Press Release
NPP
Part One
Part Two
CONTRIBUTION OF
MINORITY LEADER, OSEI KYEI-MENSAH-BONSU ON
BUDGET STATEMENT 2012
Madam Speaker, thank you for this opportunity
to contribute to the motion on the Budget
Statement for 2012.
The budget is the most important document that
governments produce. It is a powerful tool in
influencing economic and social development.
The budget determines whether there is
equitable access to services by different
groups of the population such as women,
children, the disabled, the poor and other
minority groups.
Article 179(1) provides for the President to
cause to be prepared and laid before
Parliament estimates of the revenue and
expenditure of the government of Ghana for the
following financial year. Essentially,
therefore, the budget is the President’s
document. The President only clothes one of
his Ministers with authority to present same
to Parliament. A person does not send an
emissary to deliver an important message and
leave his home before the message is
delivered. This is what our President, His
Excellency John Evan Atta Mills has done. It
is perhaps the first time in living memory
that a President of this nation has so
behaved.
Article 179(3) enjoins the Chief Justice to,
in consultation with the Judicial Council,
submit to the President both the estimates of
the administrative and development expenditure
of the Judiciary. 179(5) provides that the
estimates of the Judiciary shall be laid by
the President. It is interesting to note that
Article 179(5) unlike Article 179(1) does not
talk about the President causing to be laid
before Parliament the estimate of the
Judiciary. The article further provides that
the President in laying the estimates of the
Judiciary shall not revise or vary the figures
but may submit any recommendations that he may
have directly to Parliament. This house has as
of yet not been served with any
recommendations that the President has
submitted to Parliament in respect of the
budgets of the Judiciary,the Auditor-General
and the Parliament. What is the state of
affairs? Parliament ought to know.
As we learnt the other day at the post-budget
workshop at Ho, following the preparation of
the2012 budget, a cardinal principle of good
budgeting is Comprehensiveness. The budget
must cover all the fiscal operations of
government encompassing all public expenditure
and revenues to enable full and informed
debate of the trade-offs between different
policy options.
Government has succeeded in holding down
inflation. However arrears due from Government
to Ghana Commercial Bank, to SSNIT, to DACF,
to GETFUND, to public sector employees, to TOR
by way of subsidies on petroleum products, to
Road Fund, remain humongous. If government
pays the arrears what would be the effect on
inflation, how would the currency react, in
other words what will be the real value of the
cedi.
It is important not to be selective but to be
very comprehensive. The IMF’s world economic
outlook for 2011 in respect of developing
countries which includes Ghana, and in
particular for Sub-Saharan Africa indicated
that growth prospects was going to be very
resilient for 2011 and 2012 propelled by high
commodity prices, in our case, by cocoa, by
gold and oil (ref. to par. 21 on page 9 of the
Budget). The resilience which the Minister
spoke about is notas a result of his prudent
management, not any magic wand from him or
from the so-called Better-Ghana mantra.
Similarly, oil-exporting economies in the
region, i.e. those in stable production are
predicted to grow their GDP by a percentage
point over and above the 2011 growth rate. The
Minister makes this admission in paragraph 27
of the 2012 Budget Statement on page 10. So if
Ghana’s projected GDP growth rate is going to
drop from 13.6% to 9.8% the Minister owes the
nation a good explanation.
On inflation, government must be commended for
staying on track. But again, what are the
facts? The IMF predicted that in Sub-Saharan
Africa for 2011 and 2012 inflation was going
to be between 7 – 10% thanks mainly to
moderation in food and energy prices as
compared to 2007 – 2008 (ref. to para 28 & 29
of 2012 budget). In other words if inflation
in Ghana had shot off the 7 – 10% mark it
would have been very, very odd. Suitable
conditions,according to IMF prevailed for this
achievement, it is not a better Ghana agenda.
Second is predictability. Spending ministries,
departments and agencies should have certainty
about their allocations, especially in the
area of capital investment, to enable them to
plan ahead. Stable funding flows support
planning and efficient and effective delivery.
In critical areas like agriculture and
industry, release of funds in 2010 and 2011 in
the areas of investment amounted to less that
60%. How do we grow the economy with such
epileptic releases? In the 2012 budget
Statement the minister could not come clear on
the $3 Chinese Development Bank (CDB) loan.
Yet the $3 billion loan is the cornerstone of
the 2012 development component of the budget.
People are asking questions about infractions
of the Agreement on the PRMA which provides
that “……………..”. Provisions in the Agreement
without equivocation indicate that the
Agreement shall not be breach in of any local
law. Clearly, there is conflict. How
predictable is the $3 billion facility?
Third principle of good budget: transparency.
All relevant information required for sound
budgetary decision-making should be available
in accessible form. Budget information need to
be accurate, reliable and comprehensive. In
the area of petroleum revenue,government has
not been forthcoming with full disclosures of
facts. First,government has failed to come to
Parliament about what the allocations to GNPC
were used exactly on against the pledge of the
Minister of Finance last year. Second, the
Minister is required to submit a report
alongside the presentation of the current
budget on oil. The Minister failed to do this.
The Speaker ruled that this must be done. As I
speak that has not been complied with. Also
not compiled with is the excess in spending of
the approval level of the supplementary
budget.
Government has proposed amnesty for tax
evaders up to December 31, 2011. On the face
of it one could commend government for a bold
decision. The people of Ghana however need to
be informed about who are the big tax evaders
which government has in mind. What total
indebtedness are we looking at? Is it the case
that some companies have collected taxes from
employees and refused to pay, for instance?
