The Mahama administration will resist the temptation to overspend in 2016, Finance Minister Seth Terkper has said to Parliament.
He said 2016 is a significant year because it is an election-year, but despite that fact, “we will resist the temptation of election-year overspending.”
Election-year overspending has been an established trend in Ghana. The situation invariably spirals the economy into the doldrums after every general elections.
A three-year bailout programme from the International Monetary Fund has compelled the Government to adopt austere measures geared towards stabilising the economy and shoring up the value of the Cedi.
Ahead of Friday’s budget presentation, the main opposition New Patriotic Party had expressed fears that the Government will spend “recklessly” for political purposes.
Acting Chairman Freddie Blay said at a press conference Wednesday that the budget will be an “election-year budget” which will be replete with “reckless spending” and “corruption,” a situation which he said makes the NPP “nervous”.
According to him, the key aim of the IMF bailout programme is to “control public expenditure to avoid the horrendous experience of reckless spending we saw in 2012, which has brought years of untold hardship on the people; caused the cedi to fall heavily, collapsed businesses, created mass unemployment, piled up huge debts, all forcing us to go for the IMF bailout in the first place”.
Mr Terkper, however, told Parliament that the Government will be financially disciplined in its expenditure next year. He also promised that the Electoral Commission will be well-resourced to conduct the elections.
“…I assure that the EC will be adequately resourced to ensure free, fair, and transparent elections,” Mr Terkper said, adding: “Let there be no doubt the economy benefits from our peaceful and acclaimed elections.”