Category Archives: Finance

Kenya: KRA collects Sh635 billion

from Elijah Kombo

Oisaboke – Well said. Let the other MPs pay up and then we will say job well done.

But we must congratulations KRA for ensuring that the MPs pay up. Its was a good threat from Njiraini. But now the challenge remains with the Spenders. Previsiouly KRA performed/delivered but the Spenders misused the funds. We also saw the KRA commissioner together with other parastatal chiefs fund one presidential candidate from tax payer’s money.

Kombo Elijah

— On Tue, 7/5/11, Tebiti Oisaboke wrote:

Mike;

We will hold on to our congratulations for a job well done until the last of Speaker Marende’s audience students pay up their dues. And then we all sing HOSANNA!!! job well done. Overall you are leading in the right direction.

TOI

Kenya: Ongeri Must Go

from Judy Miriga

Folks,

No doubt 99% of Kenyans want Ongeri out, but Kibaki will not bulge. He wont let either Sam Ongeri or other corrupt members in the Coalition Government step aside or quit.

Uptill now President Kibaki has said nothing of significant to ask Ongeri out of Public Office for further investigation.

We definately urgently need a bulldozer to help us push Kibaki and Ongeri to a corner where they can begin to understand what we are all talking about.

The whole world Leaders, friends and sympathizers should join with us (under humanitarian grounds) to make this move a definate call to ask Ongeri step aside.

Thank you all,

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Ongeri Must Go
Nelly Gitau
30 June 2011

Representatives of public and private universities students are calling on Education Minister Sam Ongeri to resign over the missing 4.2 billion shillings meant for the free primary education. They say Ongeri should take political responsibility and leave office. The students say Ongeri should step aside and stop blaming his juniors since the buck stops with him. Ongeri maintains he is innocent and that police are already investigating those behind the scam.

I Won’t Quit Over Fraud, Vows Ongeri
Barnabas Bii
29 June 2011

Nairobi — Education minister Sam Ongeri has said he will not commit political suicide by resigning over the theft of Sh4.2 billion from free primary education kitty.

“I cannot compromise corruption with my political responsibility by resigning as a minister,” said Prof Ongeri who absolved himself from any fraudulent dealings.

He challenged those calling for his resignation to await the outcome of a financial audit of the scandal instead of undermining him politically.

“Forensic audit is going on and those found to be behind the scandal will be made to carry their own cross,” said Prof Ongeri and reminded his critics that he only dealt with paper work and not cash.

School administrators and other education officials should be held responsible for any theft of Sh1.9 billion released during the June 2008 to June 28, 2011 period, he said, noting that appropriate rules were applied in releasing the cheques to banks.

He was speaking during Keiyo South Education day at Maria Soti Girls Education Centre.

The event was attended by among others Environment assistant minister Margaret Kamar, Keiyo South MP Jackson Kiptanui and former Cabinet minister Nicholas Biwott.

“The Sh2.27 billion for the programme was released between June 2005 and June 2008 reconciliation period when I was by then not a minister,” said Mr Ongeri.

He defended the free education plan noting the transition rate from primary to secondary had improved from 46.4 per cent to 72.5 per cent since the scheme was introduced almost 10 years ago.

He, however, said about 1.5 million children could not access free primary education due to factors ranging from financial constraints to lack of learning materials.

“About 200,000 children in arid and semi-arid areas are not benefiting from formal education,” he said.

Prof Ongeri said Sh1.2 million had been released to each constituency to support bright students from poor families.

Mr Biwott lamented the low enrolment of boys in schools in Keiyo South and called on leaders to shun tribalism in education matters.

Kenya: We Will Not Pay a Penny, Swear MPs in Tax Row….Well, Tax is a must no escape….!

from Judy Miriga

Folks,

Tax is a must that all MPs must pay as equal partners in sharing the burden of the debt. It is a shared commitment to all salary earners irrespective of position in the society.

Taxes are the collectibles made through Revenue Collections that helps with Government functions and operations in meeting expenses and costs of bills, salaries, transportation and other Government activities along with boosting social welfare for community programs and in management for infrastructures.

In situations where there is relatively good regulatory program put in place with balanced effective management system, it is not worth that Revenue collection would suffice to boost economic development as well as social programs without heavy borrowing and overburdening the society with undue rising high costs for consumer basic needs and other commodities.

In a shared-cost tax-payer bracket, rich and poor, employers and employees, high salary and low salaried earners, business community, service providers and or commodities traders or hawkers, investors of land and property dealers, must have a taxable salary bracket that which conforms in a balanced proportion that fits well inclusively.

Where MPs begin to brag and order People, in their selfish demands to raise their salaries to the ceiling, and stubbornly refusing to pay income and property taxes, but are full of themselves with threats to paralyse the house, is a show-case of performing evaluation, which, according to the New Constitution, the performing deliberations and recommendations are summarily reasons enough for recall and equally satisfactory to have a Members’ term of office terminated from serving in the House, cutting short his or her term of office in Parliament.

This is something People Power MUST confront and engage Parliamentarians in order to weed-out those who are hell-bent to delaying tactics so matters get to a state they are overcome by events, and so that they evade Implementation of the New Constitution.

It is not a secret that they are all ready to go to election with the old constitution, and this will never ever happen……….They are in a deep dream land……

I therefore register my disappointment and disagreement with Speaker Marende in siding with these unthoughtful crooked Politicians, who have lost focus for better things in Democratic Governance of the people and for the people…….

People…..We must succeed…… United we are strong, divided we fall……..take the Bull by the horn, and show your People Power, a force that which will shape our destiny for a better world now and forever………!

You will sigh and be satisfied, it is a risk worth taking………!

Cheers everybody, and God Bless us all……

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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MPs: We’ll paralyse House if taxman pushes us to the wall

By MARTIN MUTUA

Parliament hit back at Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) terming threats to seize MPs’ property for not paying tax as “mischievous and malicious”.

The Parliamentary Service Commission (PSC) said remarks by KRA Commissioner John Njiraini were meant to incite Kenyans against MPs.

PSC Vice-Chairman Walter Nyambati said the current Parliament is safeguarded under the old Constitution.

“For MPs in this Parliament, the law to be applied is under the former Constitution. This includes the exemption from taxation of allowances,” he said.

Impeccable sources told The Standard that MPs are now planning to paralyse business in the House when it reconvenes next month until the matter is resolved.

Several MPs interviewed but who did not wish to be named said no Government business would be transacted in the House until the matter is dealt with.

“Unless there is something we don’t know, the feeling among members is that no Government business would be transacted, including the Budget, which is yet to be approved by the House,” said an MP.

Members have also vowed that if pushed to the wall, they would reintroduce the Akiwumi Tribunal report that proposed their remuneration to be increased to meet the tax deficit that KRA is demanding.

In the report pending before the House, the tribunal had recommended that the Prime Minister should earn 80 per cent of the gross remuneration of the President.

It had also suggested that the Vice- President earn 60 per cent of the gross remuneration of the President and the Deputy Prime Ministers earn 60 per cent of the gross remuneration of the PM.

The tribunal further recommended that the Speaker should earn 50 per cent of the gross remuneration of the President, while his deputy earn 70 per cent of the Speaker’s gross remuneration. Similarly, the report said the vice-chairman of PSC should earn a parliamentary responsibility allowance.

The PM’s salary was recommended at Sh2.9 million a month, the VP’s Sh2.19 million, the Speaker Sh2.1 million, Deputy Prime Ministers Sh1.6 million, and the Deputy Speaker Sh1.4 million. Assistant ministers, Government chief whips and members of the Speaker’s panel were to earn Sh1.3 million, while MPs were to earn Sh1.09 million.

Nyambati, in the company of MPs Olago-Aluoch and Jamleck Kamau, said the taxation of MPs’ allowances was the subject of two Speaker’s kamukunjis last year just before the referendum on the Constitution.

Nyambati said in the first kamukunji, Attorney General Amos Wako told MPs that taxation of their allowances was shelved until the expiry of the Tenth Parliament.

“In the second kamukunji, the President assured MPs the Government shall abide by the legal opinion of the Attorney General,” he added.

Olago said the Speaker was in possession of the letters by Wako and KRA Commissioner General Michael Waweru. “When the Speaker produces the letters, then it will be out in the public for Kenyans to judge,” he added.

We Will Not Pay a Penny, Swear MPs in Tax Row
Alphonce Shiundu
23 June 2011

Nairobi — Members of Parliament were on Thursday adamant that they would not obey demands by Kenya Revenue Authority to pay tax on their full Sh850,000 salary.
Furious MPs described KRA officials as “uncivilised” and quoted sections of the law they claimed supported their right not to pay taxes like other Kenyans.

They dismissed the Commission on the Implementation of the Constitution as having “no role in interpreting the constitution”. MPs refusal comes even as the Judiciary, which is also affected by the new law, has agreed to comply, and has asked Treasury to help its members, including judges and the Chief Justice to obey the Constitution.

The CIC had said that MPs must pay their bit. Many institutions, including political parties to which the MPs belong, have been referring matters of constitutional interpretation to the CIC.

The Constitution is unambiguous: all state officers, including MPs and holders of constitutional office, must pay taxes. The Constitution actually bars Parliament from making a law that exempts anyone from paying tax.

Speaker Kenneth Marende, admonishing Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta for not following the Constitution, recently ruled that unless expressly suspended in the transitional clauses, a section of the Constitution is assumed to be in force and must be obeyed.

It now remains to be seen whether Parliament will change its understanding of the Constitution to accommodate the MPs’ demands.

MPs have been arguing that the status quo should be maintained until after the next election on the basis of a legal opinion by the Attorney-General last July that they will not be taxed until the end of their term.

KRA has dismissed the AG’s opinion as the views of one State department, and has threatened to auction MPs’ property and raid their accounts if they don’t pay their taxes with arrears.

It is highly unlikely, in the event of a lawsuit that judges will agree to be taxed but make an exception of MPs.

Yesterday, the Parliamentary Service Commission (PSC) — the administrative wing of the House — defended MPs, saying they will not pay tax until the law is reviewed.
Mr Walter Nyambati, the vice-chairman of the PSC and MPs Olago Aluoch and Jamleck Kamau, both members of the commission, also accused the taxman of malice and mischief, for publicly demanding that they pay up.

Mischievous

“(The commissioner of domestic taxes, Mr John) Njiraini, is being mischievous and malicious. This is one arm of government. KRA has not instituted any discussion with the Parliamentary Service Commission. They’re inciting the public against their Parliament. It is wrong. Totally wrong,” Mr Nyambati said.

They said PSC had initiated talks with the KRA, the Treasury and Attorney General Amos Wako, with a view to having the directive rescinded.

And separately, Kinangop MP David Ngugi accused the Government of sparking the storm over MPs taxation as a “diversionary tactic.”

“These are MPs with kneejerk reaction. I repeat this is nonsense. It should not be mentioned. We should be going by the law, and so far the law is on the on the side of MPs. It would be reckless,” Mr Aluoch said.

The PSC commissioners fell back on what it termed as the “opinion of the Attorney General” issued last July, just before the referendum on the Constitution, saying that the KRA can’t tax them both “in law and in fact”.

Mr Kamau said the President and the AG, “unless they were not being genuine”, promised to abide by the opinion and protect MP’s tax free allowances until their term in Parliament ends.

While, they noted that the AG’s opinion cannot be superior to the Constitution, they said it was based on law and that anyone with a problem should go to the Supreme Court for interpretation.

They then cited Section 6 of the Sixth Schedule, which says the rights and obligations that were enjoyed under the old Constitution shall be enjoyed in the transition period.
They argued that their obligation was to pay tax, while the government’s was to collect tax. However, they said, it was a right under the “laws of natural justice and principle of reasonable expectation” for them to enjoy their tax-free perks totalling Sh651,000. They just pay tax on their Sh200,000 basic salary.

“You cannot change the terms of an employee’s contract midway, before the term ends. Full stop! People are arguing based on emotion rather than fact and truth,” Mr Aluoch said. The MP for Kisumu Town West quoted the Income Tax Act, saying, there was a provision to cater for such situations because there is a discrepancy in the law. Under this law, the Finance Minister can also direct the commissioner to collect tax from MPs.

They said that once the Speaker comes back from his international trip, the AG’s opinion and the letter from the KRA will be made public and that the status quo will remain.
“Under the legal principle of Estoppel, he cannot go back to say that he’s changed his mind,” Mr Aluoch said of the AG.

He said the Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution had no role in interpreting the law.

The tax exemption on MPs’ perks was first introduced in law in 1975. The current pay was set in 2003 after a report by a tribunal by former judge Majid Cockar.

Marende Dismisses MPs Call to Pay Tax
Alphonce Shiundu and Njeri Rugene
22 June 2011

Nairobi — House Speaker Kenneth Marende has dismissed calls for MPs to pay tax on their perks.

With the move, Mr Marende has effectively shrugged off the taxman’s directive that the lawmakers and other constitutional office holders pay tax.

Mr Marende’s stance is the strongest indication that MPs will not yield to public pressure in respect to the Constitution in the remitting of tax.

“The basic concept of law is that once you confer a benefit, you don’t take it away arbitrarily,” he said in London, where he is on official duty.

In an interview with the BBC, Mr Marende said MPs were paying tax as the law requires.
“My position is that as we speak now, Kenyan MPs pay tax as required by enabling tax laws,” he said.

The lawmakers pay taxes on their basic salary of Sh200,000, but their perks amounting to a minimum of Sh651,000 remain untaxed -and they are keen to maintain that status quo at least until after the next elections.

“If the law says Mr Speaker you earn Sh800,000 a month; you are supposed to pay tax on all the Sh800,000. I can assure you that I will be among the first to comply,” Mr Marende told the BBC.

It is not clear which law the Speaker was referring to, given that the Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution -the custodians of the new dispensation–has said that the Constitution, being the supreme law of the land, requires every State officer, including MPs, to pay tax.

The National Assembly Remuneration Act, which exempts MPs from paying income tax on their huge perks, according to the CIC is inconsistent with the Constitution and therefore it is null and void.

He said it was not for him as the Speaker to introduce amendments to have the lawmakers comply with section 210(3) of the Constitution.

He said if the amendments are brought and approved by Parliament “then there’ll be compliance.”

Asked about his moral views, the Speaker replied: “If you talk about morals, my position is very simple. And it is clear. I do everything in accordance with the law as prescribed. Even as a good Christian, the bible says give unto Caesar what belongs to Caesar.”

The contention is that MPs have so far not been giving as much to Caesar, given that they engineered the move to block their perks from taxation. That move to shield allowances was enacted by President Kibaki when he was Finance minister under the Moi Government.

The Speaker’s latest position comes at a time when differences have arisen over interpretation of the law as to the taxation of MPs allowances.

While the CIC boss Charles Nyachae is of the view that the Constitution directs everyone to pay tax, Justice and Constitutional affairs minister Mutula Kilonzo says the law is not that clear.

Mr Kilonzo says that while “it is fair to argue that Article 210 of the Constitution binds everyone to pay tax,” the use of the word “may” in the article about no law exempting any State Officer from paying tax, creates a discretion.

Similarly, he argues that 210 (2) also allows a discretion for a waiver of tax in the case of another legislation.

He argues that ‘If” is the “significant word”.

In this case, the minister says, it can be argued that the National Assembly Powers and Privileges Act could be the law contemplated by the provision.

“If that is what the Kenya Revenue Authority is using, then they must understand that the article creates discretion on Parliament to exclude or authorize State Officers from paying taxes (on their allowances),” he said.

Mr Kilonzo, a Senior Counsel also brings in another argument. Are ministers and Members of Parliament State Officers in the transition period? If indeed they are, would they be holding political party offices?

He bases this on Article 3(2) of Schedule Six which extends the provisions of the old constitution stating that the National Accord and Reconciliation Act which forms the Coalition government is still in operation until after the next elections to be held under the current Constitution.

“The current government which includes MPs is formed under the Accord, to what extent does the KRA letter reflect the value and efficacy of the National Reconciliation Act?” he posed in an interview with the Nation.

However, he urges that the KRA letter “should not be dismissed lightly because Article 12 in which Article 210 falls is in full force.”

But again, MPs salaries are presently defined in Section 45B of the old constitution –on the powers of the Parliamentary Service Commission– which is still in force, Mr Kilonzo said.

“I want to entertain a sober interpretation of these provisions and also invite Kenyans who are aggrieved to go to the Supreme Court once the Judges are sworn in, for interpretation. My ministry will gladly abide by the ruling of this wonderful court,” he added.

However, he was quick to defend MPs against allegations that they have violated the Constitution by failing to pay taxes on their full because the legislation that allows them not is in force.

“I would also like to see the wording in that letter to see how it varies from the one (the letter from Finance which is said to be with the Speaker) presented to Parliament,” the minister said.

Kenyan MPs are among the highest paid lawmakers in Africa.

MPs Owe KRA 700 Million Shillings
Fred Indimuli
22 June 2011

The revenue authority could in the next two months start recovering taxes owed by MPs including from their bank accounts.

John Njiriaini, commissioner domestic taxes department, says they have issued demands to the MPs for self declaration which should be returned in 30 days failure to which KRA will begin recovering the money in another 30 days.

KRA says MPs owe it 700 million shillings in unpaid taxes excluding penalties calculated from when the new constitution was promulgated. KRA is also expecting taxes from another 11 constitutional offices including that of the President, vice president and the Judiciary.

MPs May Lose Assets Over Tax Arrears
Samwel Kumba
22 June 2011

Nairobi — The Kenya Revenue Authority will auction the property of MPs and other top government officials if they don’t pay their taxes.

Their bank accounts could also be seized and money recovered.

The no-nonsense position taken by the taxman means that the tax-free existence that MPs have fought so hard to keep is almost coming to an end.

MPs’ tax holiday, through which they pay income tax on only Sh200,000 of their Sh850,000 salaries, is hugely unpopular with the public.

Other public officials who are joining the ranks of taxpayers include the Attorney General, judges, Controller and Auditor General, chairman and members of the Public Service Commission and Interim Independent Electoral Commission chairman and commissioners.

The Constitution explicitly provides that no public official is to be exempted from paying taxes. From the moment it became law on August 27 last year, the incomes of constitutional office holders became taxable.

KRA has given the affected officials, and their employers, until mid-July to pay up. If they don’t, enforcement measures will be taken to recover the money, warned Mr John Njiraini, the Commissioner for Domestic Taxes.

The taxman, however, said he did not expect matters to degenerate to that level. “The other measures we have to recover the money include doing so through the affected person’s bank accounts. But we hope for an amicable solution to this,” he said.

Deputy Speaker Farah Maalim supported the decision to demand the taxes. “MPs have no choice but to pay taxes… the law is very clear. It does not exempt them from paying taxes,” he said in Nairobi on Wednesday.

The Judiciary is already in touch with KRA and has asked to be guided to comply with the law. “We expect Parliament and the other relevant authorities to respond to our demands the soonest possible,” said Mr Njiraini.

KRA is challenging MPs who are unhappy with its interpretation of the law to go to the Supreme Court.

MPs have been arguing that taxing them would cut their pay in violation of their employment contract with the public.

They also say that they have obligations such as loans and mortgages, which they took on the basis of their full untaxed pay.

Only two MPs have been paying tax — Mr Peter Kenneth and Mr Johnstone Muthama — while the rest have only been paying tax on their basic salary of nearly Sh200,000.

In total, KRA expects to collect Sh700 million excluding penalty as the accrued tax and going forward nearly Sh1 billion every year from MPs and the 11 constitutional offices.
MPs’ taxable monthly perks include responsibility, constituency, extraneous, entertainment, sitting and the Sh336,000 for owning a car.

“Even the motor vehicle purchase allowance of Sh3.3 million will now be subjected to taxation,” said Mr Njiraini.

In July last year, Attorney General Amos Wako told MPs that under the new Constitution they would not be expected to pay taxes until the end of their term in office as they were exempted under the transitional clauses.

Mr Njiraini on Wednesday said that after consultation with Constitution Implementation Commission (CIC), they agreed that Article 210 of the Constitution was not subject to deferral despite the AG’s earlier opinion.

CIC chairman Charles Nyachae has supported the decision to immediately tax MPs and other constitutional office bearers. (READ: Nyachae backs MPs tax move)

In CIC’s view, the section on the taxation of MPs became operational the moment the Constitution came into force.

“There are many state officers. It is not just MPs. They all have to pay tax as none of them shall be exempted.

“The opinion of a State department is not superior to an interpretation by an institution mandated to oversee the implementation of the new constitution,” said Mr Njiraini.

The MPs may have been told what they wanted to hear at the time to gain their support at the referendum after some of them threatened to oppose the Constitution if they were to be taxed thereafter.

Early this month KRA wrote to Treasury – which runs the kitty from which most constitution office holders are paid – asking it to tax the salaries of the officers.

I Can Imagine Why we have such a headache………!

MP’s Certificate a Forgery, Court Told
Richard Munguti
24 June 2011

Nairobi — A school certificate said to belong to Gatundu North MP Clement Waibara is a forgery.

Principal secretary in charge of archives at the Kenya National Examinations Council (Knec) Patrick Ng’ang’a Miano said the certificate produced in court by former assistant minister Patrick Muiruri was not in their possession.

“The certificate shown to me by lawyer Evans Ondieki for the MP is a forgery. It did not emanate from Gikindu Primary School whose results I have with where Mr Waibara allegedly attended his early education,” Mr Miano told Justice Fred Ochieng.

He said the index number of Mr Waibara in the certificate produced in court did not tally with the records at the examinations council.

“The index number in the Knec’s record is 25624/075,” Mr Miano said.

He read out the index number in the certificate produced in court as 25624/070.

The exhibit produced by Mr Muiruri bore the name of Mr Waibara. It was issued by Gikindu Primary School in Gatundu North constituency.

Mr Miano was testifying in a case in which Mr Bernard Chege Mburu has challenged the MP’s election. He is asking the court to nullify the MP’s election, saying the polling rules were violated.

But Mr Miano found himself in a tight spot when lawyer Muthomi Thiankolu pointed out to the court that the records produced in court by Mr Miano were from a school in Murang’a District.

“The records being relied upon by the Knec officer are from a different school and belongs to a different student. The student’s index number is 075 while the one produced by Mr Muiruri is 070,” Mr Thiankolu said.

He said there were many schools with the same name in Murang’a and Kiambu.

KENYA: ONGERI SHOULD STEP ASIDE NOT BECAUSE HE IS GUILTY!

FROM: DR. ODIDA OKUTHE

Prof Ongeri should step aside not because he is culpable but because he is the minister responsible for the ministry which has lost Sh. 4.6 billion. His stepping aside will facilitate transparent investigations, which according to me are most likely going to clear his name. When this happens then he will emerge much stronger as a political leader. He should not blame the junior officers under him since doing so is not only against common logic but too low for his integrity and status.

Meanwhile we demand that the ministry of finance with speed publishes the names and tribe of all finance officers seconded to the ministry of education, let alone primary education, to deal with the disbursement of the the said lost fund. Before this is done Prof Saitoti, PS Kinyua and Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta must step aside to facilitate the investigations and the ensuing prosecutions.

My bet is as good as yours that the PS Kinyua, Prof Saitoti and Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta might come out less clean compared to Prof Ongeri if this list reveals what the past experience has taught us about those citizens with a predilection to and a higher propensity to grabbing money. Before investigations we cannot blame anybody as nobody has been proven guilty yet.

Prof Ongeri should not lower his status by claiming that people demanding his stepping aside are from the same community since his name too begins with an ”O” yet he is not Luo! Okiya Omutata for example is not a Luo, but a Luhya, yet his names begin with an ”O”! Ongeri is much a Luo name as it is a Kisii name too! What is in a name the great professor? It should not be lost to the great professor that he is a minister for the whole country not just for the Kissii and non-Luos!

Exposing the names of the treasury officers seconded to the ministry of primary education will go along way in explaining why President Kibaki cannot sack Ongeri.

DR. ODIDA OKUTHE

Linking Research to Policy: The African Development Bank as Knowledge Broker

From: Yona Maro

This paper highlights areas of bridging the gap between research and development policy and practice and discusses some pertinent issues and relevant role for the Bank as a “Knowledge Broker” as it mainstreams its knowledge management strategy to institutionalize a knowledge and learning culture in the Bank. In Africa, a wide gap exists between the producers and consumers of knowledge, and research could have a greater impact on development policy than it has had to date. Researchers as “knowledge makers” cannot understand why there is resistance to policy change despite clear and convincing evidence. Policymakers as “knowledge consumers” bemoan the inability of many researchers to make their findings accessible and digestible in time for policy decisions.

There are a number of gaps between research and policy that must be bridged such as (i): Limited policy relevant research; (ii) Insufficient access to research; (iii) Ineffective communication by researchers; (iv) An under-emphasised but very important area is the limited understanding by policy makers, politicians and incapacity of overstretched bureaucrats to absorb research and (v) improving the demand for evidence in a systematic and rigorous way.

http://www.afdb.org/fileadmin/uploads/afdb/Documents/Publications/WORKING%20131%20Linking%20Research%20to%20Policy%20.pdf


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East African currencies hit the lowest record against the dollar

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

A week after the joint presentation of the annual budget for the expenditure of governments of Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda for the financial year 2011/2012 the currencies of the three sister states touched new low in trading against the US dollar, putting pressure on Central Banks across the region to raise interest rates in the face of accelerating inflation.

Kenya shilling breached the Kshs.90 level against the dollar, while the Ugandan shilling touched US 2,428 to the dollar and the Tanzanian shilling traded at the record lowest rate of Tshs 1,595 to the dollar.

In the coming weeks, demand for the dollar, especially from the importers in the energy sector, is expected to intensify pressure on the East African currencies.

As importers – mainly in energy and food sectors- pass on the extra costs, inflation is likely to remain high within the region, stifling growth in some key areas.

Moreover, if commercial banks anticipates that local currencies will lose to the dollar, they will hold onto their dollars, further reducing supply.

Central banks have in the past tried to rein in speculative activities by commercial banks with little success.

There have also been attempts to mop up local currencies through repurchase agreements but with limited success.

The only tool that the three central banks are likely to deploy is a hike in key interest rates, such as the Central Bank Rates, the rate at which banks borrow from them.

So far, the Central Bank of Kenya has preferred a moderate increase of 25 basic points to the CBR. But with the shilling trading at record lows, the rate rise is expected to double to 50 basis points at the next Monetary Policy Committee meting.

Analysts said should the benchmark interest rate rise, commercial banks will also read from the same script, increasing the cost of borrowing to consumer and businesses.

Ends

Kenya: Jogoo House overnight sit-in activists update statement

From: George Nyongesa

Dear fellow Kenyans and the Press:

On June 20, 2011 at around 9am four activists ( Tom Oketch, Okoit Omtata, Sheikh Ahmed and George Nyongesa) stormed into Minister for Educations office on Jogoo House and staged a sit-in to demand Prof. Ongeri resigns or fired by President Mwai Kibaki to pave way for further investigation. This was occasioned by Treasury internal audit report that revealed that Free Primary Education Fund had lost Kshs. 4.6 Billion.

_

Our demand does not mean that he is culpable but we hold it that he is the duty bearer and he has obligation to be accountable to the people of Kenya about their money. The same activists were among the 22 who were arrested on December 24, 2009 following a civic action to spotlight embezzlement of FPE money.

By close of business June 20 the activists had only heard from Permanent Secretary, Prof. James Ole Kiyiapi who defended himself saying he does not know who stole the money.

Yesterday, June 21, the activists returned to the Ministers office, subdued intimidation from anti riot police who demanded they leave and staged an overnight vigil at Jogoo House. As I write this statement the activists are still holding out at Jogoo House 2nd room 204. We are mobilizing more support from our networks this morning to join so as to make it business unusual at the ministry until something gives in.

The activists are determined to stay put at the Ministry of Education headquarters Jogoo House until the Minister resigns or is fired to pave way for further investigation. In the event he is found culpable, he should prosecuted and the money recovered.

We are also asking the British government not to demand their money back because the money gives relief to the poor families. Prof. Ongeri’s children do not go to public schools and will not be affected. The British government should use other means of holding Kenyan political leadership accountable on corruption.

With the new constitution, the new chief justice, increase demand for integrity among judges and magistrates, and the promise of total overhaul of judicial system; the ball is in the court of us citizens to make Kenya better a nation.

We must now make the concept of accountability a reality and inculcate the culture of taking responsibility into our public affairs. This is a song we sang as we whiled the night away at Jogoo House on June 21, 2011.

The following are the activists in the photos: Florence Kanyua, Francis Sakwa, Vincent Kidaha, John Koome, Gabriel Adigo, Japhet Moroko, John Abok, Gacheke Gachihi, Fredrick Odhiambo, Okoiti Omtata and George Nyongesa

Circulate this message to your networks.

George Nyongesa | National Coordinator, Bunge la Mwananchi | 0733 82 7859

KENYA JOURNALISTS THROWN OUT OF HOTEL IN GENEVA.

By our Reporter from Geneva

A battery of Kenya journalists who had been taken to Geneva City in Switzerland for the International Labor Organization annual general meetings by Francis Atwoli the Secretary General of Kenya’s Central Organizations of Trade Union (COTU) for two days now have been thrown out of the Hotel where they have been accommodated since their arrival and their personal effects confiscated by the hotel management due to what they say is “aloofness” by Atwoli to settle the bills and have vowed to block Atwoli’s attempt to leave the country until he pays the accrued costs.

The hotel spokesperson Martin Karlson says that their attempts to get money from Atwoli has bore no fruit resulting to them locking the journalists out of their hotel saying theirs is a business which needs to be respected and serviced.

“Its not the Kenya journalists fault, we locked them out and confiscated their personal effects as one way of bargaining as we try to recover our money as we are made to believe that they wanted to leave the country as they claimed that Atwoli has abandoned them and ILO is ignorant of their presence here in Geneva saying it was Kenya’s arrangement” Mr. Karlson added.

One female journalist who spoke on condition of not being named because she is married says that their trouble began when the female journalists refused to have sex with some section of COTU officials resulting to them being abandoned.

“We are appealing to the Embassy here and the Ministry of Labor and Foreign Affairs to come to our aid as we do not have our own passports, when we asked Atwoli,he sarcastically told us that “mtaka cha mvunguni sharti tuiname “,we are married and we never came here for sexual escapades” the weeping journalists said.

Another male journalist lamented that the allowances they were promised that they were to be paid, they have not been paid despite some sources saying Atwoli had there money.

“He pleaded with our bosses to bring us here only to subject us to all these, we appeal to Kenya Government to intervene speedily otherwise we do not know what to do” he said.

Efforts to get comment from Atwoli were fruitless while when we contacted ILO headquarters a lady who never wanted to be mentioned said that they never invited the said journalists and that should be the case of Atwoli to handle.

“Please we only handle our invitees, not tourists and joy riders” she said finally.

Kenya Foreign Affairs Assistant Minister Richard Onyonka when contacted admitted of being aware of the case and promised to consult the Labour Ministry .

“We will assist them, but laid down Kenya government rules must be followed” he assured.

African Bank Development Bank / Online press conference

From; African Press Organization

subject African Bank Development Bank / Online press conference about the expected outcomes from the Climate Investment Fund Partnership Forum

The Director, Energy, Environment and Climate Change, African Bank Development Bank (AfDB) Group, Ms. Hela Cheikhrouhou, will hold an online press conference on Thursday, 16 June 2011, about the upcoming Climate Investment Fund Partnership Forum (Cape Town, South Africa, 24-25 June 2011).

As one of the main implementers of the Climate Investment Funds (CIF) in Africa, the African Development Bank will host the 2011 CIF Partnership Forum in Cape Town, South Africa from 24-25 June 2011. The CIF are designed to contribute to effective and global climate change solutions.

You are invited to join this online press conference.

Speaker: Hela Cheikhrouhou, Director, Energy, Environment and Climate Change, African Bank Development Bank

Date: Thursday, 16 June 2011

Time: From 2 PM – 3 PM (GMT)

Languages: English, French

How it works: This service is FREE and only requires a computer connected to the internet.

Application: http://www.apo-opa.org/en/application?vc=AfDBen

Media Contact: Pénélope Pontet +216 71 10 12 50 / +216 24 66 36 96 – Email: p.pontetdefouquieres@afdb.org
Technical Contact: +41 22 534 96 97 – Email: sec.sg@apo-opa.org

Kenya: Understand why they abuse and steal your money

from Dr. Morrison Muleri

I believe the article contributes to public awareness amid the numerous reports in the Kenya media on corruption, abuse of public resources and questionable accumulation of wealth.

I will be delighted to provide any further information / clarification you may require.

Morrison Muleri, PhD

– – –

Understand why they abuse and steal your money

By Morrison Muleri*

What really keeps you awake at night? Do you ever find yourself sleepless and wondering how a person, any person, could accumulate that US$10 million, yes, that is right, Kshs 800 million in that bank account overseas? Or how a servant of the people amassed Kshs 2 billion, yes, that is right Kshs 2,000 million of investments that the family is feuding over? These figures and how people amass them is mind boggling, but allow me to develop an argument to explain why people of lesser moral compass do it.

I will not bore you with countless theories, scientific or otherwise, of why people abuse or steal your money. I will only borrow from three theories and simplify them as much as possible. Of course, I will be very blunt about it too. To start off, let me answer that question from the outset: they abuse and steal your money because of exactly that; it is yours and not theirs. How much of it they abuse or steal depends on their station on the social ladder of needs. The richer they are, the more they abuse or steal. Let nobody tell you it is the other way round or more complex than that. But do not just take my word for it, allow me to explain.

There is a theory I really like that explains how people spend money. It says simply that how one spends money depends on whose money it is they are spending, on whom, and for whose benefit. In essence, this puts forth three competing scenarios. Whose money? It can be mine, yours, ours or somebody else’s. On whom? It can be on oneself or on somebody else. For whose benefit? It could be for one’s own benefit or for the benefit of another.

Human nature dictates that our behavior with money changes as those scenarios change. Have you realized that when you take your girlfriend out she usually goes for the expensive stuff (food, drink, dress etc)? A beer drinking girl suddenly turns to red wine and seems to value it more as the price rises. Instead of settling for nyama choma at Sagret, she wants it at Carnivore. If you give her the money outright to treat herself, all that changes and she becomes herself again. Why? Because she is no-longer spending “your” money but “her” money! Give her the same money but tell her to treat herself and to bring you back the receipts and change. Suddenly, she reverts to wine and carnivore, or fake receipts from there. I am no exception. When travelling on my employer’s business I insist on business class air travel. A return ticket costs over Kshs 500,000 between Washington DC and Nairobi. I insist on staying at a 4 or 5-star hotel at over Kshs 15,000 per night. When I come home on my own dollar I always travel economy class at a cost of Kshs 100,000 and I stay at 3-star hotels at Kshs 5,000 per night. In both cases the same level of effectiveness is achieved; I travel safely and stay comfortably. Let me not get ahead of myself by delving into efficiency and economy now. Take another example, when I lived in London I would bring a friend a suit from Shepherd’s Bush that cost a modest £129 or Kshs 17,000. One time I deliberately failed to and instead gave him the equivalent Kshs 17,000 to expressly “buy a suit”. He confessed a week later that he bought one at BR Tank at Kshs 7,000 and used the balance on other “more important” things. I am glad I did not accompany him to buy the suit. If I did, I bet we would end on the other side of Moi Avenue and spent thrice the amount on a suit.

The second theory I want to build on is the “value for money” theory which states that we get the most out of money if it delivers effectiveness, efficiency and economy, or simply the “3Es”. Effectiveness is getting done what you really want to do. If I want my sick son to get well, I can take him to hospital, pay a doctor to treat him and buy him medicines the doctor prescribes. If my son heals, I have used my resources effectively. Efficiency has to do with how much less of it I use to achieve that objective. I could take my son in a helicopter to Nairobi Hospital and get him treated at a cost of Kshs 100,000. I could hire a car and get him to Mater Mission Hospital and get him treated at a cost of Kshs 50,000. Or I could take him to Kenyatta National Hospital, in a matatu and have him treated at Kshs 10,000. The last option achieves the same objective at least cost and it is therefore the most efficient. Finally economy is all about avoiding waste. Can I get my son treated without losing resources like time, medicines or paying medical or traffic staff a bribe? If I avoid unnecessary leakage then I have achieved economy. So, if my son heals in all three cases then taking him to KNH best observes the 3Es just as my economy class travels to Nairobi and accommodation at 3-star hotels, your girlfriend’s beer and nyama choma at Sagret and my friend’s suit at BR Tank are.

In general, when the theory of value for money is superimposed on the theory of how people spend money, three scenarios arise.

Scenario one: when one spends his own money on himself or on somebody else but for his own benefit, he aims to achieve all the 3Es.

Scenario two: when one spends someone else’s money on himself and for his own benefit, only effectiveness matters.

Scenario three: when one spends somebody else’s money on another person and for that other person’s benefit then none of the 3Es matters.

To use examples above to drive the point home, when you spend your own money on a treat or when you gave it outright to your girlfriend to spend or when I gave it to my friend to buy a suit; all fall squarely in the first scenario and you will behave the way I did when I took my son to KNH or when I visit home on my dollar.

When we give our MPs the power to decide how we should use our money and to determine their own remuneration or when I travel on my employer’s dollar or bring my friend London suits; all fall squarely in scenario two and all that matters to them is effectiveness. They behave as I do when I travel on my employer’s dollar or when your girlfriend dines and wines at Carnivore. That is why you hear MPs say the roads are so bad they should fly or be bought state-of-the-art 4×4 vehicles. For the middle class taxpayer, your option is to park your car and use public means to cut costs.

You can actually change their behavior to some extent. When I worked as an accountant, we reduced company costs and enhanced staff morale by terminating accommodation on employer’s shilling and decided to give staff a lower than top hotel rate but outright fixed allowance. We simply turned it from being company’s, or someone else’s money, to being their money and thereby widened focus from effectiveness to 3Es. Similarly, I opine, you can change behavior of MPs by taxing them so that in their eyes state resources become “our” money rather than “their” money.

The civil servant, CDF official and some foreign-funded NGOs are in a class of their own. They are in scenario three where they spend somebody else’s (government, donors) money on somebody else (citizens, institutions etc) for somebody else’s benefit (Kenyan citizens). They therefore have no motivation for any of the 3Es. Have you ever wondered why donors who give funds to NGOs run by their fellow countrymen do not worry at all about governance as they do when the NGO is run by locals? Here is your answer. An Irishman running an NGO in Turkana is in scenario one as Irish donor / tax payers while the local manager is in scenario three. At an international NGO in Nairobi we fought for Land Cruisers while the expatriates accused us of not being cost-conscious and insisted on 1600cc Toyota Corollas. A top civil servant or cabinet minister can travel first class to London at Kshs 500,000, draw a per diem of Kshs 25,000 per day, stay for a week and come back empty handed having failed to meet his British Government counterparts (none of the 3Es observed!).

The last theory I want to draw on is “Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs” theory. It states that we yearn for different things at different stages on the ladder of life. Our needs range from basic physiological needs, safety, love, esteem to self-actualization. Initially we just want food, water and shelter then as we grow rich we switch to love and recognition. At the apex we want self actualization or to shape destiny for others. You want to be “the go to” guy that power and action gravitates around.

If you add this theory to the first two I discussed above, it starts to make sense why they abuse or steal as much they do. A junior civil servant will go for Kshs 10,000 to send a kid to school or Kshs 50,000 to buy a plot. That is his station on that ladder. Wow unto you if the person is of lesser moral compass, is in scenario three and rich or high on that ladder. He is then thinking of how to finance an election to become an MP, a senator, a president and that may as well cost over Kshs 10m. You can bet that he will only negotiate deals of Kshs 100,000 and above. Have you not heard them say some people in parliament are cheap because they can be bought at Kshs 100,000 and you wonder is that really cheap? Have you not heard some people can afford to spend Kshs 10,000 on lunch? That is where fat cats and big fish are on life’s ladder and they can suck us dry to whet their appetites.

Now you know why your girlfriend and my friend act rich when you pay and normal when they do, why I fly and stay high class on my employer’s dollar, why the clerk in DC’s office only wants “harambee” or “airtime” of Kshs 500, why top guys abuse and steal big bucks, and why MPs award themselves salaries of Kshs 1 million monthly and resist paying tax on them. You can use this template to make sense of many behaviors around you, including the $10 million in an overseas bank account and the Kshs 2 billion the family is feuding over.

In a nutshell, they abuse and steal your money because it is in scenarios two and three. And because it is there, they have no motivation for all the 3Es. How much of your money they abuse and steal depends on where they are on Maslow’s ladder of needs; the higher up they are the more they will abuse and steal. One of the ways to curb this is to move resources from scenario three to one, or at least two. This is not a sweeping thesis, it holds where those involved are rational and with lesser moral compass.

*The author is a chartered accountant and holds an MBA and a PhD in measurement of development effectiveness besides other qualifications. He works for a leading international development agency in Washington DC. The views and interpretations expressed in this article are entirely his own. They do not represent the views of any institution, person or body to which the author is affiliated. The author can be reached at mmuleri@yahoo.com

Uganda budget speech 2011 – 2012

from Yona Maro

Financial Year 2011/12
Theme: Promoting Economic Growth, Job Creation and Improving Service Delivery
DELIVERED AT THE MEETING OF THE FIRST SESSION OF THE 9TH PARLIAMENT OF UGANDA
ON
WEDNESDAY, 8TH JUNE, 2011
BY
HONOURABLE MARIA KIWANUKA
MINISTER OF FINANCE, PLANNING AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
PREAMBLE
Your Excellency the President of the Republic of Uganda,
Your Excellency the Vice President
The Right Honourable Speaker of Parliament,
Your Lordship the Chief Justice,
The Right Hon. Deputy Speaker of Parliament,
The Right Hon. Prime Minister;
Honourable Ministers
Honourable Members of Parliament,
Distinguished Guests

. Introduction
1. Madam Speaker, I beg to move that Parliament resolves itself into a Committee of Supply for consideration of:

i) The Revised Revenue and Expenditure Estimates for the Financial Year 2010/2011; and
ii) Proposals for the Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure for the Financial Year 2011/2012.

2. Madam Speaker, Article 155(1) of the Constitution provides that the President shall cause to be prepared and laid before Parliament estimates of revenue and expenditure for each financial year. I am accordingly performing this duty on behalf of the President.
3. Madam Speaker, with the overwhelming renewal of the mandate of the NRM Government, I wish to congratulate His Excellency the President for the victory achieved at the recent General Elections. I also extend congratulations to you Madam Speaker for your historic election to the high office of Speaker of Parliament, and to Honourable Members who have been elected and re-elected to the 9th Parliament; and to all Ugandans for successfully marking yet another milestone in democratic governance.
4. Madam Speaker, during His Excellency the President’s swearing in ceremony on 12th May 2011 and in the State of the Nation Address, he clearly outlined the key interventions crucial for the transformation agenda of our country. His Excellency the President placed emphasis on interventions in transport and energy infrastructure, skills development and the stimulation of employment, the need to enhance an enabling environment for business and improving the effectiveness of Government.
5. Madam Speaker, peace, security and political stability are an important pre-requisite for socio- economic progress. Stability, both within the country and in the region has been an important factor in increasing economic activity and promoting trade activities within the region from which our traders and the country as a whole have benefitted.
6. The Budget I am presenting today therefore reflects the Government’s continued determination to strategically prioritize those core programmes which form the main foundation for the transformation of our economy on a sound and sustainable basis.
7. Accordingly, Madam Speaker, the theme for the budget for the Financial Year 2011/12 is “Promoting Economic Growth, Job Creation and Improving Service Delivery”
Economic and Sectoral Performance of the FY 2010/11 and the Medium Term Economic Outlook
8. Madam Speaker, the Background to the Budget 2011/12, which has been made available to Honourable Members, contains an extensive review of the performance of the economy and different sectors during Financial Year 2010/11. It also provides an assessment of the medium term economic outlook. I will therefore only highlight key developments and future prospects in my statement.
Economic PerformanceNational Output,
9. Madam Speaker, despite the slow recovery in the global economy and increasing domestic prices, economic activity remained robust during the past year. The total National Output of goods and services, commonly referred to as Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rebounded, growing at 6.3 per cent during the year, compared to 5.5 percent in Financial Year 2009/10. Consequently, National Output is projected to total Shs 38,800 billion, an increase from Shs 34,810 billion in the Financial Year 2009/10. The rebound in economic activity is largely attributed to the recovery in construction and increased trade activities. In addition, there has been a strong performance in the telecommunications, financial services, mining and quarrying sub-sectors.
Agriculture
10. Madam Speaker, the livestock sub sector grew by 3.0 percent, while the food crop sub sector registered 2.7 percent growth. However, poor rainfall and drought have severely affected the agricultural sector, with output of cash crops declining by nearly 16 percent during the current financial year. This reduced the overall growth in agricultural output to 0.9 per annum, compared to 2.4 percent recorded in the previous year.
Industry
11. Industrial production improved during the year, with growth estimated at 7.5 percent as compared to 6.5 percent the previous year. The robust growth was driven largely by construction, mining and quarrying activities. Construction activities recorded growth of 7.7 percent in real terms, following a 5.9 percent increase the year before. Growth in mining and quarrying activities is estimated at 15.8 percent during the same period.
Services
12. Madam Speaker, the services sector, which is currently estimated to contribute over 50 percent of total annual national output, continues to be a major driver for economic growth. This sector includes trade activity, education, telecommunications and financial services. During the year, the services sector grew by 8.0 percent, an increase from 7.4 percent in the previous year. This buoyancy in the services sector is due to stronger performance of the telecommunications, financial and trade activities.
13. Telecommunication services continued to be the fastest growing sector in the country and are estimated to have increased by 21.2 percent during the past financial year, while the financial services sector recorded strong growth at 10.3 percent in real terms. The growth in telecommunication and financial services has been driven by increased competition among service providers, which has resulted into significant price reductions and increased innovation leading to new products being offered on the market.
Prices
14. Madam Speaker, the country has been experiencing price increases, about which Government is concerned, and will address with measures I will detail later. The general price level of all items increased by 16.1 percent per annum in May 2011. Food crop prices have registered the greatest increase recorded at 44.1 percent over the same period while prices for Electricity, Fuel and Utilities (EFU) items increased by 9.1 percent over the same period. Annual non-Food Inflation in May 2011 was 7.4 percent, confirming the fact that the major drivers of the current surge in inflation are constraints to food supply.
15. Madam Speaker, the causes of the increased food prices have been primarily poor rainfall and drought which affected food production during the last two seasons of this financial year. Increased regional demand for food has also contributed to the surge in food prices. At a regional level, countries in the East African Community have all suffered high food inflation as a result of drought and the high global food prices. It is important to note that the monthly inflation rate for food crops decelerated in May 2011 to negative 0.6 percent, compared to a monthly increase of 17.4 percent recorded in March 2011. This means that food inflationary pressures are abating and prices are expected to come down soon following the forthcoming harvesting.
16. Madam Speaker, inflationary pressures have also been driven by both increased global commodity prices and the depreciation of the Uganda Shilling, which has affected domestic prices. Inflation in China, India and Kenya, the main sources of Uganda’s imports, has risen persistently, leading to higher imported inflation. For example the average price of crude oil in April 2011 reached US $ 128 per barrel, an increase from US Dollars 66 in December 2009. This increase in international fuel prices passes through to the domestic market because of a depreciated Uganda Shilling. As a consequence, domestic pump fuel prices are now at an average level of Shs. 3,500/= per litre for petrol and Shs. 3,200/= per litre for diesel.
17. Madam Speaker, it is also important to note that the pump prices of petroleum products in Uganda are comparable to those within neighbouring countries, distance from the sea notwithstanding. In Rwanda, Kenya and Tanzania, fuel prices for petrol are equivalent to Shs 3,860, Shs 3,190, and Shs 3,300, respectively.
18. As I have noted, the primary driver of the current inflation is the shock to food prices. Non food inflation remains at relatively moderate levels. Annual services price inflation was only 2.6 percent in May 2011. Inflation pressures are therefore expected to recede when supplies of food to domestic markets improve during the course of next financial year both headline and core inflation.
External Sector
19. Madam Speaker, Uganda’s balance of payments continued to be constrained as a result of slower growth of exports, tourism receipts and remittances on one hand, while imports continue to increase. Total exports of goods amounted to US Dollars 2.43 billion in the past year, compared to US Dollars 2.32 billion in the previous year. This translates into an annual growth of 4.7 percent compared to 4.5 percent in the last period. The slow growth in exports is a result of the on-going recovery from the global economic crisis in some of Uganda’s major trading partners. Imports of goods, on the other hand, have continued to rise as they are structurally dependant on domestic needs.
20. Total imports of goods and services amounted to US Dollars 4.54 billion, compared to US Dollars 4.0 billion in the previous year. This translates into an annual growth of 13.2 percent, compared to a decline of 1.1 percent in the previous year. The growth in imports has been much faster than that of exports, meaning that the gap between exports and imports, commonly referred to as the trade deficit, has widened. Most of the imports have been for production related activities to support a fast growing economy, including increased activity in the oil sector.
21. Madam Speaker, an increase in the world price for coffee has generated higher incomes for Ugandan farmers. Coffee export earnings this year increased by 13.1 percent as a result of higher global prices. Cotton export earnings have also registered a marked increase of 296 percent over the past year, from just US Dollars 17 million last year to US Dollars 67 million this year. At a regional level, the high demand for Uganda’s farm produce has been and continues to be an opportunity for farmers to increase their incomes by producing more for the market. Other formal non-Coffee export receipts amounted to US Dollars 1.34 billion. Exports that performed most strongly in this category include sim-sim which registered 83 percent growth, maize, recording a 17 percent growth and fish recording a 16 percent growth.
22. Madam Speaker, Foreign Exchange Reserves are projected at US Dollars 2.2 billion by end June 2011, equivalent to 4 months of import cover, compared to US Dollars 2.498 Billion in June 2010. The Inter-Bank Foreign Exchange mid- Rate in May 2011 was Shs. 2,388 per US Dollar compared to Shs. 2,259 per US Dollar in June 2010. The continued depreciation of the Uganda shilling reflects increased import demand in the face of weak export performance that has not fully recovered.
Monetary Sector
23. Madam Speaker, the monetary sector in Uganda has been resilient, reflecting good management. Interest rates have remained stable over the past year. The lending rates in April 2011 were at 19.2 percent compared to about the same level in June 2010. The deposit savings rate remains low, at only 2.4 percent during April.
24. Treasury Bill rates increased during 2010/11 as the Bank of Uganda tightened monetary policy to prevent the shocks to food and fuel prices from spilling over into higher inflation throughout the economy. The interest rate on the 364 day Treasury Bill rose from 6.2 percent in June 2010 to 11.3 percent at the most recent auction in May 2011.
25. Private sector credit demand was buoyant during the fiscal year, in part because of borrowing by the private sector to finance capital investment. Private sector credit grew by 34 percent in the 12 months to May 2011.
Fiscal Performance
26. Madam Speaker, fiscal performance was in line with the fiscal targets on overall resources and expenditures.
Budget Resources
27. Madam Speaker, total resources available for the budget amounted to Shs 8,374.3 billion during the financial year 2010/11. Oil revenue amounting to Shs. 1,008 billion was earned during the year, and Shs. 828 billion of this has been allocated to the Karuma Hydropower Project in the next financial year.
28. Domestic revenue collections by the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) during the year are projected to amount to Shs 5,024 Billion, representing performance of 99. 8 percent against the target of Shs 5,034 Billion. Domestic income tax collections are expected to be above target by Shs 38.1 billion.. Taxes on international trade are estimated to have grown by 22.5 percent, reflecting a surplus of Shs 163.4 billion, driven by strong growth in import volumes, coupled with the depreciation of the exchange rate.
29. External financing, comprising loans and grants from development partners, are projected to total Shs 2,681.2 billion during the year compared to a target of Shs. 2056.1 billion. This represents a performance of 30 percent above target.
30. Non-tax revenue collections contributed Shs 86.3 billion, which is equivalent to about 1.7 percent of the total domestic revenue. This represents a 94 percent performance against the target of Shs. 91.5 billion. There is scope to increase non-tax revenue collections through reforms to improve transparency and accountability in non-tax revenue collection within Government institutions.
31. Several reforms in tax administration have been undertaken during the year to enhance the efficiency of tax administration and reduce costs of compliance. These reforms include rolling out online tax services in the Jinja. Gulu, Kampala, Mbale, and Mbarara stations. These developments allow taxpayers to register, file returns and pay taxes on-line, once they access the internet. Other improvements include quicker customs processes and improvements in the management of bonded warehouses. All these measures have contributed towards improved tax revenue performance. I call upon the business community and individuals to embrace the changes in revenue administration for the development of the country. An important reform that will be undertaken in the medium term is the introduction of the electronic Tax Register to enhance service delivery to the tax payers. I am directing URA to start sensitizing and preparing the tax payers for this reform.
Expenditure Performance
32. Madam Speaker, total approved Government expenditure for the financial year 2010/11 is projected at Shs. 9,325.7 billion. Development expenditure increased by 40 percent this year over the previous year, amounting to Shs 3,470.1 Billion. The increase in development expenditure is attributed to the depreciation of the Uganda shilling against major donor currencies which increased the donor disbursements in shilling terms, and the increased absorption on donor projects. This expenditure has financed projects in road works, energy, agriculture and water.
33. Salaries and Wages are projected to amount to Shs.1,620 billion this year, compared to Shs.1,300 billion spent in FY 2009/10. This represents less than 20 percent of the total budget.
34. Total interest payments are projected at Shs 419 billion, largely due to increased issuance of Government securities. This is meant to reduce money in circulation in the economy in order to dampen inflationary pressures which emerged in the second half of the financial year.
Social benefits
35. Madam Speaker, pension payments are projected at Shs 244 billion for this year, representing Shs 56 billion above the approved budget estimate of Shs 188 billion. This was because during budget preparation, there was insufficient information on benefits to be paid to ex-service men and local government retirees that were due to be transferred to the central government payroll.
Central Government transfers to Local Government
36. Transfers to Local Governments for purposes of meeting the local government wage bill and recurrent and development expenditures have continued to increase over the years. During the year, total local government transfers are projected to amount Shs 1,525 billion compared to Shs 1,461 billion in the previous year. Of the total local government transfers this year, Shs 360 billion is for development expenditure, Shs 248 billion for non-wage recurrent expenditures and Shs 960 billion for salaries and wages.
37. Implementation of the current budget has experienced extra budgetary pressures arising from the needs to finance the recent general elections and security related expenditures. In order to accommodate expenditure in these areas, cuts were effected on the Non-Wage Recurrent budget during the year, while protecting the priority areas of the budget. Although some areas did not receive full funding, the strategic priority objectives of the budget were not compromised.
Sectoral Performance
38. Madam Speaker, in the budget speech for the FY 2010/11, Government pronounced several programmes to be undertaken. I am glad to report that despite the challenges facing the economy, significant progress has been registered for most of the programmes.
39. I will therefore just summarise some of the key achievements in the key priority areas outlined in last year’s Budget Speech. These achievement are in the following areas:-
i. Infrastructure Development in Roads and Energy,
ii. Promotion of Science, Technology and Innovation for Value Addition, Private Sector Development and Employment Creation,
iii. Enhancing Agricultural Production and Productivity, and
iv. Human Development.
Infrastructure Development in Roads and Energy
Road Infrastructure
40. Madam Speaker, I am happy to report that during the year, Government continued to consolidate the work undertaken in previous financial years to improve and further develop Uganda’s road network and to reduce the backlog of outstanding works. A number of key projects have been completed this financial year and strides have been taken to improve the condition of the national road network. Some of the projects which are close to completion include:
i. Kampala -Gayaza-Zirobwe road;
ii. Soroti-Dokolo-Lira road; and
iii. Matugga-Semuto-Kapeeka road;
41. Substantial progress has been made towards the completion of Kabale-Kisoro-Bunagana Road, where 30km was completed in line with the target. A total of 44 km were completed against a plan of 34km in the reconstruction of Busega – Mityana Road. In addition, 30km of work was completed out of 47km planned on the Masaka-Mbarara Road.
42. Uganda Road Fund continues to finance road maintenance and has disbursed Shs. 468.2 billion since January 2010 to maintain 20,800 kilometers of national roads and 22,500 kilometers of districts roads. The funds were also for the maintenance of 4,800 km of urban roads, 30,000 kilometers of community access roads and 4,500 kilometers of municipal council roads. 4,850 kilometers out of the targeted 10,500 kilometers of unpaved national roads underwent mechanized routine maintenance. 850 kilometers out of the planned target of 1,610 kilometers of national roads were re-graveled.
Energy Infrastructure
43. Madam Speaker, at the commencement of this year’s budget, some units of the 250 MW Bujagali Hydropower Project were expected to be available. While substantial progress was made, unforeseen geological complications have delayed the Project. Consequently, the first 50 MW should be available by October 2011.
44. In addition, generation capacity has been installed with the commissioning of renewable power projects at the 18 MW Mpanga Power Project, while the 6.5 MW Ishasha Power Project is expected to be commissioned later this month. The 3.3 MW Nyagak Hydropower project is expected to be commissioned in the course of the next year. Other mini-hydro projects under development include 10 MW at Buseruka and 1 MW at Maziba.
45. The feasibility study for the 600 MW Karuma Hydro power project was completed during the year, and the Government is ready to commence its construction. The feasibility study for the 140 MW Isimba Hydropower Project will be completed in the next financial year.
46. Madam Speaker, the Rural Electrification Programme made substantial progress with the completion of the following Low Voltage Network lines:-
i. Nabitende – Itanda and Bugeso – Iwemba power lines;
ii. Mutolere – Matinza – Nyakabaya;
iii. Kyanika – Mulora;
iv. Kitgum – Padibe – Lokung;
v. Budusu – Bunawale; Japdong village; and
vi. Mpanga-Kamwenge-Kahunge
Science, Technology and Innovation for Value Addition
47. Madam Speaker, in order to improve Uganda’s competitiveness and business climate, as well as promote economic growth and create employment, Government prioritized a number of interventions during the financial year. The following achievements have been realized:
Information and Communications Technology
48. A total of 1430 km of optical fibre cable was completed under the second phase of the National Backbone and e-Government Infrastructure project. This compliments private sector efforts to develop high speed interconnectivity between the country and global internet and telecommunication networks.
49. In support of value addition, the Uganda Industrial Research Institute (UIRI) has commissioned several commercial production plants. These include:
i. Potato processing facility in Kabale;
ii. Peanut processing in Lira District;
iii. Fruit juice processing in Mpigi District;
iv. Meat processing facility in Busia District; and
v. Mushroom processing center in Kabale District.
50. Other developments at the Uganda Industrial Research Institute (UIRI) include the completion of a facility for the production of a vaccine against the Newcastle disease in poultry and a foundry for the fabrication of a variety of implements, equipment and machinery for use by Small and Medium Enterprises. This will facilitate the fabrication, by the private sector, of machinery for producing feeds, silk processing, soap production, paper production and a variety of looms for weaving.
51. Under the Presidential Initiative on Innovations in Food Science Engineering, Technology and Skills for production, Employment and Development in Animal Industry (SPEDA), over 500 jobs have been created in production marketing; research and development; and in food technology.
Agricultural Production and Productivity
52. Madam Speaker, last year’s budget prioritized increased agro-industrial production and productivity, improvement in employment opportunities and increasing access to markets.
53. The National Agricultural Advisory Services (NAADS) supported approximately 487,500 farmers with inputs and advice to enhance food security. A further 22,000 out of a targeted 26,000 farmers received inputs and advice to enable them to become commercially oriented. These farmers were in the following enterprises: local and exotic poultry, improved cattle and goats; banana suckers & tissue culture; citrus, mango, coffee and tea seedlings.
54. The National Agricultural Research Organisation (NARO) developed 10 planned new crop varieties, and another 11 were submitted for approval before being released for multiplication.
55. The Agricultural sector continued to modernize livestock and livestock product marketing infrastructure in various districts. Construction of 9 modern livestock markets was completed in Masindi, Kamwenge, Mubende, Mbarara, Isingiro, Nakasongola, Luwero, Nakeseke, and Pallisa. In addition, 6 slaughter houses were constructed in Sironko, Pallisa, Isingiro, Kamwenge, Nakasongola and Nakaseke.
Human Resource Development
Education
56. Madam Speaker, in the Budget Speech of FY 2010/11, Government placed emphasis on the provision of education and skills development. In pursuit of these priorities, the Education sub-sector has achieved the following:
57. Government completed the construction of the following 5 Seed Secondary Schools and handed them over for use: Bagezza SSS in Mubende district, Namugongo SSS in Kamuli, Mbarara SSS in Mbarara, Mateete SSS in Sembabule and Pakada SSS in Zombo district. Government also completed the rehabilitation, expansion and re-equipping of Rukungiri Technical Institute. Furthermore, the rehabilitation and expansion of the following 5 existing traditional secondary schools were also completed:- Kabalega SS in Masindi, Mpanga SS in Kabarole, Kigezi College Butobere in Kabale, Lango College in Lira and Kololo SS in Kampala.
58. In order to promote science and technology in schools, 9 traditional secondary schools received fully equipped ICT laboratories. The beneficiary schools were: Rock High School – Tororo; Bishops School in Mukono; Kinyansano Girls in Rukungiri; St Mary’s College Rushoroza in Kabale; Sacred Heart SS in Gulu; Nyarilo SS in Koboko; Kibibi SS in Butambala; Wanyange Girls in Jinja and Mwereerwe SS in Wakiso.
59. Under the interventions to enhance skills development for employment generation, the Government has provided funds to complete and equip the following technical institutions: Abim, Katonga in Mpigi, Moroto, Kaboong, Nakapiripirit, Nkoko in Mayuge, Kasese Youth Polytechnic, Bumbeire in Bushenyi, Rutunku Community Polytechnic in Sembabule, Nakaseke Community Polytechnic in Nakaseke, Ssese Farm School and Mbale Community Polytechnic. In addition, ten thousand (10,000) youth country-wide were trained in various non-formal modularised courses for self employment.
