Press Release
NPP
December 08, 2015
RESPONSE OF THE
MINORITY NPP TO THE 2015 BUDGET STATEMENT
AND ECONOMIC POLICY OF THE GOVERNMENT AND
CURRENT EVENTS – JANUARY 8, 2015
Part Two
Part One
IMF POSSIBLE PROGRAM AND RELATED ISSUES
The Government announced to the world that
it was seeking the support of an IMF
supported program to help address the
current imbalances in the economy. On the
basis of this, it was able to calm the
nerves of investors and issue a $1 billion
sovereign bond. In the prospectus that
sought to convince investors, the Minister
of Finance indicated that a substantial
portion of the amount borrowed would be used
for infrastructure development and critical
projects. What projects did the Minister of
Finance have in mind? The Minister should
list and provide a detailed plan of what
projects he has in mind.
We are reliably informed that the amount
raised has been used to reduce government’s
indebtedness at the Central Bank and that
the funds are not available anymore for the
purpose for which it was raised. The NPP
Minority in Parliament have already raised
red flags on this and called on the Minister
of Finance to answer questions relating to
the $1billion sovereign bond. How untruthful
can a government be? How can we borrow such
a huge amount to fill a gap at the Bank of
Ghana? Is this the use to which
non-concessional borrowing should be put?
This is a very serious development and
Government should realize that its
credibility is being shred into tatters!
In the 2015 budget statement, there are no
visible elements of an underlying agreement
on an IMF supported framework. In all
likelihood therefore the nation will see a
revised budget statement if a final deal is
concluded in 2015. Where is the financing
coming from to fill the budget gap? Are
Donors likely to disburse without an IMF
agreement and in the midst of corruption
especially in payroll administration? Is the
government planning on using parastatals
like GNPC (which has recently purportedly
entered into an agreement to borrow $700
million without parliamentary approval in
violation of the Constitution and the
Petroleum Revenue Management Act) to fill
the gap? What will the government do if
there is no IMF agreement? The questions are
tall and this budget is therefore clouded
with so much uncertainty going forward.
The 2015 budget is supposed to be the work
programme of the government for a period of
just one year. The programme should be
predictable in order to be able to offer
assurance to potential investors. If we
cannot plan for one year then it will be
difficult to woo investors.
PILLARS OF TRANSFORMATIONAL AGENDA
Ladies and Gentlemen, we are told in
paragraph 131 of the budget statement that
the transformational agenda rests on three
strategic interventions, namely:
i. strengthening and deepening the essential
elements and institutions of good
governance. Parliament is the bastion of
democratic governance. How has Parliament
been strengthened in the budget? The
Electoral Commission is an essential
institution in good governance. How has that
institution been resourced in this budget?
Charity, they say, begins at home.
Parliamentary democracy is not strengthened
if their request is decimated. We know the
Electoral Commission has not been allocated
resources to perform some critical
activities which they need to do in 2015
preparatory to the 2016 General and
Presidential elections. The sign posts are
emerging. The Finance Minister should not by
his actions and inactions create a situation
where the December 2016 elections would be
engulfed in confusion. Nobody should have
any cause to complain again. And that is why
we urge the Minister of Finance to do what
is right, immediately.
ii. Promoting export-led growth through
products that build up on Ghana’s
comparative strength in agricultural raw
materials is the second of three strategic
interventions. There has been a paradigm
shift in the international economy and
geopolitics: the discourse now is on
competitive advantage and no longer
comparative advantage or strength. The
Minister should be alert to the
socio-economic philosophy of the day and not
immerse himself in ideas of yesteryears.
and
iii. The third is “anchoring industrial
development through prudent use of natural
resources based on locally processed value
addition.
AGRICULTURE
Fellow Ghanaians, the second strategic
intervention that government intends to make
is in the area of agriculture to promote
export-led growth. The question to ask is
which agricultural product is government
piloting in this promotion? The budget
mentions only one agric product, cotton
(Ref. Par. 351). If we want to stimulate
growth in the cotton industry, then we need
to be more scientific. The bud of Ghana’s
cotton is small and, therefore, the yarns of
cotton produced in Ghana are short and
twining comes with additional expenditure.
