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Protect Oil From Politicians

By on Wednesday, 9th December 2009

oilrigghanaA Ghanaian economist on Tuesday called for concrete measures to be put in place to ensure that the expected oil revenue is based on sustainable fiscal policies that transcends political regimes.

“We have to put long-term measures in place to ensure that we protect the expected oil revenue from politicians,” Professor Joe Amoako-Tuffuor, Adviser to the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning, said.

“I do not hate politicians, because I would like to be one in the future, but politicians are very likely to spend state funds injudiciously if the rules and measures are not put in place to safeguard the interest of posterity,” he said.

Prof. Amoako-Tuffuor, also a lecturer at Francis Xavier University in Canada, was speaking on the theme: “Ghana: Options of the Oil Revenue Management”, at a day’s public forum organized by the Centre for Policy Analysis.

He noted that transforming of oil revenue into development depended on quality of spending and sustainability of fiscal policies across political regimes.

Prof. Amoako-Tuffuor said that to ensure that oil revenue was protected from injudicious spending by different political regimes, there was the need to build state institutions to ensure a broad-based inter-sectoral management of the revenue.

“Let us not assume that we have the necessary strong institutions for the effective management of the oil revenue because we don’t,” he said.

Prof Amoako-Tuffuor noted, for instance that when the Ministry of Foreign Affairs building was burnt, it also exposed the weakness of the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS), saying that should be an indication to “us that we need to strengthen state institutions”.

He also called for a 10 to 15-year long-term development plan specifically on how to apply the oil revenue, saying that there was also the need for a series three to five-year medium-term plans within which identified priorities for development and financing needs would be catered for.

He suggested that the main areas of spending that would yield long-term benefits for the country included spending on software such as public safety, law and order, good governance and accountability, culture as well as the strengthening of processes and institutions of economic management.

“Spending on (these) areas would ensure transparency and good governance in the management of oil revenue and thereby prevent the situation in Kuwait, where politicians keep the people in the dark as to how much money was in their oil heritage fund,” he said.

Prof. Amoako-Tuffuor said there was also the need to spend on housing, roads and transport, water and sanitation, human capital development, energy, agriculture and petrochemicals.

He proposed that in spite of the huge investment needs of the country, there was the need to save a huge chunk of the oil revenue for posterity, considering that the oil discovered was finite.

“We must learn from the experiences of other oil rich countries and avoid the mistake of spending lavishly and save some of the revenue for posterity,” he said.

PF

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