News › Headlines       18.11.2022

[Full text]: Ken Ofori-Atta’s response to Minority’s allegations in censure motion

The ad-hoc committee in its third sitting today Friday, November 18 heard the motion of censure filed against the Minister of Finance Ken Ofori-Atta by the Minority Caucus in Parliament.

The Minority Caucus represented by the Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu and the Minority Spokesperson on Finance Cassiel Ato Forson at the first sitting of the ad hoc committee made several allegations including unlawful spending on the national cathedral from the contingency fund without Parliamentary approval.

In his defence, first on the allegation that he unlawfully spent some money on the national cathedral, the underfire minister says they are false claims.

He indicated that the national cathedral is 100 per cent owned by the state and as such payment made from the contingency vault was lawful.

“All the payments made for the national cathedral were lawfully done and from the contingency vault under the government obligations vault and not from the contingency fund as alleged by the proponents,” he said.

Read Ofori-Atta’s full defence below:

RESPONSES TO GROUNDS FROM PROPONENTS ON PARLIAMENTARY MOTION OF CENSURE

FRIDAY, 18TH NOVEMBER, 2022 RESPONSE TO PARLIAMENT

Introduction

The ground of the Proponents claiming that there has been “Unconstitutional withdrawals from the Consolidated Fund in blatant contravention of Article 178 of the 1992 Constitution supposedly for the construction of the President's Cathedral”, I submit as follows:

The Contingency Fund, the Proponents refer to, is what is covered under the Constitution, specifically under article 177. This constitutes money voted by Parliament and advances from this must be authorised by the Parliamentary Finance Committee. The Contingency Vote, on the other hand, is a line under the “Other Government Obligations” vote which is approved by the Finance Committee and passed as part of the annual Appropriation Acts passed by Parliament.

iii. 2021 Budget Statement and Economic Policy – Paragraphs 1132 and 1134: which informed the House of the Letter of Intent (LoI) signed on 25th November 2020 between NCG Trustees and RIBADE JV (led by Rizzanni de Eccher with M Barbisotti & Sons and Desimone. And, the Appointment of Apostle Prof. Opoku-Onyinah as new Chairman of the Board of Trustees on 8th February 2021.

  1. Mid-Year Review of the 2021 Budget Statement – Paragraphs 354 and 355: which announced the expansion of the Cathedral project to include a Bible Museum (Bible Museum of Africa – BMOA) and Biblical Garden; as well as the establishment of the 100-Cedis-a-Month “Ketewa Biara Nsua” Club, in line with the original plan to encourage as many donors as possible to contribute towards the establishment of this national monument.

In conclusion, Co-Chairs, all the payments made for the National Cathedral were lawfully done and from the Contingency Vote under the “Other Government Obligations” vote and not from the Contingency Fund as alleged by the Proponents.

I now focus on the grounds claiming “Deliberate and dishonest misreporting of economic data to Parliament”.

I wish to state that:

  1. The allegation of deliberate misreporting of economic data to Parliament is completely not true. Since I took office in 2017, I have served the country with integrity and honesty.
  2. Under my leadership at the Ministry of Finance, there have been significant improvements in the accurate reporting of public finances. Today, under President Nana Akufo-Addo, Ghanaians are enjoying greater accountability and transparency in the management of the public purse than any other period under the Fourth Republic.
  3. Since 2017, Government has complied with the reporting provisions in the Public Financial Management Act 2016 (Act 921), including Budget Implementation report, Fiscal Reports, Public Debt Report, Petroleum Revenue Management Reports, ESLA report, etc.
  4. The Proponents have raised the issue of treatment of energy sector IPP payments and financial sector clean-up payments in the fiscal tables. The Ministry of Finance has explained its position on the treatment of these two items to the relevant Committees of Parliament during their scrutiny of the annual budget from 2018 to 2021. The Ministry of Finance actually issued a Press Release on the subject on 10th May 2020, which we had hoped should have put this matter to rest.
  5. The Ministry included the energy sector IPP payments in the “amortisation” line in the Fiscal Framework during the 2018-2021. Financial sector clean-up costs were included in the fiscal framework annually for the period 2018 to 2021 to reflect the issuance of bonds to cover the non-cash costs.
  6. Contrary to the position of others that the MOF did not reflect the Finsec Payments and the energy sector IPP payments in the fiscal framework, I want to emphasize, with the Budget document as evidence, that these payments were reflected in the fiscal framework. Energy sector IPP payments were treated as “amortisation” and the non-cash financial sector clean-up payments were reflected in the “memo item” (Refer to Appendix 2A of the Fiscal Tables in the relevant Annual Budget).
  7. The MoF reflected Finsec clean-up payments in the memo item called “fiscal deficit (including finsec payments)” for the following reasons: i. They are extra-ordinary payment items which need not be mixed-up with traditional fiscal operations; and
  8. They are largely bonds and capturing them above the line will imply recognizing their payments now and recognizing their payments again when the payments fall due in the future – a possible double counting. A method that the proponent is or ought to have been very much familiar with from his years as Deputy Minister of Finance.
  9. They are debts of SOEs that have been assumed by Government and are largely contingent liabilities that have crystalised for payments; and
  10. They are extraordinary, one-off payments which need not be mixed up with traditional expenditure items. Something, again, which the proponent should be very familiar with.
  11. the Finsec bailout exercise is largely completed and, therefore, ceases to be an extraordinary budget item; and
  12. IPPs payments are expected to be made over the medium-term. Given that they have become explicit contingent liabilities, appropriately budgeting for them “above the line” ensures that resources are duly allocated for their settlement.
  13. Likewise, the Energy sector IPP payments were reflected in the fiscal framework as part of the Amortisation line under the Financing part of the fiscal table for the following reasons:
  14. However, the MoF agreed with the Finance Committee of Parliament in 2021 that going forward from 2022 onwards, both the Energy IPP payments and the Finsec Payments will be treated “above the line” in the fiscal framework for the following reasons:

There is also a claim on “Fiscal recklessness leading to the crash of the Ghana Cedi which is currently the worst performing currency in the world”, I will respond as follows:

“He told the Parliamentary Press Corps last June that, “Thanks to the opposition Government has already lost half-year revenue. That can only be attributed to the purpose and tenacity of the Minority Group in Parliament.”

FUNDING ECONOMIC GROWTH AND TRANSFORMATION

  1. a) Supporting 1,765,977 Ghanaian students under Free SHS/TVET to promote human Capital Development and social mobility.
  2. b) Enrolling 15,656,160 Ghanaians aged 15years and above on the National Identification Programme by Sept, 2021 to enhance security and economic efficiency.
  3. c) support about 100,000 Young graduates to enter the job market.
  4. d) Providing needed infrastructure to support decentralization and local governance to expand access to public services under the Regional Re-organisation programme.
  5. e) Promoting the development of railway network to advance national and regional connectivity
  6. f) Supporting the on-going construction of fishing harbours to service key coastal communities including Axim, Dixcove, Moree, Mumford, Winneba, Senya Bereku, Gomoa Feteh,Teshie and James Town.
  7. g) Increasing School Feeding beneficiaries from 1,677,322 in 2016 to 3,300,000 pupils in 2021.
  8. h) Increasing LEAP beneficiaries from 195,860 households in 2017 to 344,023 in 2021 to improve the livelihoods of for the underprivileged in our society.

  1. i) Increasing food production and security through Planting for Food and Jobs. It has led to a 71% increase in the national production of maize and 34% in paddy rice.
  2. We have invested significantly in retooling the security sector to maintain territorial integrity and improve internal security (CCTV, motor bicycles, vehicles, Forward Operating Bases, recruitment of security personnel etc);

iii. We have recruited over 200,000 Ghanaians into crucial service areas such as Education, Health, Security and Local Government; and

  1. Established a Tree Crop Development Authority with a focus on mango, cashew, rubber, oil palm, shea and coconut, in order to diversify our economy and provide raw materials for industrialisation.
  2. These and many more we have done.

ON THE ISSUE OF FISCAL RECKLESSNESS AND DEPRECIATING CEDI

On the issue of “Alarming incompetence and frightening ineptitude resulting in the collapse of the Ghanaian economy and an excruciating cost of living crisis” I state as follows:

iii. an asset quality review document which had not been released;

vii. Limited CAPEX to MDAs; and viii. 'Dumsor' which had decimated local industry and strongly impeded national productivity.

iii. The fiscal deficit which was about 6.5% was brought down to under 5 percent by the end of 2019;

vii. Government also implemented comprehensive reforms across the energy sector and kept the lights on to-date.

iii. establishment of the two Social Partnership Programmes with Labour and Faith-Based Organisations.

iii. the Banking Sector Clean up (GHC 25 billion).

iii. the construction of the Eastern Regional and Central Gonja Hospitals;

  1. Commencing work on eighty-seven (87) of the Agenda 111 projects;
  2. funding on-going airport projects, including the Kumasi International Airport; and
  3. promoting the establishment of the Development Bank Ghana to provide competitive finance for Ghanaian Entrepreneurs.

There is a claim of “Gross mismanagement of the Ghanaian economy, which has occasioned untold and unprecedented hardship”. I want to re-state that:

Going Forward

Concluding Remarks

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