Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Budget promises lagging; state of ‘Implementa­tion Unit’ unknown

„National Budget Department says no such unit exists „Progress reports of individual ministries lacking consistenc­y „Status of 26 percent of promises remains undisclose­d

- By Shabiya Ali Ahlam

The government has yet again failed to implement the vast majority of the budget promises, even with an ‘Implementa­tion Unit’ which was supposed to have been establishe­d under the Finance and Mass Media Ministry to specifical­ly track the progress of the budget proposals and report on them.

With only 8 percent of the promises made in the 2018 budget being fulfilled, or making some progress, within the first half of the year, an analysis of the budget proposals and their status suggests that the Implementa­tion Unit has not fulfilled its duties.

The unit that was set up by Finance and Mass Media Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a, as proposed in the 2018 budget (proposal 297), was said to be headed by Senior Advisor to the Finance and Mass Media Ministry, Mano Tittawella and Economic Advisor (to the Ministry) Deshal de Mel.

The unit was responsibl­e to monitor the implementa­tion of the proposals and make available to the general public a progress report on a monthly basis.

While no such report has been released since the establishm­ent of the unit, economic think-tank Verité Research shared with reporters yesterday that in their efforts to update an online budget tracker platform, budgte-promises. org, the Finance Ministry’s National Budget Department had told them that no such unit exist.

According to the National Budget Department, those requiring informatio­n regarding the progress of the budget proposals must file a Right to Informatio­n (RIT) applicatio­n to relevant

ministries as no compilatio­n is being done at the Finance Ministry.

Although National Budget Circular No. 03/2017 affirmed the establishm­ent of such a unit, under the Department of National Budget to “monitor the implementa­tion of all capital projects including budget proposals,” the Finance Ministry had responded to an RTI requesting for the same

stating “no unit is establishe­d in the Department of National Budget under the budget proposal 297”.

Meanwhile, Verité Research said the progress reports forwarded by individual ministries, in the absence of the Implementa­tion Unit, were lacking consistenc­y in tracking and reporting of any progress made on relevant budget proposals.

The think tank also pointed out that despite filing RTIS, not all the ministries were keen on sharing any progress reports.

The least cooperativ­e ministries according to Verité were: Ministry of Agricultur­e, Ministry of Education, and Ministry of Highways and Road Developmen­t.

Whereas the most cooperativ­e ministries were: Ministry of Irrigation and Water Resource Management, Ministry of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources and Ministry of Housing and Constructi­on.

With regard to the fulfillmen­t of the 2018 budget promises for the period from January to June, 59 percent of the proposals are lagging, 5 percent neglected, and 2 percent broken.

The status of the remaining 26 percent of promises remains undisclose­d by relevant government authoritie­s.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka