Audio By Carbonatix
The Institute of Public Policy and Accountability has described the government’s flagship 24-our Economy programme as lacking credible implementation plan.
According to the institute, it is concerned that the 2026 Budget’s treatment of the flagship 24-Hour Economy Policy, touted as a transformative initiative for job creation in the 2024 General Parliamentary and Presidential Elections, lacks the level of detail and seriousness required for effective execution.
The National Coordinator of the Policy, Goosie Tanoh, said the initiative requires approximately US$4 billion, equivalent to GH$48 billion for full implementation.
Yet, the IPPA in its analysis of the budget led by Kwasi Nyame-Baafi said the 2026 Budget allocates only GH¢90 million, representing just 0.18% of the estimated requirement.
This allocation, it said, suggests that the policy remains symbolic rather than substantive, lacking an operational framework, measurable targets, timelines, institutional arrangements, or sectoral rollout strategy.
The institute also raised concerns over budget credibility and capital expenditure execution, saying, budget credibility remains a major challenge.
The government committed only about 34% of allocated capital expenditure, and disbursed just GH¢9 billion out of the GH¢13 billion approved for the Big Push Infrastructure Project.
“If the government struggled to meet its capital expenditure commitments in 2025, IPPA questions how it will effectively finance the ambitious programmes outlined for 2026 such as the Big Push Infrastructure Agenda, the Women’s Development Bank, and other capital-intensive initiatives”, it added.
It continued that a budget that under-delivers on capital allocations undermines public confidence and weakens the transformative potential of flagship policies.
The institute called on the government to reassess the 2026 Budget to ensure that it is grounded in realistic fiscal projections and operational capacity.
It also wants the government to provide a comprehensive and fully costed implementation plan for the 24-Hour Economy Policy, including financing strategies, institutional coordination, timelines, and measurable outcomes.
Latest Stories
-
Five things to know about Black Stars new boy Marvin Senaya
22 minutes -
Set up constitutional reforms implementation committee—CPCR urges President
31 minutes -
Ghanaians are worse off now than in 2024—Awal Mohammed
32 minutes -
We must transition from crisis management to institutional discipline—UEW Lecturer
34 minutes -
Two fire officers injured as tanker explodes a second time at Potsin Junction
41 minutes -
BoG to cut policy rate further despite geopolitical risks
2 hours -
Inflation to go up in March 2026 – Report
2 hours -
Dozens killed after Afghanistan rehab centre struck
2 hours -
Minerals Commission warns public over fraudulent emails by impostors
2 hours -
Photos: Fuel tanker explodes at Potsin Junction
2 hours -
Africa’s infrastructure boom faces 57% construction talent gap – PMI report
2 hours -
Israel says it has killed Ali Larijani, Iran’s top security official
2 hours -
Ghanaian pension funds to invest $11m in Atlantic Lithium as Ewoyaa Project gains momentum
2 hours -
Bond market: Turnover declines by 18% to GH¢2.38bn
2 hours -
MiDA CEO raises alarm over ‘Wasted Agricultural Assets’
3 hours