Just what is the nature and character of the
skeletons in the cupboard. How far is it true
that some of the defaulting companies are
financing a particular political party and
hence the reason for the amnesty. The public
must know.
Fourth, public availability of the information
– The public should be provided with full and
not selective information on the past, current
and projected fiscal activity of government.
Information provided in the budget is a
pick-and-choose one. When it suits government
it quotes 2008 figures and juxtaposes with
2011 projections and 2012 anticipations. Other
times they dig into 2005 and 2006 figures.
Government projects a GDP growth rate of
13.6%. That on the face of it is commendable.
But since government is hammering its chest
for unprecedented performance, government
should disaggregate the figures appropriately;
what is the contribution of petroleum
production.
If we remove the growth attributed to oil
production, the growth in the non-oil economy
would about 7%, less than 2007 and 2008 growth
rates.
The WAMZ convergence criteria and Ghana having
satisfied all the four primary convergence
criteria. That is a good achievement and it is
important for the other four countries,
Guinea, Gambia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone to
strive hard to enable the ECO to be
introduced. If Liberia and Ghana migrate and
there are problems which of the two could
offer a bail out. Whilst we are that, it is
important to learn lessons from the tsunami
afflicting the countries of the Euro zone.
That notwithstanding, one thought that instead
of the NDC government making it appear as if
it is the Better Ghana Agenda that has led us
on this course, it would have been better for
government to have told us what the situation
was from 2001 to 2008 in the other West
African countries. In the 2011 budget, Dr.
Dufuor chose not to talk about that: Ref. to
Table 1 on page 13 of the 2011 Budget. From 1
in 2007 Ghana achieved 2 targets consistently
until 2008 when she slipped. At that time it
was only Gambia and Nigeria that in one year
attained all convergence criteria. The two
countries subsequently slipped. The others
achieved 1 & 2 and no more. That was then. Yet
selective as the Minister was he chose not to
let the nation know where we have all come
from.
Now there are two sets of criteria which
measure a nation’s progress. There is a
secondary convergence criteria. Please refer
to page 13 of the 2011 Budget Table 2. The NPP
administration moved from a zero achievement
situation in 2000 to achieving 3 out of six in
2006 and 2007 and slipped to 2 out of 6 in
2008, an election year. Of the six secondary
convergence criteria the NDC has dropped to
achieving just one. And they claim they are
doing better. Mr. Minister a key principle of
a good budget is providing full not selective
information to allow for sound debate.
In paragraph 59 of the 2012 budget the
Minister tells Ghanaians that production of
petroleum started in January 2011. However as
a nation we know production started in
December 2010. What happened to the quantities
produced in 2010?
The fifth principle of a good budget is that,
fiscal information shouldhave integrity. On
page 20 the figure for total expenditure 2011
end-year projections including arrears
clearance and tax refunds has been given as GH¢15,274.6
million. On page 27 the same figure has been
given as GH¢15,565.5 million. The variation is
GH¢290.9 million or ¢2.91 trillion. The
question is has the ¢2.91 trillion been spent
or has it not been spent? If it is has not
been spent, how did it surface, if it has been
spent how did it not appear and yet we had a
balanced account.
Again, it is important to observe that two
different figures have been quoted for the
total expenditure component of the 2011
Revised Budget Estimates. In the table on page
20 of the budget Statement, the figure is
given as GH¢12,938.0, on page 27 the same
figure is given as GH¢14,397.4. The difference
is GH¢1.459.4 million or ¢14.594 trillion. The
question is, how come?
On page 42 we have different figures in
paragraphs 147 and 148. It is indeed strange
that on the same page of the budget, two
paragraphs, one following immediately after
the other should provide two different sets of
figures. An analysis of the figures given
makes very interesting reading. Paragraph 148
provides higher total petroleum receipts: GH¢1,240.88
million against GH¢1,239.82 million. The
Receipts figure in paragraph 148 naturally
earns much more royalty payments, GH¢240.73
million against GH¢236.87 million in paragraph
147 which is GH¢236.87 million. Carried and
participating interest is GH¢628.92 against GH¢618.84.
What is strange,however is that in paragraph
148 the higher receipt attracts a lower
corporate tax of GH¢371.23 million against GH¢384.11
million.
In paragraph 784 it is stated that 32,358
Civil Service Staff were transferred to Local
Government Service in 2011. Paragraph 818
provides that 30,000 staff were transferred.
What happened to the 2,358 people. Were they
paid? Where were they paid, how much have they
been paid? Any incidence of double payment? A
budget should have integrity.
The Minister has
lots of explanation to do. The discrepancies,
the inconsistencies, the wide off-the-wall
expenditures, not to be philippic but
charitable do mean that the 2011budget which
provides the foundation for the 2012 budget
was afflicted with common problems with
budgeting namely; poor planning, poor
expenditure control, weak cash management,
ill-disciplined execution that leads to a
large gap between the budget as approved and
the budget as implemented. It also means
inadequate accounting systems. It means the
2012 budget is foundationed on poorly
organized and unreliable budget documentation.
Mr. Speaker, distinguished colleagues from the
Ministry side have distinguished themselves in
critiquing the various sectors of the economy.
I do not intend to go through the motion
again. I may want to emphasise four of the
salient issues raised.
Cont'd....1/2
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