Accra, Nov.23, - Mr Daniel
Titus-Glover, Deputy Minister of Transport has slammed the NDC administration
for leaving the Ghanaian economy in a mess and also subjected the people to
“Dumsor” for four years.
According to him, the NDC’s
shambolic performance, which culminated in the “Dumsor” caused many factories
to close down and hundreds of job losses with its attendant issues on families.
Mr Titus-Glover made the
criticism on the third day of the debate on the 2018 budget in Parliament.
Mr Ken Ofori-Atta, Minister of
Finance on November 15, 2017, presented the government’s 2018 Budget Statement
and Economic Policy to Parliament.
The budget highlighted results
from the government’s policy programmes over the past few months, and announced
the government’s planned developmental programmes for the next fiscal year.
Among the major programmes to be
rolled out by the government in 2018, are the proposed 13 per cent reduction in
electricity tariff for residential consumers, the establishment of
nation-building corps and operationalization of the special prosecutors’
office.
Mr Titus-Glover also revealed
that government plans to offer a stimulus package to the tune of GH₵276 million to about 60 distressed
companies to enable them to revamp their operations and create jobs for the
people.
He said the NDC administration
instead of providing a stimulus package to support distressed companies it
rather budgeted for paying judgement debts.
He said the game-changer in the
2018 budget is the proposed 21 per cent reduction in electricity tariff for
industrial and mining sectors, which he said, would go a long way to help their
activities and create jobs for the people.
Mr Emmanuel Armah Kofi Buah,
former Minister of Energy in his contribution chastised the NPP government for
failing to deliver on their promises.
He said currently the cost of
doing business as well as the cost of credit has gone up dramatically in the
country.
Mr Buah said when the NDC was
leaving power the cost of a gallon of petrol was GH₵16.00 but now it sells at GH₵23.00, and called on the government to scrap the Special
Petroleum tax because, it is not serving the purpose for which it was setup.
He said the NDC administration
also laid a solid foundation in the upstream petroleum sector and that the
President Mahama’s administration must be credited for negotiating all the
energy sector projects that the NPP administration is enjoying.
He debunked claims by the NPP
government that they resolved the “Dumsor” problem, saying that, when the NPP
came to power there was no “Dumsor” in Ghana.
GNA

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