Accra, Nov. 22, - SENG Ghana, a
policy research and advocacy non-governmental organisation, has asked
government to pay attention to social and children protection issues in the
2018 Budget and Economic Policy Statement.
It expressed concerns about the
reduction in budget allocation to the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social
Protection, and noted that expenditure allocation to the Ministry in the 2018
Budget was GH¢ 61,380,673, a decrease in real terms by approximately 77 per
cent compared to its 2017 allocation of GH¢ 255,481,323.
This reduces the Ministry’s share
of total Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) Budget to 0.2 per cent
from one per cent in 2017, which may affect operations of key institutions
under the Ministry, it said.
It said allocation for Goods and
Services dropped by half from 82 per cent in 2017 to 40 per cent in 2018, while
compensation increased significantly from nine per cent in 2017 to 44 per cent
in 2018.
Madam Clara Osei-Boateng, the
Director of Policy Advocacy Programme of SEND Ghana, said this at the
Organisation’s media encounter on the 2018 Post Budget Analysis in Accra on
Wednesday.
She said, for instance, that the
Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice, which was supposed to
investigate human rights abuses and corruption issues, may not get sufficient
funds to carry out its investigations into human rights abuses and corruption
cases.
Madam Osei-Boateng noted that the
Social Welfare Department, which falls under the Ministry, did not have
vehicles and other logistics to investigate cases of child abuses and domestic
violence and, therefore, asked government to explain the rationale behind the
budget reductions.
The media briefing aims at
explaining the budget to the public, identify policy gaps and assess whether
the budget addressed citizens’ needs and priorities as well as make inputs to
help address the aspirations of Ghanaians, especially the vulnerable people in
society.
The NGO analysed key thematic
areas in the budget such as social services, agriculture, health, financial
allocations to goods and services, education, water, sanitation and hygiene,
social and children protection
She said the gap between the rich
and the poor was widening despite government’s social interventions like the
Livelihood Empowerment Against Programme (LEAP) and called for more funds to be
channelled towards social and child protection issues.
Touching on education funding,
she said, the implementation of the Free Senior High School (SHS) Policy had
shored up enrolment, which had created infrastructure deficit, especially at
the second cycle education institutions and asked government to expand the
education infrastructure.
“The education sector budget increased
by 11 per cent from GH₵8.33
billion in 2017 to GH₵9.26
billion in 2018,” she said.
However, she said, much of the
increment went into the payment of compensation compared to goods and services
and capital expenditure.
The share of allocation to
compensation increased significantly from 91.4 percent in 2017 to 98.5 per cent
in 2018, she said.
“This development raises serious
concerns about government’s commitments to deal with infrastructure such as
schools and dormitories and logistics like teaching and learning materials, as
well as monitoring and supervision constraints that contribute directly to
educational outcomes,” she noted.
Mr George Osei Bimpeh, the
Country Director of SEND Ghana, also expressed concerns about the budget cuts
to some strategic sectors like agriculture, education, health, children and
social protection as against astronomical financial allocations to new
ministries like the Regional Re-organisation, Business Planning, Senior
Minister’s Office and government machinery.
“What issues did government take
into consideration before making those allocations to the new ministries?
Government should justify the increment to those ministries,” he queried.
Mr Bimpeh said government had the
opportunity to prioritise some projects and programmes in the 2018 Budget
adding that it must take a second look at the allocations and free resources
from the new ministries and align them to areas that would have better
influence on the lives of the ordinary Ghanaian.
The NGO said its independent
analysis on the 2018 Budget would be forwarded to Parliament and Government for
consideration so that the budget would address the concerns of civil society
organisations.
GNA

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