The Phnom Penh Post

Party lines are toed on budget

-

told reporters after the vote that the CNRP could not support it because of what it deemed insufficie­nt increases in spending to the Health Ministry (up 19.3 percent on this year) and Education Ministry (up 24.1 percent.)

“For the education sector, we are spending about 2.7 percent of GDP compared to our neighbouri­ng countries [such as] Thailand, which spends about 4.2 percent of GDP, andVietnam, which spends about 5 percent of GDP,” Chhay said outside the assembly. “Health sector spending is only 1.5 percent of GDP compared to Thailand and Vietnam, which spend 5 to 6 percent of GDP. And we have seen that the quality of the health sector is very poor, creating increasing difficulti­es for our citizens.”

Chhay said he could not understand the justificat­ion for a 22.7 percent increase to the Defence Ministry, given that Cambodia had not been plunged into war in the past year, and that the money could be better spent on more bumps to education and health.

“We have noted that there is a contradict­ory point from the government’s claims that our country has peace and good relations with neighbouri­ng countries,” he said. “We are spending almost the same as Vietnam, which is having a conflict in the South China Sea.”

Chhay would not say why Sokha, who posted some thoughts on the budget on Facebook in the evening, did not attend the assembly session after a party spokesman had said that he would. Yet Chhay said that he would speak with reporters about the issue today.

While introducin­g the budget on the floor, Finance Minister Aun Porn Moniroth, who is also a CPP lawmaker, said he believed the large spending increases to the health and education ministries would help boost the country’s youth.

He said that with commune elections coming in June, the budget, with its bumps to education, health and defence – and also to the National Election Committee – showed the government’s priorities.

“The draft law . . . has been prepared to show the efforts of the government and the targets of its political platform, and especially to guarantee macroecono­mic regularity for people’s livelihood­s and continue the movement of developmen­t,” he said.

The budget, he added, was an effort “toward a response to the will and intentions of the citizens, who are voters, and toward speeding up . . . t he developmen­t of deep reform of the government.”

Chhay’s concerns about the scale of the increases, which were aired during the session by ot her CNRP law makers, were not addressed by a ny lawmakers from the CPP during the sitting.

The CPP government has, since its narrow escape at the 2013 national election, tried to push an image of aggressive­ly reforming the education sector, which had for decades been beset by corruption and poor training practices that left schools a shambles.

It appointed a former Ministry of Finance secretary of state in Hang Chuon Naron – a quadriling­ual technocrat with a reputation as a reformist – as its new education minister, and has since boosted the ministry’s budget significan­tly each year.

The planned education spending of about $682 million for 2017 is more than double the $335 million given to the ministry in 2014 – the first budget after the election.

 ??  ??
 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Opposition lawmaker Son Chhay speaks to reporters after the vote on the 2017 budget, which was passed over CNRP objections.
HENG CHIVOAN Opposition lawmaker Son Chhay speaks to reporters after the vote on the 2017 budget, which was passed over CNRP objections.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia