President Bola Ahmed Tinubu .is planning to restructure the civil service to ensure effective an efficient service delivery to Nigerians.
in this regard some ministries will be merged, others scrapped while some new one will be created. The decision on which ministries wil be merged, scrapped and created is expected to be announce before the National Assembly finished screening an confirming the ministerial nominees submitted by the presidency this week.
Reports say the restructuring is based on the recommendation of the Stephen Oronsaye.
The Punch, reports that President Tinubu is set to implement some of these recommendations.
It said the Ministries of Education, Youths and Sports Development, Agricultural and Rural Development, Solid Minerals, Works and Housing, Power, and Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development are among those being considered for restructuring. These changes will also lead to the creation of new ministries.
The Ministry of Education into two: the Ministry of Tertiary Education and the Ministry of Basic Education, each overseeing tertiary and primary and secondary education respectively.
“The decision to create two ministries would improve the quality of service delivery in the two sectors,” sources in the civil service revealed.
The Ministry of Works and Housing will be unbundled, with a standalone Ministry of Works focusing on federal roads and highways and a revamped Ministry of Housing aimed at stimulating economic growth.

The Ministry of Humanitarian, Social Development and Disaster Management will be transformed into the Ministry of Human Development, with social development as one of its responsibilities.
The Federal Ministry of Transportation will be split into the Ministry of Railways and Rail Transport and the Ministry of Waterways and Marine Transportation.
The Ministry of Information will be renamed the Ministry of Information and National Orientation, with the National Orientation Agency taking on a significant role in disseminating information to the public.
Other new ministries will include Solid Minerals and Iron and Steel Development.
The Ministry of Budgeting and National Planning will be restructured, with budgeting merged with the Ministry of Finance, and National Planning moved to the newly formed Ministry of Statistics.
The Ministry of Commerce and Industry will also see changes, with the commerce component moved to the Ministry of Trade and Investment, and the industry component transferred to the new Ministry of Employment and Industry.
The Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, hinted at these changes in a recent interaction with journalists.

However, it remains unclear whether the Tinubu administration will scrap some ministries and agencies per the Oransanye report.
Despite this uncertainty, experts believe the restructuring process will benefit certain ministries and facilitate the steady implementation of government policies.













