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2021 budget:A helpless one without hope-Dr.E K Hayford

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Dr.E K Hayford, Executive Director,CDG-Ghana has said that,the 2021 budget of Ghana is a helpless one without hope.
According to him,the Caucus for Democratic Governance, Ghana (CDG-GH)  sees the budget as a joke, instigated by Nana Addo in his last term in office.
Adding that,the budget is a set of policies and programs that seeks to worsen the plight of the ordinary people.
He said , the imposition of more taxes on the suffering masses, will only collapse small businesses and make nonsense all the incentives for economic growth.
He maintained that the budget will also increase unemployment and drive desperate citizens  into criminality.
Any attempt to resuscitate the collapsing economy should begin with reduction in taxes,  restriction on imports and the introduction of Luxury tax. He revealed.
RECOVERY
An economy which was sent to Intensive Care Unit (ICU) in March 2020, after massive borrowing, should reduce expenditure and increase productivity to incite recovery. Sadly our targeted expenditure of over 10 billion is too high. Increases in taxes and price regime – a wrong approach expose the incompetence of Akufo Addo and his infantile structural adjustment program. Indeed the next four years is bound to be a period of severe hardship, characterized by corruption, deceit and lies in government circles; during which Ghanaians have nothing to expect but suffering and unemployment.
It is interesting to note that Akufo Addo before the election had enough money for COVID-19. Post election however sees Ghanaians paying back these monies. We now face COVID-19 levies; 5.7% increases in petroleum  price; 10p taxes to keep Ghana clean ; increases in NHIS, VAT and road tolls among others. With these new taxes the grass roots and unemployed will have to tighten their belts while the corrupt rich clan members explode in wealth.
INTEREST PAYMENT
Before the budget, Ghanaians were  struggling with high rice, plantain, tomatoes, maize (kenkey), fuel, transport and imported goods prices. The national debt of 291.6 billion gh¢ (155 billion of which Akufo Addo  alone borrowed in his first term), now tightens the financial space. With our debt ratio to GDP at 76.1%, negotiation for a loan becomes  highly difficult. The short fall in the economy is expected to be 9.5 billion gh¢. The national revenue of about 45 billion has decreased heavily, such that  we are forced to use 5.9 billion gh¢ of our borrowed money to pay the interest rate of our debt. In spite of these threatening financial  parameters, the usual “never to be fulfilled promises” was not left out of the budget. Promises such as : massive road projects; tax rebate for businesses,   revamping of the railway system and expansion of digital space, are juicy promises that cannot be fulfilled because we have no money.
UNFULFILLED PROMISES
Promises given by Nana Addo in 2016 show that promises are not realities. They are often meant to deceive us and get us to vote. Just as the President failed to build the badly needed 135 SHS during the free SHS crises ; just as he failed to build the promised 88 hospitals during COVID-19; he will  in much the same way not have the funds to carry out the new promises to Ghanaians. We are in hard times.
Source:Broadcastergh.com/Ayisah Foster

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