Accra, Aug. 28, GNA - Mr Yaw Osafo-Maafo, Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, on Thursday said the 2004 presidential and parliamentary elections would cost the nation 235 billion cedis. "This certainly will put undue pressure on the budget... calls for strict fiscal discipline and avoidance of over-expenditure as well as a critical assessment of the electoral budget and prioritisation of the activities involved, while ensuring value for money for the procurement of goods and services."
Mr Osafo-Maafo whose speech was read on his behalf by Dr Samuel Nii-Noi Ashong, Minister of State for Economic Planning, stated this at the on-going national consultative forum on state funding of political parties.
The forum seeks to build consensus on the way forward for the financing of political parties and the electoral process, how to resource the parties to make them more effective in the performance of their duties and examination of the challenges of financing elections. About 100 participants, comprising representatives of political parties, the Trades Union Congress, security organisations, professional organisations and chiefs attended the forum. It was organised by the Electoral Commission and KAB Consult, a non-governmental organisation, with funding from USAID.
Mr Osafo-Maafo said, notwithstanding, the difficulties associated with the funding of the electoral process the government would endeavour to make available the financial resources needed to fund the elections, while also ensuring that a stable macroeconomic environment was maintained.
He, therefore, urged the EC to ensure the provision of a credible voters' register to serve as the basis for future elections and thereby relieve the nation of the cost of spending huge sums of money to reconstruct a new register.
On challenges facing the nation as it enters an election year, the Finance Minister said analyses of the economy during the elections of 1992, 1996 and 2000 indicate that policies designed for short-term political gains replaced the programmed budgets for these years. These ushered in a spree of visible overspending and the initiation of new projects not budgeted for.
Election years, particularly 2000, were characterized by the freezing of prices of utilities and petroleum products and the granting of generous wage increases. This led to huge fiscal deficits, high rates of inflation and massive depreciation of the cedi.
He said these election-year-distortions tendered to destroy all the gains made in stabilizing the economy in the years preceding elections. The result was that after elections, the country had to start the stabilization process all over again, while grappling with the deficit, with its consequent devastating impact on the operations of the private sector.
Mr Osafo-Maafo said the government would ensure that the economy stayed on course and that all programmed expenditures were within budgetary allocation.
Once this was achieved, it could meet its part of the expenditure required for the elections, with the satisfaction that the budget had not been distorted through undue reallocation of expenditure, he said. The Minister said ensuring macroeconomic stability would also facilitate the inflow of the donor component of the resource needed to finance the elections.
"Any signal to our development partners that the events leading up to the election may destabilize the economy will usher in a period of uneasiness and a strain in our relationship. This will surely have negative consequences and must be avoided at all cost."
Accra, Aug. 28, GNA - Mr Yaw Osafo-Maafo, Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, on Thursday said the 2004 presidential and parliamentary elections would cost the nation 235 billion cedis. "This certainly will put undue pressure on the budget... calls for strict fiscal discipline and avoidance of over-expenditure as well as a critical assessment of the electoral budget and prioritisation of the activities involved, while ensuring value for money for the procurement of goods and services."
Mr Osafo-Maafo whose speech was read on his behalf by Dr Samuel Nii-Noi Ashong, Minister of State for Economic Planning, stated this at the on-going national consultative forum on state funding of political parties.
The forum seeks to build consensus on the way forward for the financing of political parties and the electoral process, how to resource the parties to make them more effective in the performance of their duties and examination of the challenges of financing elections. About 100 participants, comprising representatives of political parties, the Trades Union Congress, security organisations, professional organisations and chiefs attended the forum. It was organised by the Electoral Commission and KAB Consult, a non-governmental organisation, with funding from USAID.
Mr Osafo-Maafo said, notwithstanding, the difficulties associated with the funding of the electoral process the government would endeavour to make available the financial resources needed to fund the elections, while also ensuring that a stable macroeconomic environment was maintained.
He, therefore, urged the EC to ensure the provision of a credible voters' register to serve as the basis for future elections and thereby relieve the nation of the cost of spending huge sums of money to reconstruct a new register.
On challenges facing the nation as it enters an election year, the Finance Minister said analyses of the economy during the elections of 1992, 1996 and 2000 indicate that policies designed for short-term political gains replaced the programmed budgets for these years. These ushered in a spree of visible overspending and the initiation of new projects not budgeted for.
Election years, particularly 2000, were characterized by the freezing of prices of utilities and petroleum products and the granting of generous wage increases. This led to huge fiscal deficits, high rates of inflation and massive depreciation of the cedi.
He said these election-year-distortions tendered to destroy all the gains made in stabilizing the economy in the years preceding elections. The result was that after elections, the country had to start the stabilization process all over again, while grappling with the deficit, with its consequent devastating impact on the operations of the private sector.
Mr Osafo-Maafo said the government would ensure that the economy stayed on course and that all programmed expenditures were within budgetary allocation.
Once this was achieved, it could meet its part of the expenditure required for the elections, with the satisfaction that the budget had not been distorted through undue reallocation of expenditure, he said. The Minister said ensuring macroeconomic stability would also facilitate the inflow of the donor component of the resource needed to finance the elections.
"Any signal to our development partners that the events leading up to the election may destabilize the economy will usher in a period of uneasiness and a strain in our relationship. This will surely have negative consequences and must be avoided at all cost."