Health
60. Madam Speaker, a key priority for next year in the Health sector was the improvement of health infrastructure. I am pleased therefore to report that during the year, equipment worth Shs. 1.68 billion was procured and distributed to 4 hospitals and 12 Level 4 Health Centers (HCIVs). A further 11 Level 4 Health Centers (HCIVs) had theatre equipment installed. With financial assistance from the Chinese Government, a modern Hospital has been constructed at Naguru in Kampala. In addition, six mental health units were completed and commissioned under support from African Development Bank (ADB) in Masaka, Lira, Mbale, Moroto, Mubende and Jinja Regional Referral Hospitals.
61. In order to control the spread of malaria, the Ministry of Health procured 7.3 million Long Lasting Treated Mosquito Nets (LLITNs) which were distributed throughout the country. In addition, medicine worth Shs. 201 billion was procured and distributed to Local Government health units, general hospitals and regional referral hospitals. These included Anti-Retrovirals (ARVs) for treating HIV/AIDs and Artemisinin Combination Therapy (ACTs) for malaria. Utilising financial assistance from DANIDA, medicine worth Shs. 3.5 Billion were procured and delivered to Private Not For Profit (PNFP) Hospitals and Health centers.
Water and Environment
62. Madam Speaker, progress was registered in the rural water and sanitation sub-sector as follows:- 380 water facilities were rehabilitated and 17 valley tanks were constructed. In addition, 54 rainwater harvesting tanks were provided.
63. In the urban water and sanitation sub-sector, construction was completed on four piped water systems in Bwera, Mpondwe, Kiyenje and Rwene towns. With respect to water for production, Construction was also completed on Kagano dam and dams in Napak, Otuke and Moroto Districts, as well as valley tanks in Isingiro, Apac, Sembabule and Gomba Districts. In order to improve environmental management, over 4.5 million tree seedlings were distributed to agro-forestry farmers and 24 community watershed management groups were formed in the Karamoja region.
Economic Outlook
Macro Economic Objectives
64. Madam Speaker, Government’s primary macroeconomic objective in the medium term is to promote rapid, broad based and sustainable growth, consistent with transforming the country to middle income status. This is possible given opportunities available including the recovery in the world demand for exports, the high demand for food in the region and globally, favourable conditions for private sector investment, continued peace and stability, and prudent management of newly discovered oil resources.
65. The macroeconomic objectives in the medium term therefore seek to attain the following:-
i. the recovery in economic growth to at least 7 per cent per annum on average;
ii. reverting to an inflation target of 5 per cent;
iii. a stable, competitive exchange rate; and
iv. prioritizing investments which enhance the productive capacity in the economy and employment creation.
Oil Sector Management
66. Madam Speaker, with proven oil reserves estimated at 2.5 billion barrels, Government is finalizing the appropriate legal and institutional framework for resource and revenue management, which proposed legislation will be presented to Parliament. The Resource Law is intended to ensure efficient licensing, development, production and the utilization of the oil resource.
67. Madam Speaker, the legal framework will also provide for the design of an appropriate fiscal regime including revenue assessment and collection, treasury management, macroeconomic implications, petroleum fund management and intergovernmental fiscal relations. Aspects that prescribe adequate transparency and accountability will also be incorporated in the legislation.
68. The proposed legislation will also allow ease in the monitoring of oil revenues and establish an Oil Revenue Fund which will be used both to finance the budget and save and invest for future generations. To ensure prudent utilization of the Oil revenues, all investments and other expenses from the Fund will be budgeted for normally, and will be charged on the Consolidated Fund, with the necessary authorization by Parliament. Oil revenue will also be utilized to generate further growth and employment throughout all sectors of the economy.
Private Sector Development
69. Madam Speaker, in light of Uganda’s low ranking with respect to business licensing and registration, I will be addressing these issues squarely. A comprehensive review of business related licenses will be undertaken with a view to simplifying requirements, reducing discretionary powers, and eliminating redundant procedures. This is aimed at reducing the time and cost to both the public and private sector.
70. In addition, lengthy business registration processes that impose an unnecessary regulatory burden keep a large number of businesses in the informal sector. These businesses consequently face limitations in accessing formal credit and contracts which constrains their ability to grow, create employment and contribute to the economy through taxes. In the medium term starting next financial year, efforts will commence to merge procedures, as well as introduce online registration processes.
Access to Affordable Financial Services
71. Madam Speaker, to address the problem of limited access to financial services, Government is undertaking reforms that will enhance increased leasing, and also undertake pension sector reforms to help increase the savings rate and provide long term investment funds, as well as the development of the mortgage industry.
72. To reduce the cost of capital to the business community, Government will fully implement the National Identification Card over the medium term, which will aid in the easy identification of borrowers. This is in addition to efforts to improve efficiency in the land registry to secure the land assets to prevent fraud which increases risk of borrowers.
. KEY CHALLENGES
73. Madam Speaker, before I spell out the Budget strategy and priorities for the Financial Year 2011/12, I wish to highlight fundamental challenges which significantly affect the development of the economy. Furthermore, I will reflect on the challenges that have been the focus of attention in the recent past – notably inflation and unemployment.
Development Challenges
74. Madam Speaker, the NRM Government has continually stressed the importance of addressing the critical development challenges that constrain rapid transformation of the economy and its people to middle income status. The critical development challenges that Uganda faces have been clearly articulated in the National Development Plan, which therefore necessitates their prominence in implementation over the next five years. These challenges to social economic transformation include the following:-
. Inadequate Physical Infrastructure
75. Madam Speaker, inadequate physical infrastructure leads to high transport and communication costs and inadequate support for private sector growth. These impediments are characterised by
i. Low access to affordable electricity leading to low consumption of only 70 kilowatt hours per capita;
ii. Limited paved roads at 4 percent of the entire road network;
iii. Low capacity utilisation of the rail network of which only 26 percent is operational and carries only 3.5 percent of freight cargo;
iv. Moribund marine transport on Lake Victoria with only one major exit point in addition to no operational wagon ferries;
v. Inadequate and consequently high cost band-width for internet connectivity; and
vi. Low annual water consumption at only 22 cubic meters per capita compared to a world average of 600 cubic metres.
. Limited Supply to Critical Production Inputs
76. In addition to the low application of science, technology and innovation, Uganda faces an inadequate supply of critical production inputs characterised by:-
i. Inadequate availability and use of improved seeds, planting materials, and animal breeds, leading to low agricultural productivity;
ii. Limited application of irrigation and fertilizer use in agricultural production that could potentially increase yields; and
iii. Limited availability and consequently high cost of critical input such as cement, iron and steel.
. Inadequate Skills Base and Social Infrastructure
77. While tremendous progress has been made in education and health, for which additional efforts will continue, Uganda’s human resource base is still characterised by the following:-
a. Qualitative and quantitative deficits in skilled human resources especially in technical areas;
b. Low school completion rates and limited capacities in vocational and technical education which ultimately is reflected in low productivity of Uganda’s labour force;
c. Inadequate qualified persons in some sectors. For instance Uganda has low health personnel to population ratio with only one doctor for 25,000 patients; and one nurse for 1,630 patients; and
d. Inadequate social infrastructure and associated low service delivery with low health facility to population and high student classroom ratios.
. Inappropriate Mindsets, Attitudes and Culture
78. Madam Speaker, the Uganda economy is still faced with poor ethical values in commercial and business practice, in addition to continued backward cultural practices such as marginalisation of the girl child in access to education and early marriages, and discrimination of women in land ownership and inheritance. The following aspects continue to constrain development:-
i. Poor business and entrepreneurial attitudes, the lack of good work ethic, integrity and patriotism in both the public and private sectors;
ii. Negative perceptions in use and appreciation of natural resources;
iii. Limited adoption of science technology and Information and Communication Technology in business and social spheres; and
iv. Negative attitude towards work and entrepreneurship in favour of paid employment, and poor time management.
. Limited Access to Financial Services
79. Madam Speaker, access to financial services and affordable long term finance, remains a major constraint especially for Small and Medium Enterprises in Uganda. The key challenges in the financial sector include:
i. Insufficient financial services infrastructure across the country, limited number of bank branches and poor access to rural financial services;
ii. Limited availability of long term funds for development finance, coupled with a low savings culture; and
iii. High costs of financing with the nominal lending interest rates of banks ranging from 17 to 23 per cent, and even higher rates in the microfinance sector.
. Limited Employment Opportunities
80. Madam Speaker, another challenge facing the economy is rising unemployment. It is estimated that the current job market can only absorb 20 percent of the youth. Fortunately, the youth are highly adaptable and only require attitudinal transformation, together with technical and business management skills to fit into the existing job market and create avenues for generating their own small scale enterprises.
81. Madam Speaker, what I have just highlighted above, are key challenges facing the economy. The Budget strategy and the priority interventions which I am going to elaborate will therefore focus on addressing these challenges, commencing next financial year.
. The Budget Strategy and Priorities for FY 2011/12
82. Madam Speaker, the focus during the next year will be to implement interventions that address the challenges I have highlighted, especially rising inflation, unemployment as well as physical and social infrastructure and improved social service delivery. These challenges require new bold ideas and renewed efforts from all stakeholders.
83. Madam Speaker, in finalising the budget proposal for this year, extensive consultations have been made with the private sector, including the Uganda Small Scale Industries Association (USSIA), the Uganda Manufacturers Association, the Uganda Bankers Association (UBA) and the Kampala City Traders Association (KACITA). In addition, we have also consulted our development partners, other ministries and agencies in Government and the Private Sector Foundation of Uganda (PSFU).
Resource Framework
84. Madam Speaker, the Resource Envelope for the next financial year amounts to Shs. 9,840 billion. This comprises of Shs. 6,330 billion financed from domestic revenues of which Shs 6,170 billion is from tax revenues, Shs 121 billion from Non Tax Revenues and Shs 39 billion from domestic loan repayments. Resources from both Tax and Non-Tax Revenues will contribute Shs. 6,290 billion. Domestic Revenues are projected to finance about 71 per cent of the budget in the coming financial year. External financing from development partners will amount to Shs 2,900 billion, contributing 29 per cent of the budget.
85. Madam Speaker, in light of the constrained Resource Envelope, I have only been able to allocate additional resources amounting to Shs. 1,586 billion to priority areas that will accelerate implementation of the National Development Plan (NDP) and the NRM Manifesto, as well as tackling the key challenges currently facing the country. Therefore, expenditures on other areas will be constrained.
86. Madam Speaker, the priorities for next financial year will aim at implementing the strategy that I have spelt out. Next year’s budget priorities are the following :-
i. Infrastructure Development in Roads, Railways and Energy;
ii. Enhancing agricultural production and productivity;
iii. Employment Creation, especially for the Youth, Women and in Small and Medium Enterprises; and
iv. Human Resource Development, and
v. Improving Public Service Delivery.
87. Madam Speaker, I now wish to turn to the details of the budget priorities for the Financial Year 2011/12.
Infrastructure Development
88. Madam Speaker, priority allocations are being made to power generation, road networks, irrigation schemes, schools and improvement of health infrastructure. This builds on our steady progress made in these areas over the past years..
Transport Infrastructure
89. Madam Speaker, in the transport sector I have allocated a total of Shs. 1,219.41 billion towards implementation of the following key projects, among other activities:-
i. Commencement of upgrading to bitumen of the following roads:- Moroto – Nakapiripirit (93km), Hoima- Kaiso- Tonya (73km), Mukono – Katosi (74km) and Mbarara – Kikagati (66km), and Ntungamo-Kakitumba (37km)Ishaka – Kagamba (35 km).
ii. Commence upgrading to bitumen of the following roads to improve road connectivity to Southern Sudan:- Gulu-Atiak-Bibia/Nimule and Vurra-Arua-Koboko-Oraba;
iii. Reconstruct Tororo-Mbale-Soroti, Lira-Kamudini-Gulu, Atiak, Moyo-Afoji and Mbarara-Ntungamo-Katuna roads;
iv. Continued improvement of the road network including Kabale-Kisor-Bunagana, Soroti-Dokolo-Lira; Fort Portal- Bundibugyo Lamia;Matugga-Semuto-Kapeeka and Nyakahita-Ibanda-Fort Portal –Kitagwenda roads;
v. Fast tracking of the rehabilitation and continuous maintenance of national, district and community access roads; and.
vi. Continue the construction of key bridges across the country and accelerate the planning for construction of the second bridge on the River Nile at Jinja estimated to cost US$ 102 million.
90. Madam Speaker, Government has also embarked on a long-term plan for improving the transport network and ease traffic congestion in metropolitan Kampala. With effect from next financial year, we will embark on the programme for expansion of key highways leading to and from the city. Government will support the newly created Kampala Capital City Authority, to speed up the improvement of the city’s infrastructure. I have allocated a total of Shs 43 billion for the construction and maintenance of Kampala City Roads.
91. In addition to the resources to the road sector, the development of the Kampala – Entebbe highway will be undertaken utilizing a US Dollar 350 million loan facility from the Peoples Republic of China. Furthermore, in order to improve access to the Kalangala Islands, the construction and operation of a ferry from the Mainland will be undertaken in a Public Private Partnership arrangement during the year. In addition the main island road will be improved.
92. Madam Speaker, in addition to the activities I have detailed, Government will maintain funding to the on-going road construction projects as provided for in this financial year. In the next year, we will fast-track the completion of the various roads and embark on new ones as resources are freed from the completed projects.
Rail Transport
93. Madam Speaker, there is no doubt that continued reliance on road transport as almost a sole means of transport is partly responsible for the high transport costs and high depreciation of our roads due to the heavy road traffic.
94. In the FY 2011/12, the rehabilitation of the Kampala – Malaba railway will be undertaken and the operational efficiency along the Kampala – Mombasa will be improved. The rehabilitation of the Tororo – Pakwach railway will also be undertaken. In addition, the rehabilitation of the Marine Vessel (MV) Pamba will be undertaken to restore wagon ferry transportation on Lake Victoria, and also operationalise the Southern Route through Mwanza.
Energy
95. Madam Speaker, to address increasing demand for electricity and also develop oil and gas reserves in the Albertine Graben (Mwitanzigye). I have allocated an additional 850 billion for the following interventions:-
i. Completion of the 250 MW Bujagali Hydropower Project
ii. Commencement of the construction of the 600MW Karuma Hydropower project, for which I have allocated Shs. 828.6 billion;
iii. Completion of preliminary work on 140MW Isimba hydropower plant, which will be developed with private sector financing, and also complete the feasibility of the first phase of the 600MW Ayago hydropower plant;
iv. Commencement of preliminary work on the construction of the Oil Refinery near Hoima , for which I have allocated Shs 14.7 billion for preliminary work; ;
v. Construction of a Petroleum Resources Database at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development, for which an allocation of Shs. 7 billion is being made.
96. Madam Speaker, most of the above projects will be funded through a multi-pronged approach, that includes; utilization of our own domestic revenues and implementation of Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs), in addition to traditional sources of financing from bi-lateral and multilateral institutions and non-concessional financing.
97. Madam Speaker, in addition to the above major interventions, Government will continue to finance the implementation of various key projects under the energy sector particularly those under the Rural Electrification Programme.
Agricultural Production and Productivity
98. The National Development Plan identifies agriculture as a vital contributory growth sector capable of reducing poverty and stimulating economic growth. Accordingly, in FY2011/12 priority interventions will focus on increasing production and productivity, agro-processing and increase enterprise efficiency through commodity value chains. The current increase in food prices is a clarion call for us to scale up efforts for increasing agricultural productivity.
99. Madam Speaker, Government will also continue with the ongoing efforts to provide affordable finance to enable farmers acquire necessary infrastructure to promote transformation to commercial agricultural production. The Agricultural Credit Facility which was introduced in 2009 was successful, achieving a disbursement of Shs 29.9 billion, representing a 99.7 percent performance. Eligible projects that received financing included the following:-
i. Wheat, Cotton, Coffee and Tea Processing Plant and Machinery
ii. Farm Machinery and Equipment
iii. Milk Processing Equipment
iv. Warehouse construction and Storage
100. However, performance of the scheme declined significantly in 2010 with a utilization of only Shs. 3.7 billion or a performance of 12.3 percent. This follows the increased risk that was supposed to be carried by participating commercial banks, as they were required to contribute twice as much as Government. In addition, the increase in interest rate to 12 percent was equally not favourable for several eligible projects.
101. Madam Speaker, I am therefore maintaining the Agricultural Credit Facility for a third year running with Government contributing Shs. 30 billion, which will be matched equally by participating Commercial Banks. Eligible projects in the agricultural sector, including the construction of warehouses and silos to improve storage, will therefore be financed at a preferential interest rate of 10 percent per annum for a maximum period of eight years, following the depressed performance in the last year.
102. In order to increase sustained production, Shs. 133 billion has been allocated will to the National Agricultural Advisory Services (NAADs) to increase the commercialization of improved seeds and other planting materials. Seed and agro-genetic propagation companies will be contracted within a long term framework to multiply improved seeds and planting materials, which will be delivered in time for planting during successive seasons over the forthcoming five years. The Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries will also enter into long term framework contracts with certified animal breeders for the multiplication of improved breeds of livestock. NAADs will also continue to provide extension services across the country.
103. In light of the prevalence of animal diseases and crop pests that reduce production and productivity, I have allocated a total of Shs. 9.5 billion to strengthen disease and pest control.
104. Madam Speaker, I have allocated Shs 200 million to commence preparatory work for the restocking programme in Northern and North Eastern Uganda. I will provide the fund for restocking in the following financial year.
105. Madam Speaker, a major constraint to agricultural production is the availability of water. I have allocated Shs. 5 billion to the Ministry of Water and Environment to provide irrigation and water harvesting technologies in collaboration with the private sector.
106. Madam Speaker, the availability of storage for crops has been a major constraint leading to the destabilization of food and other commodity supplies to the market. This constraint also denies farmers from getting reasonable prices for their produce, especially when there has been a bumper harvest. I am allocating Shs. 2 billion for the rehabilitation of small-scale warehouses across the country at sub-country level. Furthermore, the private sector will be encouraged to access funding from the Agricultural Credit Facility to construct warehouses and silos to improve storage. In future, large warehouses and silos will be constructed by Government at regional level across the country.
Job Creation and Employment Strategy
107. Madam Speaker, as a first step to address employment challenges, I have allocated Shs. 44.5 billion towards creating jobs in the next financial year. The following interventions shall be implemented:-
i. A Youth Entrepreneurship Venture Capital Fund will be established together with the DFCU Bank, for which I am proposing an allocation of Shs. 25 billion. This will be used to support youth starting or expanding their business enterprises. The loan sizes will range between Shs 100,000 to Shs 5 million or 20% of injected equity for youth group investments.
ii. Enterprise Uganda, shall undertake Youth Entrepreneurial Training Programme to instill business management skills among the youth, to enable them join the job market or create their own enterprises. I have allocated a total of Shs 3.5 billion for this purpose.
iii. Enterprise Uganda shall also undertake Business Development Skills clinics in collaboration with the private sector and Uganda Small Scale Industries Association (USSIA), with special focus on imparting technical skills to youth, using non-formal vocational training programmes. I have allocated an additional Shs. 1 billion specifically for this purpose.
iv. Dedicated work spaces will be established in markets starting in Kampala, in which youth and other small scale manufacturers under the Job Stimulus programme will undertake manufacturing and other processing activity. I am proposing to allocate Shs 16.5 billion for this purpose.
108. Madam Speaker, the implementation of these measures will be closely monitored and fine tuned to achieve the required outcome of increased employment.

Human Resource Development

Education
109. Madam Speaker, I am allocating an additional Shs. 115.9 billion to the Education sector. Emphasis will be placed on building on the successes of Universal Primary and Secondary Education by giving priority to the following interventions in the next financial year:-
i. Extension of free Universal education to A-level and Business, Technical, Vocational and Education Training (BTVET) beginning in January 2012, for which I have allocated an additional Shs. 58.8 billion. In addition, there will be scaling up of Universal Secondary Education with an additional allocation of Shs. 20.3 billion for the capitation grant;
ii. Provision of Shs. 9.2 billion for the necessary physical infrastructure and Shs. 12.9 billion for personnel cost to address quality constraints at all levels of the education sector as well as Shs. 1.8 billion for enhanced inspection of schools ;
iii. Support private sector vocational institutions with equipment, key staff and salaries as well as enhanced inspection of schools; and
iv. Development and retention of a pool of national expertise in the emerging mining, oil and gas industries. This will be done through undertaking quick skills mapping and supporting the existing vocational and tertiary institutions to start or expand programmes for the required skills.
110. Madam Speaker, the legal and institutional framework for the proposed Student Loan Scheme for University Education will be completed in the course of next financial year and will be implemented in the future.
Health
111. Madam Speaker, whereas we have registered substantial progress, our health care delivery system still face many challenges ranging from inadequate infrastructure, staff shortages and low remuneration and general mismanagement of facilities. To consolidate the progress towards the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals in the health sector, Government will prioritise the following interventions in the next financial year:
i. Increased funding for drugs worth Shs. 96 Billion;
ii. Increased attention to Maternal and Reproductive Health for which I am proposing to allocate a total of Shs. 24 billion;
iii. The rehabilitation of Mulago National Referral Hospital together with the construction of Maternal and Child Health centre; and the
iv. Construction of new District Hospitals in Kawempe and Makindye divisions of Kampala.
Water
112. Madam Speaker, in the water sector, emphasis will be put on provision of new water point sources in rural areas, rehabilitation of existing sources, and provision of small piped schemes for Rural Growth Centres. In particular, 750 shallow wells, 910 deep wells, 36 piped water systems and 45 valley tanks will be constructed at the Local Government level during the year. This is in addition to ongoing work on gravity flow systems and piped water systems in Kaabong, Namalu, Abim, Bukedea and Kapchorwa which have already begun.
113. Further emphasis will be placed on improving efficiency in the Water sector. This will involve increased monitoring of performance to ensure the delivery of agreed targets.
Improving Government Effectiveness in Service Delivery
114. Madam Speaker, I am proposing several measures to improve the effectiveness of Government in order to deliver quality services. In order to re-focus public service efforts for delivery of quality outputs there is need to reduce wastage, laxity, and limited responsiveness. I am proposing the following actions:-
i. Effect cuts of 50 percent on advertising budgets for all Ministries and Agencies;
ii. Effect cuts of 30% on the budget for allowances, workshops and seminars, travel inland and abroad, fuel and vehicle maintenance, printing and stationary, welfare and entertainment, books, periodicals and newspapers, special meals and the purchase of furniture for selected Ministries and Agencies; and
iii. Freeze the purchase of Government vehicles, except for critical areas such as hospitals, police and the security services.
iv. Conduct an immediate forensic audit of Government salaries, wages and pensions to establish credibility
115. Madam Speaker, an estimated Shs. 40 billion has been raised from the above measures and will be allocated to service delivery infrastructure.
116. In addition, the following measures will be implemented, in collaboration with the ministries of Public Service, Works and Transport and the Public Procurement and Disposal of Assets (PPDA) Authority to improve service delivery:-
i. Hold Accounting Officers, including Chief Administrative Officers personally responsible for the delivery of performance targets, once funding has been made available to them.
ii. Implement performance contracts for top civil servants up to the level of Heads of Departments to strengthen performance management and enhance transparency and accountability;
iii. Enforce use of unit costing for all government procurement, against which mis-procurement will occur if reserve prices are not met; and
iv. Enforce use of government-procured equipment in the maintenance of national district and community access roads, with operational financing from the Uganda Road Fund and Uganda National Road Authority. Any waivers to use private sector contractors will first have to be approved by the Treasury.
. Constitutional Self Accounting Bodies
117. Madam Speaker, the budgetary proposals of the following Self Accounting Bodies have been submitted in compliance with Article 155(2) of the Constitution.
. Courts of Judicature
. Electoral Commission
. Inspectorate of Government
. Parliamentary Commission
. Uganda Law Reform Commission
. Uganda Human Rights Commission
. Uganda Aids Commission
. National Planning Authority
. Office of the Auditor General
118. In accordance with Article 155(3) of the Constitution, Government has made recommendations on these proposals. I hereby lay both the budgetary proposals and the recommendations of Government before this august House, as required by the Constitution.
119. In order for me to submit a fully financed National Budget for your consideration in accordance with Article 155(1) of the Constitution, the budget provisions of these Self Accounting bodies are in accordance with the resource envelope conveyed to them in the course of budget preparation, including the presentation of the National Budget Framework Paper to Parliament, in accordance with the Budget Act 2001.
. Taxation and Revenue Measures
120. Madam Speaker, the objective for our tax system is twofold:
i. Stability and predictability: and
ii. Efficiency of the tax system
121. The technical amendments I will be proposing are accordingly meant to meet the objective of the tax system.
122. I will also announce decisions agreed upon at the East African Community Pre- Budget Meeting of Ministers of Finance held on 7th May 2011 in Kampala.
Income Tax
Application of royalty
123. Madam Speaker, payments made as consideration for internet broadcasting. This has been necessitated by innovations in technology I am proposing to amend the definition of royalty to include The details are contained in the Income Tax (Amendment) Bill, 2011
Transfer Pricing Regulations
124. Madam Speaker, as the Ugandan economy gets integrated in global economy including set up of multinationals, the issue of transfer pricing demands urgent attention. I have therefore finalized transfer pricing regulations to ensure that prices charged between associated entities for the transfer of goods, services and intangible property are in line with the arm’s length principle. The Regulations will be gazetted and will be effective 1st July 2011.
Value Added Tax
Treatment of Imported Services
125. Madam Speaker, Hon Members, I propose to make clear the VAT treatment on imported services VAT will apply to imported services where the recipient of the services is a taxable person. The details are contained in the Value Added Tax (Amendment) Bill.
Supply of Solar Energy:
126. Madam Speaker, to promote clean and alternative energy, I propose to make the supply of solar energy VAT exempt. This policy is to encourage supply of solar power to consumers in rural areas by commercial solar producers. The details are contained in the Value Added Tax (Amendment) Bill, 2011
Supply of Ambulances:
127. I propose to remove VAT on ambulances to facilitate the transportation of patients to hospitals and other health facilities. The details are contained in the Value Added Tax (Amendment) Bill, 2011
Stamps Act
128. Madam Speaker, I propose to remove the stamp duty applicable on securities given in procuring small loans in order to lessen the burden of borrowing to small income earners whose threshold shall not exceed 2 million shillings. Details will be contained in the stamp duty (Amendment) Bill, 2011
Excise Tariff Act
Excise Duty on sugar:
129. Madam Speaker, I propose to reduce the excise duty on sugar by 50 percent given that sugar is a key welfare item in many households in Uganda. This will lead to revenue loss of about Shs 8.5 billion. The details are contained in the Excise Tariff (Amendment) Bill 2011
Excise Duty on Kerosene:
130. Madam Speaker, to provide relief to households from the burden of increased kerosene prices, I propose to repeal the excise duty on kerosene. This will lead to a revenue loss of about Shs 12 billion. The details are contained in the Excise Duty (amendment) Bill 2011
Levy on Hides and Skins
131. Madam Speaker, Government introduced a levy on the export of raw hides and skins. The levy was intended to support and encourage value addition in Uganda. To achieve Government’s objective the levy is being revised from US Dollars 0.4 per kilo to US Dollars 0.8 per kilo On exports and outward processing of raw hides and skins
Investment Trader Regulations
132. As part of the effort to streamline and improve tax administration I am terminating the Investment trader facility.
Reform of Tax laws
133. Madam Speaker, Government plans to reform the tax laws to ensure consistence with the current economic reality, best practice, regional integration and provide a taxpayer friendly regime. According Government has drafted a Tax Procedure code which will be introduced into Parliament next financial year. Government is also in advanced stages of reviewing the Excise Law, stamp duty law Lotteries and Gaming and Pool Betting Laws.
Decisions Made at the EAC Pre-Budget Consultations by the Ministers of Finance:
134. Madam Speaker, I now turn to the decisions agreed upon during the pre-Budget meeting of the East African Community Ministers of Finance, details of which will be contained in the East African Community (EAC) Gazette:
Remission of Duty on Uganda’s Inputs and Raw Materials:
135. In recognition of the regional economic situation, the Ministers for Finance decided to grant the extension of duty remission to Uganda’s list of raw materials and industrial inputs for another one year.
Road Trucks and Semi-Trailers
136. The Ministers for Finance extended remission of import duty for a period of one year for road tractors for semi-trailers and trucks of carrying capacity of over 20 tonnes. Details are in the East African gazette.
Inputs for Assemblers of Refrigerators and Freezers:
137. In order to encourage value addition and assembling by local entrepreneurs, import taxes on components parts and inputs for assembly of refrigerators and freezers were remitted from 25 percent to 10 percent.
Hoes used in Agriculture
138. To augment local production and encourage food security, import duty on hoes was remitted from 10 percent to 0 percent.
Food Supplements:
139. In order to reduce nutritional deficiencies through use of food supplements, the Ministers reduced the import duty on food supplements from 25 percent to 10 percent.
Premixes
140. To support the Agricultural Sector through reduction of the price of feeds the Ministers decided to remove import duty on premixes used in the manufacture of animal and poultry feeds.
Motor-Cycle Ambulances
141. To encourage use of appropriate and affordable technology in rural areas the Ministers agreed to waive taxes on motor-cycle ambulances.
Double Tax Treaty
142. The Double Taxation Agreement among the East African Community (EAC) Partner States was concluded. In accordance with the Ratification of Treaties Act I am laying before Parliament, the East African Community (EAC) Double Taxation Agreement to conclude the ratification process. The Double Taxation Agreement will promote cross-border investments among East African Community (EAC) Partner States..
Ratification of the Revised Cotonou Agreement
143. ?Madam Speaker, the Cotonou Agreement which sets out the development, trade and political cooperation framework between the European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific States was concluded on 23rd June, 2000 in Cotonou, Benin. The Agreement first revised in 2005, was again revised in 2010. It provides the framework for the European Union’s development funding to Uganda. The Government of Uganda is required under the Ratification of Treaties Act, to table before Cabinet for approval and lay the Revised Agreement before Parliament. I am therefore laying before you, the Revised Agreement for ratification in accordance with the Act.
. Report of Tax Expenditure for Financial Year 2010/11
144. Madam Speaker, Article 152 (2) of the Constitution requires me to periodically report to Parliament on the exercise of powers conferred upon me by any law to waive or vary a tax imposed by that law. This is to report that this fiscal year, I have exercised powers conferred by the Income Tax Act and Value Added Tax Act and waived shillings Three Billion One Hundred Ninety Five Million Nine Hundred Seventy Three Thousand and Five Hundred Forty Seven Only (Shs. 3,195,973,547/=).
145. Madam Speaker, Government has also paid shillings fifteen billion four hundred ninety five million nine hundred forty seven thousand one hundred and twenty five only (Shs 15,495,947,125/=) for Hotel, some Hospitals and Tertiary Institutions inputs and materials and procurement of Non Government Organizations with tax exemption clauses in their agreement.
. Schedule of Indebtedness
Schedule Of Indebtedness
146. Madam Speaker, in accordance with the provision of Section 13 (1) and (2) of the Budget Act 2001, I hereby lay before the House the Statement on:
i. Government’s total external indebtedness as at 31st March, 2011; and
ii. the grants that Government received during financial year 2010/11.
147. With respect to Section 13 (3) of the same Act, Government did not guarantee any new loan during financial year 2010/11.
. Conclusion
148. The Budget strategy and priorities I have presented today seek to stimulate enhanced economic growth by creating an environment for increased economic activity for more Ugandans. A specific focus in the forthcoming year has been placed on the creation of the necessary environment for employment generation. The proposed interventions aim at building lifetime skills for the youth making them not only employable but also entrepreneurs and job creators themselves.
149. Addressing constraints in transport, energy and health and education and improving service delivery, will accord Ugandans a better quality of life. I commend this budget to the people of Uganda and especially the youth, who are our beacon of hope for the future
150. Madam Speaker, I beg to move.
FOR GOD AND MY COUNTRY

Kenya: Uhuru Kenyatta gets the green light ILLIGALLY to present the Budget

from Judy Miriga Folks,

To defy Constitutional Legal Authority and deny Parliament to engage and public to participate in the matters that affect their lives directly or indirectly as is in the National Budget is a serious crime and an act intended to distabilize Peace and Unity……It is against Human Rights obligated Freedom, Peace and Security to cohabit in a just secured society.

