 According to analysis, the budgetary allocation for the presidential air fleet has increased by 190% in the last four years. For 2022, 13 billion Naira has been budgeted for local trips and maintenance of the presidential fleet. A political pundit says 13 billion Naira is not exorbitant compared to the cost of maintaining the aircraft. In 2022, the president is expected to spend 13 billion Naira on his presidential fleet. Bahari will spend 2.4 billion on compliance with mandatory upgrades on the aircraft. Two billion Naira will be spent on the overhaul of Gulfstream G550, Falcon 7X and CL-605 engines. Another two billion Naira on the repair of air navigational equipment and the poachers of aircraft calibration equipment will garb 500 million Naira. According to the budget document, the presidency also budgeted 210 million Naira to purchase three seven avionics for AW 139 helicopters and 250 million to buy aviation fuel for the presidential air fleet. About 1.6 million is provided for the poachers of vehicles and spare parts. Another 1.6 billion Naira will be for general maintenance in the presidential air fleet while one billion Naira will be spent on the maintenance of the aircraft. Commenting, a political analyst Joseph Ebiigwa is our opinion that says 13 billion Naira is not enough to maintain a private jet. In flight operations, there is what we call the DC checks. We have what we call the post checks. We have what we call the pre checks. We have what we call the weekly maintenance or inspection checks. And these are factored into the costs of maintaining an aircraft. And if you look what private individuals use in maintaining their private jets, you will see that the 13 billion budgeted by this administration is not actually too exorbitant. An economic expert Richard Inoyo has over time argued against the high cost of governance in Nigeria. Inoyo emphasised the need to avoid redundancy. For me, I don't think it's a good thing in light of the fact that the Nigerian economy is going through hood boring, just to finance its deficits. So if not for anything, what the country needs right now is to reduce the costs of governance, reducing the costs of running the mechanism of government. And yeah, we're seeing a review upward in a time where our building financially in terms of deaths is rising. 18 billion Naira is the highest that has been budgeted for the maintenance of presidential fleet under the administration of Goodluck Jonathan. While the least was 3.54 billion Naira, messy bubble for plus TV Africa.