This is why the Akosombo, Juapon and Tema
Textile companies, as early as in the
sixties, had to import long-yarned cotton
from Egypt and Sudan. Unfortunately, the
budget does not provide any solutions to
this, going forward.
Re-afforestation has almost collapsed whilst
logging has gone into high gear. The latter
contributed 16.5% in the overall
agricultural growth of 5.3% in 2014. It
should tell us that we are fast depleting
our forest cover. At the turn of the 20th
Century the forest cover of Ghana was
8.5million hectares. Today, the forest cover
is less than 700,000 hectares. In 2014 there
were many reported cases of chainsaw
activities and illegal lumbering. We are not
sure anybody heard of new acreages of
degraded lands being reafforested! If
agricultural growth as contained in the 2015
document, is being led by logging in the
face of serious deforestation, the nation
should be scared.
Fellow citizens, if we must admit it,
agriculture is not doing well (ref. pg.12).
Agriculture is not doing well because of the
paltry budgetary allocation to the sector.
In December 2013 we lamented the fact that
only 1.07% of total budgetary allocation
went to agriculture in 2014 that is
excluding the ABFA from the Petroleum Fund.
This explains why in 2014, $1.5billion of
foodstuffs was imported into the country
against a food import bill of $600million in
2008.
Out of the total GH¢44billion budget figure
for 2015 only GH¢484.3million equivalent to
1.1% is allocated to the Ministries of
Agriculture and Fisheries and agriculture
Development. How do we grow agriculture with
such pittance?
The import of fish poultry, tomatoes,
cooking oil, have all almost doubled between
2008 and 2014.
In 2013 we lamented that the true state of
the food, agriculture and cocoa subsector is
one of stagnation. Real growth in
agriculture spiraled downwards from 7.4% in
2008 to 7.2% in 2009 through 5.3% in 2010
then 0.8% in 2011; 2.3% in 2012 and 5.0% in
2013. The projected growth for 2014 is 5.2%.
Clearly, a major reason for the decline of
agriculture has been the decline of the
share of agriculture in the total budgetary
allocation. From 3.0% in 2009 it climbed
down to 1.9% in 2012 and 1.07% in 2013. Add
onto this the tax that was slapped on
matchetes, fertilizers, hoes, other farming
equipments, fishing nets, and premix fuel.
The result of this is reduced food security
for the country and low productivity
resulting in low income for farmers.
Over the past three years we have lamented
the stagnation of growth in the production
of basic food staples (cereals, legumes,
roots and tubers). The huge yearly
fluctuations in outputs and the rising
imports of rice from 395,400 metric tonnes
in 2008 to 543,465 metric tonnes in 2011 and
over 600,000 metric tonnes in 2013 for which
alone the nation spent US$374million (ref.pg
11 of 2014 State of the Nation Address)
provide ample testimony to the deepened food
insecurity in the country. Today the nation
is on the brink of serious shortages in the
supply of maize a major staple in all parts
of the country. In 2014 Crops was projected
to grow at 5.8% but the out-turn was 3.6%
which is 38% short of what was anticipated
to be produced.
Production of meat and fish has not seen
much growth and that is why,
correspondingly, there has been a steady
increase in the importation of livestock and
poultry products: from 128,000 metric tonnes
in 2008, to 139,000 tonnes in 2011,
$170million in 2013 and $283million on
imported fish. Government was least serious
in its policy on poultry in 2013 – 2014. For
in 2013 the Ministry of Agriculture raised
and distributed 8000 cockerels to 500
farmers – so each farmer had 16 cockerels!!
In 2009 the NDC government established the
Local Premix Committees (LPC) to facilitate
what they called “a fairer distribution of
premix fuel to fishermen”. Today, there are
still reports of persistent shortages of
premix in virtually all the fishing
communities. That is quite aside the fact
that the price of premix fuel, fishing nets,
outboard motors and wooden canoes have all
gone up steeply. The combined effect of
these is deepening poverty in the fishing
communities.
FERTILIZERS
There is no mention of fertilizer subsidy in
the 2015 budget. In the 2014 government gave
an indication to distribute 180,000 metric
tonnes of subsidized fertilizers to farmers
in the course of the year. How much money
was set aside for this exercise and what has
happened to the money especially since the
farmers are in agreement that for 2014 no
new fertilizers were imported or
distributed?
Today a bag of NPL fertilizer
is selling at GH¢130. How many farmers can
afford this? Yet another reason why food
security is being threatened.
Recently the Ministry of Agriculture has
pronounced that farmers should get used to
less subsidies from government. Is that the
new policy? And, if so, what will the effect
be on production and income to farmers, and
by that, on poverty reduction in the
country?
IRRIGATION OF ACCRA AND AFRAM PLAINS
The Accra Plains and Afram Plains irrigation
projects which have the potential of
positively in impacting food security for
the nation have remained on the books. The
2009 – 2013 budget documents all mentioned
these projects. The 2015 document mentions
the development of Accra plains in line with
tradition but that is all that there is to
it as it has been since 2009 (ref. par 347).
COCOA
Once again, farmers have been called to
rescue Ghana. Can anybody imagine what the
exchange rate, indeed the economy would look
like without the recent US$1.7billion
syndicated cocoa loan? It is the cocoa bean
that was pledged to international bankers
for $1.7billion to save the economy from
virtual collapse. That is why it is doubly
agonizing when farmers are not
commensurately appreciated.
The annual bonuses due farmers have not been
paid for three consecutive years, i.e.
2011/12 – 2013/14 cocoa years. The GH¢5
bonus per bag of the produce announced
recently is a slap in the face of the
farmers since “by day” labour attracts
double that amount.
After three years of paying fixed and
agonizing producer price against the
backdrop of escalating prices in every facet
of our national life the cocoa farmer has
now been awarded an increase to GH¢345 per
bag. Given the world market price today, the
current exchange rate as well as the NDCs
own manifesto pledge to pay at least 70% of
the FOB price, the cocoa farmer should have
received a new price of not less than GH¢470
cedis per bag and especially also because
for three years now government has fed fat
on the sweat of cocoa farmers.
Inspite of the contrived euphoria which
greeted the producer price increase, this
amount will not encourage farm land
expansion nor spur increase in the quantum
produced.
We in the NPP note the coincidence, that
last year’s “farmers’ Day” held at Sefwi
Wiawso. We had earlier gone there to show
solidarity with cocoa farmers, and draw
attention to how government was
shortchanging farmers in Ghana. The good
thing is that government went to the same
location, not to bring relief but to
restrict themselves to the status quo.
INDUSTRY
The third strategic intervention relates to
industrial development through prudent use
of national resources. High fallutin
pontifications! The plain truth is that
industry is not doing well. Industry was
targeted to grow at 6.8% in 2014 from the
high 11% growth in 2012. It grew at 4.6% and
that was driven by petroleum activities
which grew at 18.2% (par 44). Manufacturing
grew at negative 8.0% (-8.0%). Construction
grew at 12.8% but employment in construction
is usually short-term and transitional. The
real deal is in manufacturing which is not
doing well.
Manufacturing industry is not doing well
because of lack of access to long-term
credit. The second is the lack of access to
even short-term credit (over borrowing by
government is squeezing out private
entrepreneurs); the third is high interest
rates for those who are able to access
credit; the fourth is the erratic nature of
utility supplies to industry. Fifth is the
high cost of utility services. Sixth is the
incessant power outages. Seventh is the huge
taxes imposed on industry. Finally, the
depreciation of the cedi is worrying to
industry as it renders the fiscal
environment unpredictable. In that sense,
the platform to stabilize industry has not
yet been created, so using industry to
secure the bright prospects of the economy
in 2015 can only be a mirage.
LOW INVESTOR CONFIDENCE
Ladies and gentlemen, the rising cost of
doing business, occasioned by the huge
taxes, lack of access to credit, high
interest rates, “dums4” “dums4”, rising
inflation, high utility tariffs, a weakening
currency all point to a clear case of
declining consumer and investor confidence
in the system and one would have thought
that the budget would have devised and
introduced ingenious ways to stimulate
growth in investor and consumer confidence.
Alas, there is none!
TRADE
In 2001 trade deficit registered
US$3.1billion. In 2012 the deficit was
$4.2billion. In 2013 merchandize export was
US$13.7 billion while total merchandize
import amounted to US$17.6billion. The
pattern has continued in 2014.
The worsening balance of trade position
contributed to the massive current account
deficit of $5.7billion in 2013 and a
colossal depreciation of the cedi from GH¢2.2
to US$1.0 in December 2013 to GH¢3.30 as we
speak now.
The free fall of the cedi has resulted in
over exposure of local traders who are left
unable to protect their working capital.
Many Ghanaian retailers were in 2014 forced
to close their shops because they were
operating at a loss. The situation was
further aggravated by the invasion of
foreigners in local trade.
The huge cost of transportation as a result
of frequent increases in the price of
petroleum products, six times in 2013 and
five times in 2014 has occasioned a huge
price differential between the farm gates
and the markets in the cities. These are
matters that call for the intervention of
government yet the 2015 Budget and Economic
Policy provides no direction.
EMPLOYMENT
Fellow Ghanaians, where agriculture and
industry are not doing well employment
cannot be generated. We need to provide
employment to increase productivity and
generate growth yet there are no new bold
measures in this direction.
It is important to state that the right to
work, according to Article 24(1) of the
constitution is a fundamental human right
and hence the work program of government
must address this. One must concede,
however, that, realistically, as a nation we
are far away from affording this right to
every Ghanaian. Notwithstanding, we must
focus attention and effort to address this
phenomenon.
In 2008 the NDC assured the nation to apply
State machinery and resources to create jobs
for the people, especially the youth. Their
strategic objective was to provide every
Ghanaian with a job from which they could
earn their livelihood (pg 60 of 2008
manifesto). Even though the combined
strength of Public and Civil Servants is
about 750,000 the NDC propagandist and
misinformation Ministers claimed that they
had, by 2010 created 1.5million jobs. The
budgets of 2011 and 2012 both indicated a
job creation of 120,000. The 1.5million
phantom jobs creation could only come from
persons who insist that when their fellows
see a sheep they have to exclaim that they
have seen a cow.
Exploiting President Nkrumah’s “work and
happiness” slogan the NDC declared to launch
an Employment Policy to reduce unemployment
to the barest minimum. Today, unemployment
has risen sharply, no thanks to the very
high cost of doing business in Ghana, the
“dums4, dums4”, the erratic water and other
utilities supply and the ever increasing
petroleum products prices, many people have
been thrown out of employment because
industry in Ghana is restive and not doing
well.
In 2012, as in 2008, the NDC has promised in
their manifesto to launch a major housing
and public works scheme involving urban
roads, drainage construction and
environmental sanitation to generate massive
employment. The 2015 Budget document offers
no direction in this.
ENERGY
Mid-year 2007 and early 2008 the country had
problems with power generation attributable,
primarily, to the low level of water in the
Akosombo dam at that time due to severe
drought. The NDC in response then insisted
that they “would ensure the supply of power
on a reliable and suitable basis” if they
were elected into office. They pledged “to
ensure the delivery of energy services to
all consumers in a secure, efficient,
reliable, sustainable, safe and
environmentally-friendly manner”. Indeed,
the Hon. Haruna Iddrisu forcefully asserted,
even in the face of the drought that
Kufuor’s government had no excuse to plunge
the nation into power outages and that if
the NDC assumed the reigns of government,
“adumdum adumdum no begyae”.
Six years on, the NDC have not delivered on
their pledge and the energy sector is in
crisis.
The problems in the energy sector are
self-inflicted and ensue from indecisions
and not-well-thought-through policies of
government. The resolution of these problems
is within the competence and control of
government and VRA. The latter have not kept
up their capacity expansion and government
has not sufficiently resourced VRA to
procure crude oil to propel electric power
generation.
Government is still hugely indebted to the
Bulk Oil Distribution Companies which debt
is destabilizing the BDCs and also deepening
the risk exposure of the commercial banks in
the country. BOST is in dire straits and the
country’s strategic oil reserves are
virtually non-existent. Under President
Kufuor the country’s strategic oil reserves
could hold for 3 months.
On monthly basis the country has to
experience fuel price increases because of
the ever depreciating Ghana cedi and not
because of world price increases. The Bui
Dam meanwhile has run into technical
problems.
About 25% of electricity generated is lost
because ECG’s transmission network is in a
terrible state of disrepair. ECG needs about
$700million investment. Government is not
assisting but government is hugely indebted
to ECG. In the meantime, ECG loses about
$110million yearly due to poor transmission.
The T3 thermal plant ran into technical
problems arising out of contractual
disagreements between VRA and the Canadian
contractors on the project. The TI plant has
also not worked effectively and efficiently
over the past three (3) years.
The gas project at Aboadze has had several
false starts and it is good that
professional assurances are now being given
about readiness of the facility to free the
thermal plants in Takoradi. There is still
no converter plant to scale the gas for
industrial and commercial use and the
earlier we demonstrated seriousness on this
the better for the nation.
In the face of these mountainous problems it
borders on absurdity to hear the Minister of
Energy who is now responsible for Petroleum
in his contribution to the Budget debate in
Parliament castigating the NPP that they are
the cause of the problems confronting the
energy sector because they did not generate
one megawatt of power in the entire 8-years
of Kufuor’s administration. That was most
unkind and most untruthful.
Uthman dan Fodio is the sage who said,
“Conscience is an open wound which only
truth can heal”. For the avoidance of doubt,
we will like to chronicle the plants that
were started or added during NPP’s 8-years
in power:
To avoid such misinformation, we put out the
party’s contribution to the generation of
electricity during our administration.
The following Plants which had a total
generating capacity of 1536mw were added or
started during NPP’s two terms in Office:
1. VRA Plant – Tema (Funded by government) –
110 megawatts.
2. Mines Reserve Plant (Funded by Mining
Companies with Government support) – 80
megawatts.
3. The VRA Athol Plant – Tema – 50
megawatts.
4. Emergency Plant – Tema (Funded by
government) – 120 megawatts.
5. Asogli Plant, Tema (Funded by Private
investor with government support) – 200
megawatts
6. Bui Hydroelectric power – 400 megawatts
(funded by government)
7. Aboadze Thermal Plant, (T3), Takoradi (NPP
secured funding) – 136 megawatts
8. Osorno (CENT) Thermal Plant, Tema – 120
megawatts
9. Kpone/Zachem Thermal Plant – 220
megawatts
10. Akosombo Retrofit increase Akosombo’s
capacity from 920mw to 1020mw
11. The NPP also by strenuous efforts
superintended the discovery of oil in
commercial quantities, which made possible
the availability and production of Gas.
All these were bequeathed to the NDC in
2009. The NDC assumed office when there was
no load shedding in January 2009.
Three (3) and half years into the tenure of
the NDC, the nation was plunged into load
shedding. The load shedding has persisted up
to today with varying intensity.
It has taken the NDC five (5) years and we
still have not seen the completion of the
gas project, despite several proposed
completion dates from the Minister and his
associates.
Instead of apologizing for the hardship they
have brought unto Ghanaians and businesses,
the Minister of Energy is rather shifting
blame and engaging in bragging.
It is a reflection of the Minister’s ability
that the electricity generation has been
taken away from his portfolio. We urge him
to work harder in his remaining portfolio
and do less propaganda.
Energy conservation also saves power, for
example in 2007 $15m was spent to procure
6million compact fluorescent lamps (CFL) to
replace the high energy consuming
incandescent bulbs which were distributed
freely saved the country 124 megawatts
Replacement of old fridges with new one will
reduce consumption of energy (The Energy
Commission Report of 2007).
Whilst we are at this, it may be important
for the nation to know why inspite of the
fall in the price of Brent crude and light
crude which have dropped below $52 and $50
per barrel, respectively, the price of
petroleum products locally have not
commensurately responded? Once again, we
demand: has the Automatic Price Adjustment
Formula been abandoned? If it has not been
abandoned, the NDC must keep faith with
Ghanaians and cause petrol to be sold at GH¢9.39.
Nothing less than that. If the government,
in their usual “yentie obiaa” stance decide
not to listen, we in the NPP will have to
make them listen.