We appeal to the United Nations Security Council and all Leaders of the world to help intervene and help support our demand to know and participate in the Budget, to help us break this bottleneck stalemate which is stubbonly being created by Uhuru Kenyatta with team.

Because of Uhuru’s stubbonness, I believe there are details and figures they do not wish the public to know, and it must be things to do with deeply soiled corruption involving huge sums of money, intended to be sneaked to some foreign accounts or lucrative Ponzi Scheme whealer dealers……

Kenyan people sweated and some died in order to achieve the New Constitution. We hold the justice through the new constitution so dearly that we will not let is fly out of our hands. ……We are staged to have an UGLY BATTLE with the BUDGET…….

We however DEMAND that The New Constitution MUST be followed strictly, which must equally applies to the passage of The Budget. We remember Mutula Kilonzo complaining along with other comments by Agents of the corrupt politicians in the media not long ago saying, politicians have unanimously agreed amongst themselves to tactfully delay the New Constitution and vowed they will forego and delay the New Constitution for five years, hold election according to the Old Constitution and do slowly, peacemeal implementation and at some point abandon it altogether.

We cannot continue to be frustrated, intimidated and corrupted in this manner. We need joint pressure force to push these difficult politicians to face justice at the ICC Hauge. Help must come urgently and fast.

Thank you all…..

Sincerely,

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: Dickens Odhiambo
Subject: Uhuru Kenyatta gets the green light to present the Budget

Uhuru admits budget process ignored law

By DAVE OPIYO (dopiyo@ke.nationmedia.com)

Posted Thursday, June 2 2011 at 12:16

Treasury has admitted that it did not fully adhere to the Constitution by failing to submit the estimates of the Sh1.155 trillion budget to parliament for scrutiny two months before the end of the financial year.

“We may not have lived to the strict letter of the Constitution with regard to the timelines but more than other institutions, we at Treasury have nonetheless operated in the spirit of the new Constitution,” Finance minister Uhuru Kenyatta said on Thursday.

Mr Kenyatta had been expected to present this year’s Budget estimates to the Parliamentary Budget Committee, but did not, sparking outrage with MPs swearing to block him from reading the Budget next week. However, the minister said he finally presented the estimates to the committee on May 31.

And with this, he however asked parliament to consider deferring the interrogation of the estimates of Kenya’s largest ever budget in history from the required two months before the end of the financial year to after the budget speech.

Planned

The budget speech has already been slated for June 8 with Mr Kenyatta insisting that it will go on as planned.

“The budget speech is the culmination of the entire budget making process but in itself, it is not the budget… the budget is contained in the estimates. The speech simply highlights the key areas of focus that would be of public interest,” he said.

In defending his failure to table the estimates as stipulated by the new Constitution, the minister said the budget making process was not as simple as many think. It usually takes between 10 and 11 months.

“We started this process after the promulgation of the new Constitution…given the length of the time it takes to formulate the budget, there probably should have been transitional clauses due to the fact that the budget date had been moved forward by two months,” he said. Speaking at a meeting at Nairobi’s Continental House earlier this week, MPs said Mr Kenyatta ought to be reprimanded for breaching the Constitution by not submitting the estimates as stipulated in the Constitution.

Highlights of the Budgetary Proposals

Ksh 1.315 Billion for construction of water harvesting systems in 10 primary schools per constituency at a cost of Ksh 250,000 per school.

Ksh 840 Million to provide bursaries for 200 additional poor/orphaned children per constituency at a cost of Ksh 20,000 per child.

Ksh 1.1 Billion for construction of 15 water harvesting pans (100,000 Cubic Metres capacity) for each non-ASAL constituency at a cost of Ksh 800,000 each Ksh 1.05 Billion for construction of 20 water harvesting pans (100,000 Cubic Metres capacity) for each ASAL constituency at a cost of Ksh 1.5 Million each

Ksh 210 Million to establish a digital village in each constituency

Additional Kshs 1 Billion for the second phase of funding for the Small and Medium Enterprises program

Ksh 1.3 Billion for expanding irrigation by 11,000 acres in existing schemes, Ksh 4.3 Billion to bring new irrigation schemes covering 16,000 acres and Ksh 600 Million to design 91,000 new irrigation schemes.

Ksh 135 Million to implement cold storage facilities in 120 constituencies to compliment the successes realized when we introduced fish ponds in the 2009/2010 budget under the Economic Stimulus Package.

Ksh 385 Million to expand coverage from 10 to 30 households for the Disabled Persons safety net program, Ksh 260 Million to expand the Orphans and Vulnerable Children safety net from 60 to 72 Districts, Ksh 240 Million to expand the cash transfer for senior citizens from 44 to 72 Districts, Ksh 230 Million to adjust benefits from Ksh 1,500 to Ksh 2,000 for the same Ksh 845 Million for the purchase of 2 gunny bags per household for farming in the slum areas.

Ksh 300 Million to purchase sanitary pads for girls in primary schools across the country

Ksh 100 Million to develop child protection system and give support to children institutions

Ksh 5.53 Billion to extend a grant of Ksh 15 Million per constituency to complete ongoing projects and cover CDF projects arrears amounting to Ksh 1.8 Billion Ksh 2 Billion capital grant to co-operative societies to clear outstanding coffee debts.

Ksh 1.85 Billion to expand and/or modernize commuter rail services,

Ksh 1 Billion to upgrade Thika-Nairobi Commuter rail and Ksh 3.25 Billion for the Mombasa-Malaba standard gauge railway.

Ksh 4.157 Billion for the final resettlement of IDP’s.

Ksh 3.34 Billion for the payment of pension dues for retired teachers between 1997 and 2003.

Ksh 5.5 Billion for preparation of the 2012 General Election

KShs. 1.15 billion for Police Recruitment.

Sector Allocations

Mr Kenyatta said the FY2011/12 Budget has provided an overall increase of Ksh. 131.5 billion in funding to all sectors with the following sectors recording significant increases in funding:

Physical Infrastructure – Allocations went up by Kshs. 55.6 billion from KSh.165.8B in FY2010/11 to KSh. 221.4B in FY2011/12 Public Administration & International Relations – We have increased allocations to the Public Administration and International Relations sector by KSh. 35.4 billion from KSh. 77.5b in the last financial year to KSh. 112.9b in the FY2011/12.

Governance, Justice, Law and Order – Allocations increased by KShs. 22.8 billion from (from KSh. 98.7b in FY2010/11 to KSh. 121.5b in FY2011/12)

Human Resource Development – Increased allocations by KShs 13.2 billion. (from KSh. 201.7b in FY2010/11 to KSh. 21.9b in FY2011/12) Research, Innovation and Technology – allocations increased by KShs. KSh. 9.6 billion (from KSh. 65.8b in FY2010/11 to 75.5b in FY2011/12).

Environment, water and Sanitation – Allocations have increased by KShs. 6.6 billion (from KSh. 50b in FY2010/11 to KSh. 56.9b in FY2011/12).

Ref………Your suggestions on the 2011/2012 budget.

From: Lee Makwiny
Subject: Your suggestions on the 2011/2012 budget
Date: Thursday, June 2, 2011, 8:02 AM

How many people have participated in this budget making process and got the mail below.

It seems people who are in Uhuru’s list are the only guys who were allowed to have input. I am asking.

Hello XXXXXXXX

It is with great pleasure that I write to you to thank you for having taken time to give in your suggestions on the 2011/2012 budget. I am not only honoured, but also humbled by your important contributions. This in itself is a great achievement for Kenya.

As we finalize the budget here at treasury, I felt that it is important for me to update you on the progress that we have made so far. We received close to 3,000 submissions through social media and the online form that you filled. In addition to these, many others took time to drop letters at my office, write emails, tweet and blog about their ideas for the budget. I personally went through each one of these submissions and I must say that I was quite impressed not only by the quality of these submissions but also by the patriotic passion with which Kenyans from all walks of life responded to my request and chose to play their part in this process. My officers sifted through these budget proposals as well and I’m glad to inform you that quite a number of the submissions have been taken into consideration and will form part of the 2011/2012 budget. In as much as we may not be able to incorporate all the suggestions, we see this as the beginning of a new form of public engagement and inclusiveness as envisioned in our new constitution.

I truly appreciate each and every contribution that was brought forward and it is my humble prayer that you and all Kenyans shall continue to take similar opportunities to have your voices heard. Let us continue to work together in the same spirit for the benefit this great nation.

God bless you and God bless Kenya.

Sincerely,

Uhuru M. Kenyatta

Kenya: Battle Over Local Budget Goes to Court

from Judy Miriga

Folks,

These are good signs representing good tiding……It is about time for Kenyans to know through their elected Parliamentary Representatives, what it is all about in the Finance Ministerial Department……How Their Taxpayer money is collected and distributed for public service…….How it is spent………who gets what and why……. to be read to them…….How and Why it got consumed or overspent………

That in going through the Referendum in a landslide, Kenya begun to walk the walks and talk the talks of Public Mandate……..

The People Public have a right to know what is contained in the money-box….if it is a snake, they must be told, so they get prepared about what type, the wight and size, whether it is poisonous or not ….people through their representatives have a right to know how to receive the snake……whether they will choose to save it or kill it……..

In Retrospect, the budget must speak for itself before it is tabled……so it is the right thing the Civil Society have begun to move towards the right direction as is required by Article 221 of the Constitution.

It will be as hard as a rock to force a bottle down the throat of people in forcing them to eat a humble pie…..

The Budget will not be read unless it goes through Parliamentary process…..It is the Law People……..in a new begining …… !

Cheers everybody…..!

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Battle Over Local Budget Goes to Court
Maureen Ngesa
30 May 2011

Nairobi — Kenya’s Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta has been sued for failing to submit estimates to Parliament ahead of the reading of the national budget next week.

A civil society group, the International Centre for Policy and Conflict, on Monday moved to the High Court in Nairobi arguing that the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance, Mr Kenyatta is acting in breach of the Constitution.

The organisation says that it would be illegal to allow Mr Kenyatta to read the budget speech without having submitted estimates to parliament two months before end of the current financial year as required by Article 221 of the Constitution.

Mr Kenyatta last week announced he will read the speech on June 8. The current financial year ends on June 30.

Justice Geanne Gacheche ordered that the case comes up for hearing on Tuesday.

Kenya: Court Freezes Nyando CDF Accounts.

From: fred wagah

Court Freezes Nyando CDF Accounts, all Nyando Constituents in Diaspora, we appeal for your help to save our CDF kitty from being embezzled. The MP is trying very hard to have the account uplifted for his personal gains. The case is with the court and the inter-parties hearing is slated for may 31st, 2011 and he is pouring a lot of money to mobilize the youths to demonstrate and also to bribe his ways, therefore whatever you’ve , please just send it to save our constituency from being mismanaged!

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Court Freezes Nyando CDF accounts
by Nicholas Anyuor
dated Fri 21 May 2011 pg 10

A kisumu court has granted interim orders restricting Nyando Constituency Development Fund (CDF) officials and area MP Fred Outa from withdrawing funds from the kitty over alleged misuse of the Sh26 million.
. . .

Samarirans 001.tif

Kenya: Barclays and Friends of KCDN visiting Kenyatta National Hospital

from odhiambo okecth

Friends,

Plans are almost complete for our visit to Kenyatta National Hospital’s Maternity Unit.

In a discussion this morning with the Branch Manager of Barclays Bank Haile Sellassie Avenue Branch Ms Jane Nganga, we agreed that we will make this visit on the 28th May 2011 as from 1.00pm.

We want to appreciate the Barclays Group fraternity and Haile Sellasie Avenue Branch members in particular for stepping forward to joining us in this noble initiative. We also want to appreciate the following people for their kind support;

Odhiambo T Oketch Ksh. 2,000.00
Lee Makwiny Kshs 2,000.00
Everlyne Gaya Kshs 2,000.00
Aggrey Mmbaya Kshs 5,000.00
Grace Shiro Mwangi- Baby Clothes- delivered to City Hall Annexe Room 116 already
Barclays Bank Haile Sellassie Avenue Branch

It is important to note that Barclays Bank Haile Sellassie Branch have been strong Friends of KCDN in the KCDN Child Support Initiative. Under Ms Irene Wasike, the Bank was of great support to the Girl Child when she engineered support that gave them sanitary towels for one year. They also made some cash support that helped the children in the KCDN Child Support Programme acquire books and stationery.

The visit to KNH is the brain child of Ms Evelyn Gaya, a volunteer with KCDN and it is our wish that many more people will join us infront of City Hall Annexe at 12.00pm on 28th May 2011 to enable us move as a team to Kenyatta National Hospital with our support.

I have talked with the KNH PRO and all arrangements are in place.

If it is to be, it is up to me. A Clean Kenya Starts With me. A Peaceful Kenya is my Responsibility.

Peace and blessings,

Odhiambo T Oketch
CEO KCDN Nairobi
Nationwide Coordinator – Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign
PO Box 47890-00100,
Nairobi Kenya .
Tel; 0724 365 557 0735 529 126
Email; oto@kcdnkenya.org, komarockswatch@yahoo.com
www.kcdnkenya.org
http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch

Odhiambo T Oketch is the current Chairman to the City Council of Nairobi Stakeholders Evaluation Team on Performance Contracting and Rapid Results Management. He is also Chair to the Nyamonye Catholic Church Development Fund.He was also the Co-Chair and Coordinator of The Great Nairobi Walk against Corruption that was held in Nairobi on the 22nd October 2010

Kenya: Money launderers; Al-Shabaab & border trade

forwarded by Judy Miriga

Money launderers having a field day in Kenya
By Dann Okoth

The country is again at the centre of attention because of money laundering.

This comes on the heels of the controversy over narcotics trafficking involving high-ranking Government officials and politicians whose sources of unexplained wealth have raised eyebrows.
. . .
http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/InsidePage.php?id=2000030499&cid=4&

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Al-Shabaab threats stall Kenya-Somalia border trade
By Boniface Ongeri

Sulub Ahmed regarded an entry point on the Kenyan-Somalia border as his ‘farm’ while the State viewed it as a goldfield.

The more than 800km border stretch buzzes with lucrative trade involving second hand cars, spare parts, petroleum, textiles, electronics, foodstuffs, construction materials and satellite dishes and other imports from the war-torn Somalia.
. . .
http://m.standardmedia.co.ke/headlines.php?id=2000035116

Sub-Saharan Africa Microfinance Analysis and Benchmarking Report 2010

From: Yona Maro

The Sub-Saharan Africa Microfinance Analysis and Benchmarking Report 2010 presents the latest regional trends and recent developments throughout the region based on a sample of 181 MFIs and spanning 41 countries. The report begins with an overview of the market with an examination of supply side issues, the policy environment, and cross-border funding flows. It then focuses on retail financial service providers, exploring growth trends, financial performance, and funding structure. In addition, for the first time in this series of reports, there is information on social performance indicators, which highlights the practice of translating an MFIs’ mission into measurable outcomes and setting policies and procedures to manage social performance.

http://www.themix.org/sites/default/files/096_MIX_Africa%20Report_05-05-2011.pdf

UK & Africa: Commonwealth Conference, My Speech “YOUTH” The Ticking Time Bomb … or is it a Gold Mine?

from Emmanuel Dennis

Friends—

The conference on Youth Employment hosted by the Commonwealth secretariat is on going. During the opening ceremony, speakers have alluded to the need to start focussing on setting up employment and entrepreneurship structures that are geared to building and maturing the youth in the commonwealth member states. I am humbled to have given a Key note address. Also during the ceremony was the Minister for Youth Affairs and Sports. He will be sharing on the gains that Kenya has had so far in another session this afternoon.
More updates will be coming soon.

