Audio By Carbonatix
A Political and Economic Risk Analyst, Dr Theo Acheampong, says Ghana’s fiscal space cannot support the pledges made by the country’s major political parties.
“You realise that these manifesto promises would have a big impact on the fiscal space, and there is actually no money lying around to fund some of their promises without borrowing from the international capital market,” he stated.
Dr. Acheampong made the statement during a political radio and television programme broadcast by Multimedia Networks and monitored by the Ghana News Agency.
He pointed out that, in comparison to the 2020 general elections, the two major political parties have made more promises, with the National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the New Patriotic Party (NPP) offering 620 and 380, respectively.
Dr. Acheampong said that the manifestos of the two parties lacked the policies needed to promote growth and economic transformation.
He said the NDC’s pledge of free primary healthcare, for instance, would cost $1.7 billion per year and $7 billion over four years.
Dr. Acheampong warned that the pledges would instead burden Ghanaians, leaving the future government with no choice but to raise taxes or borrow to fulfill them.
He emphasized that the manifestos must provide a clear benchmark related to specific sectoral outcomes for assessment and advised political parties to consider the financial implications of their proposed policy measures, as well as how they planned to support them.
Prof. John Osae Kwapong, a Fellow at the Centre for Democratic Development (CDD), said the two major political parties had not figured out the fiscal implications of their policies.
He said political parties ought to offer voters information on how much their promises would cost and how they propose to fund them.
The fellow asked stakeholders in the democratic arena to compel political parties to provide the funding mechanisms for their pledges.
Latest Stories
-
African Armwrestling Championships: Accra Mayor promises jobs for 30 Ghanaian athletes after medal haul
22 minutes -
Starmer under pressure, as Labour suffers heavy election losses
26 minutes -
Wife allegedly butchers husband in deadly fight over charcoal money
1 hour -
Anger and resignation in Tenerife as hantavirus ship approaches
2 hours -
‘This nonsense must stop’ – UGBS Dean Prof. Bawole slams exploitation of BECE leavers for social media content
2 hours -
Asamoah Gyan fears for Black Stars as Kudus’ injury rocks World Cup plans
3 hours -
Ofori Panin school nurse killed in solo motorcycle crash
4 hours -
‘Give us two weeks’ – NIA Management pleads for calm as strike deadline looms
4 hours -
World Shea Expo 2026 launched in Wa as gov’t moves to restrict raw nut exports
4 hours -
TGMA 2026: The night ahead; who wins what?
5 hours -
Prime Insight to examine Charles Amissah report, growing NDC succession debate this Saturday
5 hours -
Kenyasi Government Hospital faces infrastructure and equipment challenges despite top performance rankings
6 hours -
Energy ministry sets up control and command centre to improve response time to power challenges
6 hours -
North East Regional Minister highlights major development gains at maiden Government Accountability Series
6 hours -
Trump says Russia and Ukraine to observe three-day ceasefire
6 hours