Chairman of the Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC), Prof.Tunji Olaopa, has canvassed sweeping reforms in Nigeria’s civil service system to strengthen meritocracy, professionalism, institutional efficiency and workforce productivity in line with evolving global realities.
Olaopa made the call at the International Civil Service Conference 2026 in Abuja, during a high-level panel discussion attended by the chairmen of civil service commissions across the federation, including representatives from the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and Kano State, as well as delegates from 16 foreign countries.
Speaking on the mandate and evolution of the Commission, Olaopa explained that the Commission, originally established in 1954 as the Public Service Commission before becoming the Civil Service Commission in 1979, derives its constitutional powers to appoint, promote, and discipline civil servants while protecting the nation’s merit system and public service ethics.
“The Commission remains the custodian of merit and professionalism within the public service. Competence, qualification, integrity, and performance must continue to guide recruitment, promotion, and career progression without compromising the Federal Character principle,” he said.
The FCSC chairman noted that the Commission once played a pivotal role in building Nigeria’s globally respected civil service culture but lamented that decades of politicisation, poor funding, mass retirements, weak institutional frameworks, and policy inconsistencies had weakened standards and administrative efficiency.
“Over the years, institutional decline affected the capacity of the civil service to deliver effectively. It became necessary to undertake bold reforms capable of repositioning the Commission for present and future governance demands,” he said.
He disclosed that upon assumption of office, the current leadership conducted a comprehensive institutional assessment which led to the development of a strategic reform plan already approved by the Federal Executive Council.
According to him, the reform agenda is designed to transform the Commission into a modern, technology-driven, and professionally competent institution.
Highlighting some of the achievements already recorded, Olaopa said the Commission had successfully migrated from manual recruitment processes to a digital e-recruitment platform and introduced transparent computer-based promotion examinations.
He also revealed that the Commission revived the National Council on Civil Service Commissions after more than 12 years of inactivity and restored Nigeria’s active participation in regional public service institutions, including the African Association for Public Service Commissions.
“Our reforms are focused on restoring transparency, accountability, and operational efficiency. Technology and professionalism are critical pillars for building a future-ready civil service,” he said.
Despite the progress made, Olaopa identified weak institutional capacity, inadequate digital infrastructure, shortage of specialised manpower, and welfare concerns as major obstacles confronting sustainable reforms.
He warned that reform programmes that fail to address workers’ welfare and performance support systems could face resistance from civil servants.
“A reform process must remain human-centred. Civil servants must be supported with the right welfare systems, training opportunities, and performance management frameworks that encourage productivity and professional development,” he said.
Olaopa assured stakeholders that the Commission remains committed to building a modern civil service that is efficient, accountable, innovative, and fully prepared to meet the future demands of governance.
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