GNPC & IT’S BORROWING SPREE
By way of emphasis let us also strongly
indicate to GNPC that they cannot be a law
unto themselves. A fully subvented state
enterprise cannot use revenues due to the
State as collateral to secure loans! The
PRMA allows only the State to use our oil
revenues as collateral. That privilege is
not extended to any corporation, regardless
of its status. We in the NPP will stand up
against that misadventure which almost
collapsed Ghana Commercial Bank in the early
90’s and which caused Dr. Kwesi Botchwey to
resign as Minister of Finance.
EDUCATION
In his 2004 State of the Nation Address the
President declared that his Vision for
national development has a people first
agenda. That being the case, education
should be of paramount concern to us all.
Besides, as a people we need to strenuously
work to achieve MDG2. Beyond that, one would
have thought that having established the
three strategic nodal areas of intervention
as captured in paragraphs 121 and 131 the
budget for “Transformation” was going to
provide the connect between how education
would feed into the strategic needs of the
economy. In other words, how would education
positively impact efficiency of labour force
in both agriculture and industry to engender
greater productivity? There is no interface.
Whilst the budget for the education sector
has increased by 15.9% over the 2014
allocation, inflation over the same period
was 16.9% whilst the depreciation of the
cedi is in excess of 70%. In real terms,
therefore, there is negative increase in
funding education. In the event, investment
in education may suffer as personnel
emolument cannot be touched.
Ladies and gentlemen, 25% of the entire
budgetary allocation goes to education i.e.
GH¢5.8billion in 2014 and GH¢6.74billion in
2015, yet these do not reflect in the
performance of pupils in public schools due
in particular to poor management and
administration as well as poor supervision
of and output from teachers. That explains
why even when gross enrollment rate is
rising at the level of basic education the
dropout rate at the JHS and SHS level is
getting rather alarming. The 2015 budget
related to arrears in GETFUND, School
Feeding, Capitation Grant and the salaries
of new Teacher recruits. The combined effect
of these is the lowering of morale. One must
also allude to the many strikes affecting
the education sector: POTAG, UTAG, NAGRAT,
TEWU etc. These will negatively impact the
performance of pupils and students.
Government must show concern.
QUALITY EDUCATION
As part of improving the quality of
education, the President in 2013 assured to
integrate Kindergarten (KG) education into
the mainstream system as if the policy did
not already exist. Between 2005 – 2008 the
Kufuor administration included a 2-unit KG
block in the basic schools that were
constructed at the time. Teachers were to be
trained to acquire the requisite skills.
Since 2009 the Mills-Mahama governments have
abandoned the idea of re-integrating KG
education into the mainstream. The
President’s assurance in 2013 was therefore
heartwarming yet nothing has happened since
then. The new basic school structures that
have been awarded since 2013 do not come
with KG components and the training of
teachers to cater for the KG system have not
be mentioned since then. The 2015 budget
does not mention them.
The 2008 NDC manifesto stated that the basic
school feeding program, which the Mills-Mahama
administration inherited would be expanded
to cover all basic schools in 4 years, i.e.,
beginning 2009. That promise had by the end
of 2012 not materialized. In 2013 the
President shifted the goal post and stated
then that they would expand the
school-feeding program to “all public basic
schools in rural communities”,
significantly, this time, not any longer to
all basic schools in the country! Even then,
how many public basic schools in how many
rural communities which had no school
feeding before 2013 have benefitted since
then remains unaccounted for in both 2014
and 2015 Budget Statements. There is no
indication because, apparently, nothing
happened.
In the meantime, the payment of the
capitation grant has since 2013 become a big
problem for Mahama government. In most
schools for a whole year the grants have not
been paid. Chalk is the most basic working
tool for any school teacher. Many public
basic schools cannot still access chalk to
teach schools children.
Last year in re-commissioning the Shoe
Factory in Kumasi the President promised to
supply basic school kids with shoes from the
factory. The 2015 budget is silent on this.
Is it the case that our President just
enjoys giving promises without checking on
whether or not the State can afford it? It
is no wonder people are now referring to him
as “Mr. Promise and Fail”.
HEALTH
In 2014 the President stated in his State of
the Nation Address that his government has a
“vision to extend quality health care to all
our people…” The mandate of the Ministry of
Health is to promote good health for all
Ghanaians through the prevention of
diseases…” among others. The Ministry has
been concerned with some star projects which
the Minister chronicled then the Minister
spoke about preparations to confront Ebola,
which fortunately has not entered Ghana yet.
