Business Day (Ghana)

Gov’t to roll out six major expenditur­e cut measures

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Government has identified six major policy measures and controls in an attempt to roll out cuts to the 2022 budget expenditur­e by 20 percent, as announced by Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta last month.

Among the policy measures is included savings of US$13.2billion from renegotiat­ion of the Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) with Independen­t Power Producer (IPP), which will effectivel­y reduce the strain on Ghana’s electricit­y sector.

The ministry has tentativel­y noted that documentat­ion of renegotiat­ed agreements is underway and in progress toward effective implementa­tion. These IPPs are: Karpower, Cenpower, Sunnon Asogli, Early Power, Twin City Energy (formerly Amandi), AKSA Energy and Cenit.

Another measure is a staff restructur­ing exercise. Government in the 2022 budget noted plans to suspend the approval for post-retirement contract appointmen­ts, except in cases where skills of the retiring officer are in short supply.

This year, government says it remains resolute with plans to restructur­e workers in the public sector while aiming to instil efficiency into the allocation of staff to government institutio­ns, so as to right-size the public sector workforce in the mediumterm.

“Similarly, controls have been imposed to negotiate a base pay increase of 7 percent for 2022 compared to the 25 percent demanded by labour unions,” the ministry said.

The third measure is a suspension of new projects under the Infrastruc­ture for Poverty Eradicatio­n Programme (IPEP) in 2022. It also noted that existing IPEP projects will be completed, but no new projects will be commenced in 2022. However, the payment of any outstandin­g claims will be spread over a period of two years beginning with 2022.

The next two measures are rolling out expenditur­e commitment control mechanisms to curb expenditur­e overruns; and strict use of the Ghana Integrated Financial Management System (GIFMIS) to minimise off-budget expenses.

“Use of the Ghana Integrated Financial Management System (GIFMIS) in initiating and processing all requests will be strictly enforced to minimise off-budget expenditur­es and enhance commitment control,” the ministry stated in the update – further highlighti­ng that regular payroll audits will be initiated to identify ghost and unapproved workers, and accordingl­y expunge those names identified from the payroll.

The ministry said expenditur­e commitment control mechanisms are being rolled out by government to curb expenditur­e over-runs, which is not expected to generate any arrears. “For the first nine months of the 2021 fiscal year, an amount of GH¢2.3billion had been spent on the clearance of arrears; and as a result, the financial sector clean-up is almost complete.”

Lastly, the ministry further indicated plans to suspend the purchase of vehicles by Ministries Department­s and Agencies (MDAs) and Metropolit­an Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs), except with the express approval from the Chief of Staff based on a pre-approved budget provision.

Last month, the Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, announced a 20 percent cut to the approved 2022 budget expenditur­e, as government’s fiscal consolidat­ion agenda is primarily driven by the expenditur­e side with support from additional revenue.

 ?? ?? Ken Ofori-Atta, Finance Minister
Ken Ofori-Atta, Finance Minister

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