery of Arts will become one entity known as the National Commission for Museums, Monuments and Gallery of Arts.
National Theatre to be merged with National Troupe.
Directorate of Technical Cooperation in Africa and Directorate of Technical Aid Corp to be merged under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Nigerians in Diaspora Commission to become an agency under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Federal Radio Corporation and Voice of Nigeria to be one entity to be known as Federal Broadcasting Corporation of Nigeria
National Biotechnology Development Agency(NABDA) and the National Centre for Genetic Resources and Biotechnology to emerge into an agency known as the National Biotechnology Research and Development Agency (NBRDA).
The National Institute for Leather Science Technology and the National Institute for Chemical Technology will become one agency.
Nigeria Natural Medicine Development Agency and the National Institute of Pharmaceutical Research and Development will become one agency.
The National Metallurgical Development Centre and National Metallurgical Training Institute will be merged.
National Institute for Trypanosomiasis to be subsumed under the Institute of Veterinary Research in Vom, Jos.
The list above is not exhaustive, according to Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser, Information and Strategy to President Tinubu.