ICAN clarifies and supports the stoppage of Budgetary Allocation to Professional Bodies

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Our attention has been drawn to a news headline on some news media stating that FG will
stop funding of professional bodies and councils, while others carried it as FG stops budgetary
allocation to ICAN and other professional bodies. Since then our members have been calling
to confirm whether ICAN has been receiving budgetary allocation from the Federal
Government (FG). One thinking along this line is that members of ICAN are being asked to
pay subscription while the institute has been receiving budgetary allocations from government.
We observed that this information was communicated through a letter: Ref
DG/BDT/GEN.CORR/2016/XII/3067 dated 26th June, 2023 addressed to Nigerian Council of
Food Science and Technology, within the Federal Ministry of Science, Technology and
Innovation but not specifically to any professional body. Reading that letter, my understanding
is that budgetary allocation will no longer be made to that institution effective 31 December,
2026, the date it will be regarded as a self-funded organisation.
We want to state that once upon a time, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria
(ICAN) did indeed receive irregular meagre budgetary allocation of between N1 and N5 million
a year. In 1989/90 year, ICAN voluntarily returned the cheque for the budgetary allocation
back to Federal Government (FG) declaring itself a self-financed organisation.
I want to categorically state that since 1990 to date, ICAN has been a self-funded organisation
and does not receive any budgetary allocation from the FG. ICAN relies on members’
subscription, Professional Examination, Continuous Professional Development (CPD) and
Faculty programmes’ net fees, other self- financing events example Annual Accountants
Conference (AAC) as well as financial support from different organisations that identify with
the ICAN brand.
ICAN however welcomes the decision of the Presidential Committee on Salaries (PCS) to
discontinue budgetary allocation to Professional Bodies/Councils effective 31st December,

  1. We believe that like ICAN, all Professional Bodies should be self-financing
    organisations. On no account should budgetary allocation be extended to any professional
    body. This will assist in bringing down the high cost of public governance which we advocate
    for and as well discourage the proliferation of professional bodies.
    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 be made to the FRC to enable it fulfil 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 be able to execute the important mandate given to it.
    Finally, we call on all our members not to read meaning into the headline news as there may
    have been misinterpretation of the original intention behind the communication on
    discontinuance of budgetary allocation to professional bodies by the media.

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