The outbreak of cholera in 2014 has
traumatized Ghanaians and caused several
casualties. The budget provides no mention
about dealing with it.
The budget purposes the scaling up of
capitation in health service delivery to all
the regions in Ghana except Greater Accra
and Northern Region (par 633). Capitation in
insurance increases out-of-pocket
expenditure and therefore further
impoverishes subscribers. Government is
determined to replenish the resources of the
insurance scheme but that should not further
negatively impact the living conditions of
the people.
There have been too many frictions and
hiccups in the relationship between Health
practitioners and government. Increasingly
the relationship between the associations
and government seems to be worsening thereby
negatively affecting the health of the
people. Appropriate conflict resolution
mechanisms must be devised to deal with this
but there is no new policy direction in this
budget.
CORRUPTION
Let us conclude, on issues of corruption
that have lately befuddled our governance
system. On Tuesday December 2, 2014 the
Ghana Integrity Initiative, the local
chapter of Transparency International
launched their report on 173 countries.
Ghana placed high on the list of corrupt
countries scoring less than 50 points. The
issues they related to include recovering
so-called judgment debts that have been
wrongfully paid to Alfred Agbesi Woyome,
Waterville, Isofoton, Construction Pioneers,
the unbridled resort to sole sourcing in
procurement, gathering the political will to
prosecute cases of corruption in high
places; SADA, GYEEDA, SUBA matters, among
others. One could only be sorely
disappointed when the President plaintively
declared that (government) “will introduce
new rules and deploy systems to strengthen
expenditure management which will reduce
waste and corrupt practices (ref. par 886)”.
How, when, where we are not told! Empty
rhetorics!! Yet corruption has become a
canker.
Now, there are issues connected with
National Service Scheme. The nation is
awaiting the prosecution of the suspects.
Kumasi Airport, GH¢29million spent…. How
much was spent on resurfacing the 1800m
stretch of the runway, GH¢2million? And the
procurement of the runway (aeronautic)
lighting system? How much was spent on the
improvement of the parking area? Parliament
shall have to inquire into what the GH¢29million
has been spent on.
In President Rawlings era, the average cost
of double-layered asphalted road
construction was $600,000 per kilometer; in
President Kufuor’s time the average cost was
$480,000. Today, under President John Mahama
the average cost has escalated to $1.4 -
$1.5million. The cost of constructing a
6-unit classroom block plus a 2-unit KG
block was GH¢85,000 under President Kufuor,
under President Mahama the 2-unit KG has
been taken out, the 6-unit block is priced
at GH¢300,000. We have made issues with the
so-called sale and purchase of Merchant
Bank; the payments made in the STX
transaction; the purchase of Embraer planes;
the projects which the $3billion loan was
supposed to fund; the cost of the
construction or refurbishment of health
facilities, including the Ridge Hospital and
Police Hospital; SUBA, GYEEDA, SADA;
government’s own unprecedented
over-expenditure in 2012 on programs and
projects which to date have neither been
properly explained nor sufficiently
accounted for etc, etc. Simply put, the
nation is being fleeced and the nation is
bleeding.
NARCOTICS
Countrymen and women, on the way forward to
fighting trade in narcotics in the face of
the recurrence of arrest of narcotics
dealers in Washington, New York, London,
Hamburg, Berlin, Amsterdam, etc and
especially in the arrest of Ms. Ruby Nayele
Ametefe and the man in charge of aspects of
security at KIA, we in the NPP have
proffered suggestions:
1. NACOB must be overhauled
2. The Bill to turn NACOB into a Commission
prepared in 2008 must come to Parliament as
soon as possible.
3. The position of the Executive Secretary
of NACOB must be taken from politicians and
revert to professional intelligence
operatives.
4. Cooperation in the operation West Bridge
must be deepened.
STATUTORY PAYMENTS
The NPP has drawn attention to the breach of
the statutory provisions with respect to the
non-payment of Social Security contribution
which state institutions collect from civil
and public servants as well as transfers to
DACF, NHIS, GETFund and Road Fund by
government as of September 2014. As has been
done before, we expect the Minister to seek
explicit approval from Parliament to be
allowed to pay these arrears by a specified
time period. In addition, the Minister
should assure Parliament that going forward
he will be in compliance with the various
Acts and provide quarterly reports to
Parliament on the status of implementation.
