By ABUBAKAR YUNUSA

Former Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, has revealed that the Federal Government uncovered about 45,000 ‘ghost workers’ by integrating the Bank Verification Number (BVN) into its payroll system.
She disclosed this during a recent dialogue at the Citadel School of Government in Lagos, where she spoke on the role of technology in improving public sector efficiency.
Adeosun served as Nigeria’s finance minister under former President Muhammadu Buhari from November 2015 until her resignation on September 14, 2018, following an NYSC certificate controversy.
The former minister also served as chairman of the board of African Export–Import Bank.
Adeosun explained that the federal payroll was the government’s largest expenditure at the time, weighed down by inefficiencies within the civil service.
“The payroll was our biggest cost,” she said, noting that earlier reforms had struggled to gain traction.
“Previous biometric efforts had stalled because paramilitary groups refused to cooperate. We bypassed this by using BVN data. We ran the federal payroll against the BVN database, and the result was staggering: we found 45,000 ‘ghost workers.’”
She further clarified that many of the irregularities were not necessarily the work of organised syndicates but often stemmed from weak systems and abuse by individuals.
“In many cases, it wasn’t a ‘ghost,’ but one person’s BVN linked to seven different salaries. It wasn’t always a ‘cartel.’ Sometimes it was just inefficiency, people who had died or transferred but were still being paid,” she added.

READ MORE  Covid-19 pandemic knocks Auctioneers activities-Kiliya

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here