FRC, Quantity Surveyors Sign MoU Against Abuse of MDAs’ Contract Awards, Procurement Irregularities
Ndubuisi Francis in Abuja
The Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS) has expressed its resolve to provide expertise in forensic cost auditing of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) of the federal government with a view to checking contract inflation, value misrepresentation, and procurement irregularities, as well as contributing during pre-appropriation and Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) review stages where fiscal risks were highest.
The NIQS President, Dr. Aminu Mohammed Bashir, gave the assurance during the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the Institute and the Fiscal Responsibility Commission (FRC) in Abuja on the weekend.
FRC is a federal agency established by the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007, with the primary mandate to promote macroeconomic stability, ensure transparency and accountability in public finance, and enforce prudent management of the nation’s resources.
According to a statement issued by the Deputy Director, Strategic Communications Directorate, FRC, Bede Ogueri Anyanwu, the NIQS president underscored the need for
Prudent and transparent public expenditure, saying this cannot be fully achieved without professional cost intelligence on capital projects.
Bashir described the relationship between the FRC and the Institute as one founded on a shared conviction that public resources must be managed with discipline, transparency, and professional rigour.
He explained that the first MoU, executed on October 22, 2021, gave institutional expression to this conviction, adding that the purpose of the current engagement was to renew and deepen the collaboration.
According to him, quantity surveyors operate at the precise intersection where public funds are either protected or lost, explaining that they measure costs, verify values, detect inflationary practices, and provide forensic evidence where contracts have been manipulated, thereby supporting accountability and transparency.
Bashir noted that the FRC’s mandate to ensure prudent and transparent public expenditure cannot be fully achieved without professional cost intelligence for capital projects, describing the collaboration between the two institutions as a functional necessity rather than a matter of convenience.
The NIQS, he said, remains committed to supporting the commission’s mandate through joint physical verification exercises to ensure that projects reported in MDAs’ budgets and expenditure returns accurately reflect realities on the ground.
He added that the Institute would also provide expertise in forensic cost auditing to detect contract inflation, value misrepresentation, and procurement irregularities, and would contribute during the pre-appropriation and Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) review stages, when fiscal risks are highest.
Bashir further pledged the Institute’s support in delivering specialized capacity-building programmes for FRC staff in areas such as construction economics, capital project cost management, procurement integrity, and forensic analysis of infrastructure expenditure.
Earlier in his remarks, the Acting FRC chairman, Mr. Charles Chukwuemeka Abana, expressed appreciation to the Institute’s leadership for the goodwill extended to him following his recent appointment as acting head of the Commission.
He underscored the cordial and productive relationship between the two institutions over the years and congratulated Bashir on his recent election as President of the NIQS.
Abana described his emergence as a reflection of his professional competence, wealth of experience, and the confidence reposed in him by members of the Institute.
According to him, the partnership between the FRC and NIQS has remained mutually beneficial and strategically important in promoting transparency, accountability, prudence, and value-for-money principles in public financial management.
He noted that the first MoU signed between the two institutions on October 22, 2021, significantly strengthened the Commission’s capital projects verification exercises through the Institute’s consistent technical expertise and professional support.
He commended NIQS for nominating competent professionals to participate in nationwide verification exercises, thereby enhancing the quality, credibility, and effectiveness of the process.