CONCLUSION
All told, Fellow Ghanaians,
the nature, character, form and shape of the
2015 budget is anything but
TRANSFORMATIONAL. The short term prospects
of the economy are gloomy, and therefore do
not provide any proper foundation for the
future and hence the medium term prospects
cannot be bright. In that regard the
“Transformational Agenda” of the 2015 Budget
Statement and Economic Policy can only be a
forlorn hope without any basis.
The President is required under Article
36(1) to “Take all necessary action to
ensure that the national economy is managed
in such a manner as to maximize the rate of
economic development and to ensure the
maximum welfare; freedom and happiness of
every person in Ghana and to provide
adequate means of livelihood and suitable
employment and public assistance to the
needy”.
Article 36(2) deals with the steps to
establish a sound and healthy economy and
strands out critical issues like:
i) guaranteeing fair and realistic
remuneration to encourage higher
productivity;
ii) fostering an enabling
environment to boost the private sector;
iii) undertaking even and balanced
development of every part of all regions,
especially, improving the living conditions
in the rural areas;
iv) promoting the robust development of
agriculture and industry, among others.
These are the yardsticks that must be used
to comb and assess the economic policy of
the NDC government as expressed in the 2015
Budget Statement.
The President has since 2013 been assuring
all who care to listen to him that the
“medium term prospects of the (country’s)
economy are bright”. In the context of that
declaration, “securing the bright medium
term prospects of the economy” which is the
theme of the budget can only mean, that in
the eyes of the President, the budget seeks
to “firmly fix” or “firmly assure of the
custody” of the bright medium term prospects
of the economy.
In the final analysis, the issues that
matter to the Ghanaian people as far as the
2015 budget is concerned are as follows:
1. Does the budget ensure that the national
economy and the resources available are well
managed? The answer is “No”.
2. Will the budget maximize the rate of
economic development? No
3. Will the budget create Jobs for our
teeming unemployed, especially graduates? No
4. Will the budget reduce the cost of doing
business and make the economy
investor-friendly? No
5. Will the 2015 budget reduce the high cost
of living and suffering of the ordinary
Ghanaian? No
6. Will the budget improve the standard of
living and ensure the maximum welfare of the
people? No
7. Will this budget provide adequate means
of livelihood, suitable employment and
public assistance to the needy? No
8. Will this budget provide better
conditions of service for teachers, nurses,
doctors, civil servants and workers in
general and hence reduce the agitations and
strike actions by workers? No
9. Will the 2015 budget allow workers to
select their own Tier 2 Pension Fund
Managers and account for the deductions
made? No
10. Will the budget restore the allowances
of teacher and nursing trainees? No
11. Will the budget end the incessant power
outages (“Adumdum adumdum”)? No
12. Will the budget stop the high level of
corruption in the country today? No
13. Will the budget transform the economy
and formalize the informal sector? No
The 2015 budget does not answer any of the
above questions in the affirmative, and that
is why it is meaningless to the ordinary
Ghanaian. At the end of the day, if the
fundamental problems with the economy are
not dealt with, the threat to the
macroeconomic stability of the country,
going forward, will not abate.
A local adage puts it more succinctly:
“akyea na 1mmui, 1sen ab1buo nyinaa d1”
which loosely translates “even though it
(the economy) is heavily tilted, it is not
completely broken and hence it can be
salvaged”. The New Patriotic Party is ready
to rescue this sinking ship since, clearly,
both the driver and the mate have
demonstrated to all of us Ghanaians that
they are clueless in the face of such
grotesque maladministration.
Fellow Ghanaians let us all come together,
roll up our sleeves and put our shoulders to
the wheel to rescue this sinking ship, as
clearly a Sinking Fund alone cannot do it.
As you might have noticed, we have basically
dealt with the economy, the financials and
just a few of the sectors. In the coming
weeks we intend to address the critical
matters afflicting the various sectors with
a view to proffering suggestions to get the
country out of this self-inflicted Mahamian
mess.
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Media, we thank
you once again for your prompt response to
our invitation.
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