Audio By Carbonatix
The Institute of Economic Policy is cautioning against the heavy reliance of the 2025 Budget on social interventions.
According to the institute, this may have both positive and negative consequences.
In its critique of the 2025 Budget, the IEA said it is prudent to invest more of the country's resources today to produce a bigger national income and then share it as equitably as possible.
On the other hand, it said “if we place equity first, we may likely end up with a smaller national income to share in the future”.
While retaining the Senior High School’s free benefits, free nursing trainee allowance, free teacher training allowance, free Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) and free National Health Insurance Policy (NHIS), the 2025 Budget also proposed free first-year university fees, free primary health care and free sanitary pads for school girls, among others.
The IEA said these free benefits are economically and socially beneficial.
However, it said they place a substantial burden on the budget and leave limited space to undertake more productive activities.
This is precisely because the budget is dominated by compensation of employees and free benefits that the investment spending component is severely squeezed, which it said constitutes a drag on economic growth.
Latest Stories
-
Prof. Prempeh defends lowering presidential age, cites Kufuor’s early leadership roles
9 minutes -
Presidential Age Limit: Unrestricted democracy could breed chaos – Prof. Agyeman-Duah warns
18 minutes -
MP Baffour Awuah advocates for legal framework on presidential continuity, not term extension
22 minutes -
Ghanaians entitled to propose constitutional changes – Charlotte Osei
26 minutes -
At 30, you lack the experience to be a President – Prof Agyeman-Duah
30 minutes -
One-year extension of presidential term unnecessary – Baffuor Awuah
35 minutes -
Sam George lauds coordinated crackdown on cybercrime in Tabora and Lashibi
40 minutes -
100 arrested in Accra’s Tabora in major Mobile Money fraud crackdown
45 minutes -
BOG put GH¢4.69bn into gold-for-oil, lost over GH¢2.1bn with no impact — Audits show
1 hour -
CRC opted for broader reforms over abolishing ex-gratia – Charlotte Osei
1 hour -
Mahama’s record shows four-year presidential term is sufficient – Inusah Fuseini
1 hour -
Four-year term enough for accountability – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours -
CRC Proposals: We were very mindful not to create problems while solving existing ones – Charlotte Osei
2 hours -
Ebo Noah’s ‘faith’ or Climate Change: Rains on Christmas eve and day in Ghana?
2 hours -
Dr Seidu Jasaw commissions CHPS facilities in Chaggu-Paala and Tuosa communities
2 hours