I am attaching my presentation for the opening ceremony.

Regards,
ED

Sent from my iPad

“YOUTH” The Ticking Time Bomb…or is it a Gold Mine?

An Address to the Commonwealth Conference on ‘Investing in Youth Employment’

9th-10th May 2011, Marlborough House, London

By Emmanuel Dennis Ngongo, CEO – Green Teams Initiative – Africa

Mr. Kamalesh Sharma – Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Dr. Paul Otuoma Hon. Minister for Youth Affairs and Sports of Kenya, Ms. Poonam Ahluwalia, President YES Inc., Mr. Sridhar, Central bank of India, Your Excellencies the Heads of Missions to the Commonwealth, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen.

I am humbled and honoured to address this distinguished gathering. The title of the conference resonates well with what drives me as an individual and other people that have inspired me in the last decade. Having started off in the children’s rights advocacy in villages in Kenya, I have grown to join the youth development world at YES, and now moving towards bigger responsibility of national and international leadership addressing entrepreneurship among other global development issues. It is to me a lifelong learning journey.

Youth Unemployment is huge a challenge that poses serious threats to the co-existence of humanity today. We are witnessing best practices which started off in the Middle East and North Africa, to Central Africa, they have their tentacles to the East side of Africa. This continuing series of revolutions will dominate the world’s agenda for as long as we continue to ignore the youth who are the common denominator for our present and future.

Research and statistics show increase in Youth population. In Africa, persons under the age of 35 form a paltry 75% of the populations. They are well educated and majority unemployed. A recipe for Social conflict.

The current financial and ecological challenges will continue to hit hard. These pressures mean that we need to device new business unusual models. We must come up with short term imperative frameworks to address youth unemployment. This must be supported by long term imperative to create sustainable value chains that resolve the problems of tomorrow driven by innovation and Entrepreneurship.

Living in poverty, one meal per day, kicked out of school due to lack of $80 school fees, a young man from Masitala village in Malawi; the country having gone through the worst drought ever; with no help coming, William Kimkwamba devised an innovative way of creating opportunity… the Wind. He started off scavenging in waste materials, he became the laughing stock of the village as he collected rusted iron, car batteries, tractor fans, bicycle parts among other scrap materials. From 2002 courtesy, his village now has 5 windmills that generate electricity and pump water for use by hundreds of villagers.

Many youth like William come up with innovations that are life changing but due to the lack of capital, technical knowhow and support structures, their dreams have been swept off without caution.

The Green Teams initiative started to organize young people into positive community building forces, that are creating revenues and at the same time resolving the ecological challenges that the world faces today using a bottom up approach.

When we began the Green Teams conversation at the Rework the World Summit hosted by YES and Tallberg Foundation in June of 2010, many sceptics shot down the idea as half baked. However the GTI Revolution is taking Africa slowly becoming a positive storm because it speaks to the needs of the youth who desperately require the kind of skills training we offer to get them into economic independence. We now have Green Teams in Mombasa, Kampala, Nairobi and soon Kigali, St. Louis courtesy of UNHABITAT CCCI Program. A GTI is coming to Washington DC as well.

With support structures in place to incubate emerging ideas and value chains, not only will we be planting the seeds of hope, but also investing in a promising future. It is to the uncharted waters that the Green Teams seek to explore. To create the path where others will come and walk through.

My appeal to the Commonwealth Secretariat and other Global initiatives. Listen to the voices of the youth, they call from remote villages of the world, they reckon with virgin ideas, they seek a helping hand. They need support to realise their dreams. They seek investment for sustainable social impact. Otherwise, every skewed development agenda that we pursue will be shuttered by the looming revolution. We can no longer continue to ignore the youth; as such ignorance will be to our own peril.

The Youth Enterprise Development Fund in Kenya has shown and proved that Youth are bankable and investable. The loan repayment portfolio surpasses that of established businesses. However, the fund needs to be reworked to a Guarantee Fund. This way to support the emerging enterprises, incubate and nurture promising ideas and invest in the young people who lack collateral. The fund would build the capacity of the youth to become entrepreneurs able to compete established businesses and at the same time protect their ideas from the plagiarists with patents and intellectual property protection.

We support the credit Facility by the Commonwealth, such an idea will far more support youth employment and should be replicated in more countries. Creating Youth Enterprise Generators as originated by YES to support in scale change ideas of organized young people will achieve immeasurable results into enterprise movements. The Commonwealth Secretariat should support ideas to scaling up and replicating promising practices in all its member states.

Kenya will be holding the National Youth Council Election by June. I am sure the Hon Minister Paul Otuoma who is here with us will take a lead in working with young leaders to make it a model that the rest of the world can learn from. We should allow young people to lead such state offices to set international standards and become models for learning and replication. Supporting member states to come up with youth friendly policies, the commonwealth should insist that such policies should be devoid of skewed political agendas.

A good idea grows by itself. We have an option to make the right decisions from their onsets. As in Entrepreneurship, Fortune favours the Bold. Indeed the brave may not live forever but the cautious do not live at all as was articulated by Sir Richard Branson, one of the most successful business moguls of our time who started off at age 16 to build a global diverse brand that is Virgin. He has proved that you can chew and cross the road at the same time.

Barack Obama is my role model that speaks my kind of Language; An astute believer in the power of the youth to change the world. He is promoting Green Issues such as developing a green economy. He wants to create 5 million jobs in the green energy sector. A green grid where homes will take power from small, local solar and wind powered generators, and home generators will push surplus energy back into the grid. This must happen as the price of fuel skyrockets, changing our energy and business models as the recession bites. Barack is a more than talk guy.

By the year 2015, the youth bulge will be at its high with the current economic pressures escalating. Initiatives like the Grameen, YES Bank in Bangladesh should be emulated and scaled to offer sustainable loans to consumers. Young people with green businesses should be supported. Africa was not hard hit by the economic downturn, because, our conservative banking practices have saved our economies. African Companies and ideas will thrive in the next decade. Investing in ideas as Green Teams, will propel a country like Kenya to start giving aid money to the USA and the UK in hard times, such as when the Economic Recession is on. My prediction is that if given a chance, this will be a reality in the next two decades.

Creating the Green Teams Business model is to do something positive for the deserving livelihoods; to connect to the rest of the world; to partner with institutions as the Commonwealth. With your support, I am sure we will thrive and reach our desired goals so that future generations can enjoy. That is the legacy that all of us should be working towards.

I hope that this Workshop will help us have honest talk and concrete action based deal breakers to gain value to why we are gathered here today. Let us not allow this to be another talk shop. In conclusion, I would like to thank the Commonwealth Secretariat for setting up this conference; it has been an onerous task to be at the place where we are today. Thanks to Rajkumar Bidla for creating stories of hope. Let us change the ticking social time bomb that is youth into a gold mine. The future depends on them.

Thank you.

USA & East Africa: Health in East Africa / Rotary and Aga Khan University launch strategic partnership to improve maternal and child health in East Africa

PRESS RELEASE

New scholarships for nursing students, professional development for educators

EVANSTON, Illinois, Improved maternal and child health in East Africa is the goal of a new strategic partnership between the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International, a global humanitarian service organization, and Aga Khan University (AKU), a private, non-denominational university promoting human development through research, teaching and community service.

Logo Rotary International: www.apo-mail.org/Rotary-International.jpg

Logo Aga Khan University : http://www.apo-mail.org/Aga-Khan-University.gif

Under the partnership, the Rotary Foundation – the charitable arm of Rotary International — will provide grants to Rotary clubs to establish volunteer teams to support the professional development of nursing faculty at AKU’s East Africa campuses in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. The teams will work with local Rotary clubs and AKU to carry out community service projects linking the classroom lessons to existing clinics and health care programs. Rotary grants will also fund nursing and midwifery scholarships for students admitted to AKU’s Advanced Nursing Studies (ANS) program. Scholarship recipients will have the opportunity to be mentored through the program by local Rotary clubs.

The Aga Khan University’s ANS program was established in response to requests from East African governments to help upgrade nursing skills and build healthcare human resource capacity in the region. Through continuing education programs, graduates are able to work in their communities to provide better quality health care services as well as lead policy development at the national level. The result is better qualified regional healthcare professionals who are helping to build accessible, responsive and sustainable healthcare systems in East Africa.

“Our Rotary clubs in East Africa are eager to partner with the top-notch professionals at Aga Khan University to help ensure that mothers and their infants receive the best health care possible,” says Samuel F. Owori, of Kampala, Uganda, a member of the Rotary International Board of Directors. “This partnership represents an immense contribution to the health and well-being of families throughout our region.”

“This partnership will enable a greater number of qualified students from poor communities to benefit from our programs.” states AKU President Firoz Rasul. “Partnerships such as this one build much needed capacity in the developing world, but more importantly, they enable innovation and the creation of knowledge to address local health problems.”

Rotary Foundation Chair Carl-Wilhelm Stenhammar adds that the partnership “is an important step toward meeting the United Nations Millennium Development Goals for maternal and child health.”

The UN Millennium Goals call for a 75 percent reduction in maternal deaths — and a two thirds reduction in the death rate of children under age five — by 2015.

The UN says developing countries account for 99 percent of the more than 350,000 women who die each year from complications during pregnancy or childbirth. In sub-Saharan Africa, a woman’s risk of maternal death is 1 in 30, compared to 1 in 5,600 in developed countries. The same region records the highest childhood mortality rates, with one in seven dying before their fifth birthday. Worldwide, more than 9 million children under 5 die each year.

Aga Khan University operates in eight countries across East Africa, the Middle East, South and Central Asia and Europe (www.aku.edu ). The University’s curricula in nursing, medicine and educational development reflect the unique needs of the communities and countries where it operates, so that students and graduates can immediately apply their knowledge where it will have the most impact. Through a needs-blind admissions policy AKU selects the most promising students who will become leaders and thinkers in the region; cultivating in them an ethic of service and the skills to help communities improve their quality of life.

AKU is one of nine agencies of the Aga Khan Development Network (www.akdn.org), a group of private development agencies with mandates ranging from health and education to architecture, culture, microfinance, rural development, disaster reduction, the promotion of private-sector enterprise and the revitalization of historic cities.

Rotary is an organization of business and professional leaders who provide humanitarian service and help to build goodwill and peace in the world. There are 1.2 million Rotary members in 34,000 Rotary clubs in more than 200 countries and geographical areas. Rotary clubs have been serving communities worldwide for more than a century.

The Rotary Foundation, under its new Future Vision plan, seeks to forge strategic partnerships with established organizations with expertise in any of Rotary’s six areas of focus: peace and conflict prevention/resolution; disease prevention and treatment; water and sanitation; maternal and child health; basic education and literacy; and economic and community development. The foundation grants support major international projects with sustainable, high impact outcomes.

Distributed by the African Press Organization on behalf of Rotary International

CONTACT: Wayne Hearn (847) 866-3386 wayne.hearn@rotary.org

Sandra Pruefer, +41 44-387-7116, sandra.pruefer@rotary.org

Eunice Mwangi, +245 20 3662170, eunice.mwangi@aku.edu

For more information, visit www.rotary.org. For visual materials go to: http://rotary.org/mediacenter

World: Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty.

Forwarded by: Yona Maro

Esther Duflo grew up in France pitying Kolkata’s poor, based on what she had read in a comic book about Mother Teresa. Abhijit Banerjee grew up in Kolkata envying them: poor kids always had time to play and they routinely beat him at marbles. As economists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, both remain fascinated by poverty. In an engrossing new book they draw on some intrepid research and a store of personal anecdotes to illuminate the lives of the 865m people who, at the last count, live on less than $0.99 a day.

The two economists made their names (and remade their discipline) by championing randomised trials. These trials test anti-poverty remedies much as pharmaceutical firms test drugs. One group gets the remedy, another does not. The two groups are chosen at random, so the remedy should be the only systematic difference between them. If the first group does better, the benefit can be attributed to the project and not the many other factors that might otherwise obscure the result.

These trials proved immensely appealing. They promised to sift nuggets of truth from the slurry of received wisdom and wishful thinking that characterises much aid-talk. The hope was that once a trial proved the worth of a project or programme, governments and donors would back it and prescribe it more widely.

The approach has caught on. Another book, “More Than Good Intentions” by Dean Karlan and Jacob Appel of Innovations for Poverty Action is also out this month. But the approach has also attracted criticism. These trials, the critics point out, show whether a drug or remedy works, but not how it works. Even in medicine, a randomised trial can only show whether the average patient benefits; not whether any individual patient will benefit. Human physiology differs from patient to patient, so does the physiology of poverty.

“Poor Economics” should appease some of their critics. It draws on a variety of evidence, not limiting itself to the results of randomised trials, as if they are the only route to truth. And the authors’ interest is not confined to “what works”, but also to how and why it works. Indeed, Ms Duflo and Mr Banerjee, perhaps more than some of their disciples, are able theorists as well as thoroughgoing empiricists.

They are fascinated by the way the poor think and make decisions. Poor people are not stupid, but they can be misinformed or overwhelmed by circumstance, struggling to do what even they recognise is in their best interests. The authors recount (with grudging admiration) how nurses in rural Rajasthan outwitted the two professors’ efforts to stop them skiving off work. They also describe how borrowers in south India exploited a contractual loophole to avoid taking out health insurance, which their microlender insisted they buy for their own good.

The poor, like anyone else, can also succumb to inertia, procrastination and self-sabotage. The authors discovered it was quite normal for poor women in the Indian city of Hyderabad to take out a microloan charging 24% interest only to deposit it in a savings account that paid 4%. This seems mad, except that the obligation to repay the loan ensured the women did not squander the money. Farmers in western Kenya miss out on the benefits of fertiliser because, by the time the planting season arrives they have often spent their earnings from the previous harvest. But farmers far-sighted enough to buy the fertiliser straight after the harvest, when they do have money, do not sell it, despite facing all the same demands on their resources. In other words, farmers cannot save the money to buy fertiliser, but they can save the physical fertiliser itself.

Poverty is often linked in the public mind with dependency. But, as the authors point out, the poor bear more responsibility for their lives than the rich, who coast along, enjoying chlorinated water, drawing a regular salary, paid directly into a bank account, perhaps with contributions to their pension and health care automatically deducted. The rich can indulge their weakness for cigarettes and alcohol without fear of financial ruin. The poor, in contrast, have to watch every cup of sugary tea. Mr Banerjee and Ms Duflo recommend a variety of nudges, props and subsidies that will make it as easy for poor people to make the right decisions as it is already for the rich.

If it is a mistake to equate poverty and dependency, it is equally mistaken to believe the poor will lift themselves up by their bootstraps. The book crosses swords with the business gurus and philanthropists who project their own enthusiasm for Promethean entrepreneurship onto the poor. Yes, the poor are more likely to run their own business than the rest of us. But that is because they have no other choice. When asked, most of them aspire to a government post or a factory job. Developing countries are not full of billions of budding entrepreneurs; they are full of billions of budding salary men.

The authors also dissent from the “melancholy view” held by some economists, who argue that bad politics will always trump good policy. Why bother figuring out the best way to spend a dollar on education, when $0.87 will be diverted into the pockets of officials? These economists argue that you can’t do anything in a country with bad institutions—and you can’t do much about these bad institutions either. You just have to wait for a revolution.

But Mr Banerjee and Ms Duflo advocate what they call a “quiet revolution”. They insist that things can be improved “at the margin”, which is an economist’s way of saying that things can get better, even if they are very bad. They also make the case that improved policies can contribute to better politics. Once constituents see that good policy making can make a difference to their lives, they raise their expectations, and demand more.

http://www.economist.com/node/18584122