NPP-NDC refuses to think 'outside the box' – CPP

By The Ghanaian Journal - The Ghanaian Journal
Politics | Fri, 20 Nov 2009
    
Click for Full Image Size
life must not be measured from it s
comfortable moments but
from it s crucial an contreversial
moments. - By: FRANCIS TAWIAH -->Duisburg
More Quotes | Submit a Quote
Advertize Here for $8 a day to reach over 30,000 people
Ghana Tourist Villas Offers an unforgettable holiday and business experience in Accra.
The Nigerian Voice gives daily news updates of the country Nigeria
The 2010 budget presented to parliament was not without the usual NDC-NPP blame game. The sheer arrogance and disrespect for Ghanaians characterised this important event when the minister of Finance, Dr. Kwabena Duffuor continually compared arrears and problems left by the NDC1 administration in 2000, and that left by the NPP administration in 2008 rather than focusing on results achieved or inherited problems solved.

These unfortunate developments, particularly the indistinct economic policy agenda of the Mills led administration towards national development formed the basis of a press conference by the Convention Peoples Party addressed by it Chairman, Ladi Nylander.

According to Mr. Nylander, this persistence in trying to show which one has done worse things instead of who has accomplished more, gives additional cause for the CPP to worry about what the future brings to the ordinary Ghanaian.

“We wish to put on record that since 1993, the NDC and NPP have had the opportunity to clean-up government machinery and specifically expenditure management. Yet, the current Administration finds it necessary to highlight inability to detect significant arrears due to procurement of goods and services as a barrier to performance or solving problems. The fact quite simply is that judgment debts and arrears due to contractors have become facts of life under Administrations led by both political parties”.

The Ghanaian Journal Publish below unedited press statement

The Convention People's Party (CPP) wishes to express its views on the fiscal and economic policies of the current Administration as experienced by Ghanaians in 2009 and expressed in the 2010 budget presented to Parliament on Wednesday, November 18, 2009 by the Minister of Finance & Economic Planning.

On March 5, 2009, the governing Administration presented its 2009 budget to Parliament. The centre piece of the budget was reducing the estimated end of year 2008 budget deficit of 14.5% of GDP to 9.4% of GDP at the end of 2009. This was accompanied by a programme that can be described as having an economic stabilization objective.

The stabilization objective was confirmed by the Minister of Finance & Economic Planning when he said on March 5th that: “The policy thrust of the 2009 budget is to reduce the current budget deficit to sustainable levels, improve the exchange rate regime, and work towards the attainment of single digit inflation.”

We wish to point out that a stabilization objective is an antithesis of the NDC Party's own Social Democratic beliefs as spelt out in their 2008 Campaign Manifesto. It is also counter to the growth objectives set by the Rawlings-led NDC1 Administration that were embedded in Vision 2020.

The economics management conundrum that this hopeful Country has experienced since 1993 has taken its toll on the Ghanaian economy and has dampened the entrepreneurial spirit in many Ghanaians. In the CPP's 2008 Manifesto “New Dawn, New Vision”, we proposed to implement a series of medium-term plans to reflect both our Party's ideology of Nkrumaism and the Direct Principles of State Policy intervention which constitute a national vision agreed by all Ghanaians in the 1992 Constitution.

We promised to develop a long-term national development plan based on the national vision to be called Ghana@75: A Roadmap to High-income Status. This means necessarily that we would have focused principally on growth had we succeeded in winning the elections and forming a Government.

The important point to be made here is that the objectives set by this NDC Administration's Finance & Economic Planning Minister will be missed. No single digit inflation, no reduction of budget deficit to sustainable levels, no improvement in the foreign exchange regime. Furthermore, Government's revenue targets will be missed while cost of living has risen. On top of it all, fuel prices have risen drastically.

As a country, we have not done anything in 2009 to take advantage of the global financial crisis to strengthen our economy against future shocks. We have not done anything to use the inconsistency in the responses coming from the international free marketers to move our people to make sacrifices for a better future. We have been on a rocky road to the “Better Ghana” promised us by NDC in 2008.

It is prudent economic management practice to have a budget sit within a certain policy framework as a guide to implementation. Unfortunately the NDC Government is yet to come to grips with this basic principle. A CPP-led Administration would have based a good part of its 2009 budget on a policy framework of “bringing the economy back home” to Ghanaians, to encourage local enterprises and create jobs to ensure sustainable prosperity.

The fiscal 2009 budget demonstrates lack of the vigorous sense of urgency to creating the advantage to Ghanaians that a CPP-led Administration would have used from the very beginning of its tenure of office.

And herein, please allow me to give a very simple example. Whilst the CPP is at ease with the moves to encourage local rice production & consumption, we want to ask why we should just stop there. We are simply not going far enough; & this is very frustrating!! What about the Millions of dollars of an item like tomato puree which are imported into this Country annually? Have we, by the way, forgotten the legacy of the Pwalugu Tomato Facility which our Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah bequeathed to us? And, incidentally, could schemes like that be part of the solution to the rural urban migration drift that create those unfortunate “Sodoms & Gomorrahs” in the urban areas? What other such legacies are we consigning to the dustbins? Dear Ghanaians, there are very many of such, dotted around the Country since 1966, with their many related attendant & ancillary benefits. This is what the Convention People's Party expects. This is what a CPP Government would have been about. This is what a CPP Government will do in order to resolve the seemingly unsolvable problems that confront us. A multi-faceted & logical approach with advantageous knock-on effects!

The 2010 Budget – Fiscal & Economic Policies of Government

The Minister of Finance & Economic Planning was quite clear in setting the tone and direction from the very beginning of his address to Parliament that pointed to a “business as usual” policy orientation.

The NDC-NPP blame game continued through the repeated emphasis on comparing arrears and problems left by the NDC1 administration in 2000, and that left by the NPP administration in 2008 rather than focusing on results achieved or inherited problems solved. This persistence in trying to show which one has done worse things instead of who has accomplished more, gives additional cause for the CPP to worry about where the future will bring to the ordinary Ghanaian.

We wish to put on record that since 1993, the NDC and NPP have had the opportunity to clean-up government machinery and specifically expenditure management. Yet, the current Administration finds it necessary to highlight inability to detect significant arrears due to procurement of goods and services as a barrier to performance or solving problems. The fact quite simply is that judgment debts and arrears due to contractors have become facts of life under Administrations led by both political parties. Continued   
Source: The Ghanaian Journal - The Ghanaian Journal

 Comments To This Article

No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts?Add your comment

 

All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. 2001-2010, © Copyright ModernGhana.com

ModernGhana.com is part of Modern Ghana Media Communication Limited and TheNigerianVoice.com