Daily Nation Newspaper

Uganda MPs nod proposed 10pc rise in 2023/24 budget

- – REUTERS.

KAMPALA - Uganda's parliament has approved the government's plan to raise spending by 10 percent to $14.19 billion in the 2023/24 fiscal year, according to the Finance ministry.

Ugandan law requires lawmakers to approve the government's spending plans for a specific fiscal year before they are officially laid out in a budget speech. The fiscal year runs July-June.

Finance Minister, Matia Kasaija, is set to present the 2023/24 budget to parliament early next month.

“Parliament on Thursday approved proposed overall spending for that fiscal year,” Uganda’s Finance Ministry said on Twitter. The government set spending for the current fiscal year at $12.95 billion. Although the ministry did not say how the funds would be allocated, energy, transport, and works and health ministries have taken the lion's share of the resources in recent years.

Opposition lawmakers have accused the government of heavily relying on borrowing to pay for spending.

"Borrowing has significan­tly increased over the years, thence gradually increasing the cost of credit. This has undermined the private sector whereby the acquisitio­n of credit has become expensive," Mathias Mpuuga, official leader of the opposition in parliament, said on Twitter as part of their response to the proposed spending.

The government defended its borrowing, saying it was necessary for infrastruc­ture and other developmen­t projects. This year, the finance ministry said it will not do any external borrowing in 2023/24 to ease debt-servicing pressures.

 ?? ?? “Parliament on Thursday approved proposed overall spending for that fiscal year,”
“Parliament on Thursday approved proposed overall spending for that fiscal year,”

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