Tuesday, November 23, 2010

2011 BUDGET REPLY By The Leader of the Opposition Rt Hon Mekere Morauta KCMG MP (Tuesday, 23rd November 2010)

Find below Budget Speech of Opposition Leader Rt Hon Sir Mekere Morauta that was not allowed by Speaker Jeffrey Nape to be delivered .Nape failed to specify under what Parliamentary Standing Order he did not allow Sir Mekere to make his budget speech.

 

Mr Speaker, the 2011 Budget may set a record in terms of revenue raised and money to be spent, but it may also set a record of money wasted.

The public sector lacks capacity, capacity to convert the billions of kina appropriated every year into public goods and services for our people and for the nation’s future. 

We all know that the public sector is beset with problems: problems of inefficiency, of abuse, theft, wastage and lack of accountability – lack of accountability of resources that belong to the public.

What does this record budget do to address these problems, the very problems that negate the Government’s ability to deliver decent affordable services to people?

Not one thing Mr Speaker; not one thing.

Throwing billions of kina at Departments and Statutory Authorities will not solve the host of problems the public sector increasingly faces.

 These problems are eating away the heart of state institutions, and the Government is doing nothing to solve them.

The 2011 Budget fails to address the capacity problem. 

It fails to address the overarching problem of waste and corruption. 

Control of corruption has deteriorated sharply over the last eight years of Somare National Alliance governments. 

According to one international measure of corruption tracked by Transparency International, PNG is now in the bottom 10% of countries in the world.

Mr Speaker we may have billions of kina to spend, but given our very poor development indicators, especially in health and education, given the huge gaps we need to fill to meet the basic needs and rights of people, and given the real cost of delivering decent services, there is no room for waste or leakage.

Misuse of funds means less money for services. 

As one budget commentator noted:  “If only 10 toea in each Kina went missing over the next five years, that would still be a massive K3.6 billion – enough to rehabilitate and maintain the priority national roads.  And every toea is enough to education 30,000 children per year.”

That is the cost of corruption and waste Mr Speaker. 

A cost met by every man, woman and child. 

It is the people who are the victims of corruption and who suffer its effects in lack of decent health services, lack of decent schools or well-trained teachers, and roads full of pot-holes. 

Corruption is a parasite:  it is truly feasting on the blood and flesh of its host, the people of Papua New Guinea.

What safeguards are being put in place to reduce corruption and to make sure money does not go missing?

 Not one, Mr Speaker; not one.

With our experience of successive so-called “record budgets” over the last few years, Mr Speaker, we should all know by now that money alone will not provide the answers. 

In the last eight years this National Alliance-led government has appropriated well over K50 billion kina. 

What have those budgets produced? 

Almost nothing that we can be proud of, or satisfied with:  a doubling of maternal mortality, an increase in infant mortality and closure of half the country’s health facilities; a sharp reduction in the quality of education,  as detailed in the recent report on universities commissioned by Prime Ministers Somare and Rudd; deteriorating roads – national, inter and intra–provincial roads. 

The level of deterioration is reaching the stage where many of these roads now require not just repair and resealing, but rebuilding.

In the last eight years we have had one government, led by the National Alliance.

 We can no longer blame political instability or frequent changes of Government for the failure in performance. 

During the same period we have also experienced and benefited from the record prices of mineral resources.  This “record” budget mirrors that fact and is built on it.

Mr Speaker, record appropriations totaling over 50 billion kina in eight years under one government. 

What do the nation and people have to show for such a large sum of money?  Not much. 

And until and unless corruption is addressed; until and unless the capacity, management and accountability issues of the public sector are addressed; until and unless the waste and leakage of public monies are stopped, the “record” expenditure of the government will continue to have little positive benefit for the nation and for people.

Record appropriations, one Government in eight years, poor services, the majority of people living in poverty. 

Why? 

What is it we are lacking? 

The answer to that question, Mr Speaker is good government, led by a good leader.

Mr Speaker, before I offer a few comments on particular aspects of the Budget, I wish to make a few general comments concerning the 2010 and 2011 Budgets.

First, there is very little analysis of the 2010 budget outcome or outturn, that is, how actual spending or performance in 2010 compared to what was planned. 

Without this analysis, it is difficult to judge how the Government might perform in 2011. 

It seems, Mr Speaker, we are travelling blindfolded.

Secondly, there is very little medium-term analysis. 

A lot is said about the spending plans for 2011, but very little about the forward context of these plans. 

We know that service delivery is a multi-year undertaking. 

Investments take time to be delivered, whether they are capital works programmes, text books or essential drugs; recruiting new staff is an ongoing commitment that also often requires new training. 

For example, the budget provides for 1,333 new positions in hospitals.

 No-one would contest that those positions are not needed. 

The question is:  where is the trained staff to fill them? 

To be effective the budget must guarantee a commitment of resources year-after-year, over say a five year period. 

A one year commitment, year to year, is not likely to lead to the outcomes planned to be achieved.

Thirdly, the budget is scarce in details.  

The budget tables show headline budget numbers for planned 2011 spending, but there is scarce information on how this funding will be managed effectively, how it will reach service delivery units, and how it will be translated into goods and services. 

Take the increased budget for drugs as an example. 

Yes, the Government does need to spend more on drugs and essential medical supplies. 

But those that are currently procured are not reaching hospitals or health facilities. 

Theft is common. 

There seems to be a merry-go-round of the very same drugs being purchased not once, but two, three times or more from the same suppliers, after “going missing” from medical stores or dispensaries. 

This results not only in the cost of drugs per unit becoming extortionately high, but also renders many of the drugs to be out of date by the time they ever reach the intended destination. 

What will the Government do Mr Speaker to ensure that the money allocated for drugs is spent efficiently and honestly, and that the people who need that medicine actually receive it?

The only conclusion that any informed or aware observer might reach is that it is not possible to form an accurate assessment of the likelihood that the record spending under this budget will translate into services and into better outcomes for people.

 But if we go on past performance of the Somare Government, we have good reason to be doubtful.

I will now turn to the revenue side of the Budget.

Total Domestic Revenue is projected to yield 7.7 billion kina in 2011, compared to 6.9 billion and 5.7 billion kina in 2010 and 2009 respectively.  Fine, no problems.

However, when the Total Revenue is broken down into Tax and Non-tax revenue, a disturbing trend emerges.

 In 2009, Non-tax revenue totalled 766 million kina (actual). 

The revised estimate for 2010 is 410 million kina, 356 million kina less than the previous year. 

A similar result is expected for 2011, with 411 million kina budgetted.

Mr Speaker, these figures represent a 46% reduction for both 2010 and 2011 over actual revenue received in 2009.

 Total domestic revenue in 2011 is expected to be 35% higher than in 2009, in line with growth in the economy, so why at the same time is there a reduction in non-tax revenue? 

It makes no logical sense.

When one examines the components of non-tax revenue in 2011, one sees two glaring facts:  a significant reduction in revenue collected by government departments and agencies, and no contribution to the budget from commercial statutory authorities.

Why?  Can the Treasurer explain this?

Are we all so besotted with the prospect of LNG revenue that we no longer both to collect other legitimate charges for goods and services?

Take as an example land lease rental revenue to be collected by the Department of Lands and Physical Planning. 

In 2009, K38.3 million was collected in land rent. 

In 2010, K22.1 million was collected, a reduction of K16.2 million or 42%.  In 2011, only K24.8 million is budgeted. 

Why is it that we are not collecting at least the same as the amount collected in 2009?

 Is PNG’s land mass shrinking? 

Or is it a reflection of the incapacity of the Department to collect?

Treasurer, please explain.

It is not just the Department of Lands that is asked to collect less in 2010 and 2011 than it did in 2009. 

Another example is the Department of Foreign Affairs and revenue from passport and migration service fees.  

In 2009, K37.1 million was collected. 

In 2010, only K11 million. 

In 2011, a meagre K2.5 million is budgetted. 

Why the massive reduction? 

Are there less people coming to work in PNG?  I thought that with Ramu Nickel and LNG many more foreigners were coming to our shores to work.  Are they paying no visa fees?

 Or is this revenue just being spent, perhaps by overseas missions on visiting politicians, and never recorded or accounted for?

Mr Speaker, the other area of potential revenue which is of great concern is dividend income, dividends payable by government-owned commercial statutory bodies and from State shares in businesses like banks and oil companies.

In 2009, no dividends were paid.

 In 2010, K55 million was budgeted, but only K38.5 million was received.  K36.5 million of this was paid by Bank South Pacific, with K2 million coming from Petromin.

Where are other monies received by IPBC?

Why are they not being paid to consolidated revenue? 

The Minister constantly reminds us that all the commercial statutory authorities, Telikom, Air Niugini, PNG Power, PNG Ports, etc, are making heaps of profit. 

Where is it?  ]

Apart from not tabling the accounts of these entities for Parliament and the people to see the true picture, Minister Somare is returning none of the profit to the people.

This year, 2010, Bank South Pacific paid 42.8 million kina to IPBC in July and 11.55 million kina in November, a total of 54.4 million kina. 

Why was only 36.5 million of this paid to Treasury? 

What happened to the other 17.9 million kina?

What is happening to the revenue from the state’s shares in Oil Search?

 In 2009 Oil Search paid AUD15.4 million dividend to IPBC, but not one toea of this money (approximately K40 million) found its way to Treasury.  In 2010 Oil Search paid AUD8.5 million, around K22 million to IPBC.  Where is this money? 

What has it been spent on?

 Why is none of it being paid to the legal custodian of monies of the people of Papua New Guinea?

Mr Speaker, the amounts of money that have been paid to IPBC in recent years are very large, with zero reporting, zero public scrutiny, and zero accountability.

 But these amounts pale in comparison with the gigantic sums of money IPBC will receive in the future.

How many of us are aware of the fact that IPBC, under the stewardship of Minister Somare, will receive all the dividends payable by PNG LNG from 2015.

  In the first five years that the project is expected to return dividend, IPBC will receive K1.3 billion kina.

 Between 2015 and 2049, a period of 34 years, IPBC will receive from PNG LNG dividend income totaling K12.5 billion at an average rate of K366 million per year.

Why IPBC?  Revenue to do what?

Apart from the money being available to satisfy the whims of IPBC’s political leaders, perhaps Mr Speaker there is a hint of things to come in the 2011 Budget. 

On top of the dividend income directly received by IPBC, the Government is allocating large amounts of money to its bureaucratic brother, also headed by Arthur Somare.

The Budget papers note that K30 million of the additional money allocated to the Police will be for (quote) “LNG support, to be paid through the Department of Public Enterprises”.

Since when did democratic governments channel funding for police forces through companies and through totally unrelated government departments?

Mr Speaker, why is IPBC allowed to control such large dividend monies?  Should not the monies be paid directly to the Treasury?

 Should not IPBC be allocated an amount for its operational expenditure through the Budget, just like every other Government institution?

Mr Speaker, my conclusion is that we, Papua New Guinea have one Government but two Prime Ministers: one elected, the other appointed by the elected.

Not only do we have two Prime Ministers, we also now have two Treasurers, two collectors of revenue and two overseers of expenditure: one treasury headed by Hon Peter O’Neill and the other by Arthur Somare.

Why is this being tolerated? 

It is not just totally unacceptable; it is frightening.

I repeat Mr Speaker:  in 2011, IPBC will pay no dividend at all to the State.  Why? 

Why is IPBC allowed to retain all it will receive from Bank South Pacific, from Oil Search, PNG Ports, Air Niugini and Telikom?

I ask again, what is IPBC going to do with all the dividend income that it will retain?

Mr Speaker, answers to these questions are just as important to the public as the intoxicated boasting by the Government of its record budget. 

The proof of the pudding is in the eating, not in the ingredients.

 

Namah welcomes Ombudsman Commission brief on prime minister's case

Leader of PNG Party Belden Namah has welcomed the Ombudsman Commission (OC) explanation on the status of leadership referral case involving Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare.

Namah said it was in PNG’s national interest that the OC went publicly and explained that the onus was on the public prosecutor to act on Sir Michael’s referral.

Last Friday (Nov 19 2010), Chief Ombudsman Chronox Manek told a media conference in Port Moresby that Sir Michael was referred to office of the public prosecutor after his court challenge failed to stop the referral.

Manek said he was not aware of any court order preventing the public prosecutor from appointing a tribunal.

Namah said following the OC explanation it was incumbent on the public prosecutor to move swiftly to perform his constitutionally mandated duty speedily.

“This matter involves the chief executive of this nation and therefore demands for the public prosecutor to act in a timely manner in the public interest,” he said.

Namah said he was not trying to interfere with the work of constitutional offices, but merely asked for high profile cases involving Sir Michael and other politicians to be dealt with speedily in public interest.

 “It is only fair that the constitutional offices do their jobs in timely manner so that leaders referred do not continue in office making important decision for the nation while there is a cloud of uncertainty hanging over them,” he said.

 Namah said the public prosecutor owed it to the over six million PNG citizens to act speedily.

“It is unfair and unjust for ordinary citizens to be prosecuted very quickly for crimes they commit, while there are long delays in dealing with lawmakers and senior public servants,” he said.

“I see no logic in parliament continuing to make laws when the lawmakers are not dealt with in timely manner for offences they are alleged to have committed.

“Parliament should stop making laws and the government releases all prisoners nationwide if we are going to continue this way.

“The general perception among our citizens is that there are two sets of law, one for the big men and another for ordinary citizens.

“This perception must be corrected by relevant state agencies moving fast to clear outstanding cases involving public office holders.”

The OC alleges that Sir Michael failed to lodge annual returns for the periods 1994/5, 1995/96 and 1996/7, his lodgement returns for the periods 1998/99, 1999/2000, 2000/01, 2001/02, 20003/04 and incomplete statements for periods 1992/93, 1993/94,1997/98, 1999/2000, 2000.01, 20001/02 and 20002/03.

The OC referred Sir Michael to the Public Prosecutor for it to ask the Chief Justice to appoint a Leadership Tribunal to deal with the allegations, but Sir Michael went to court seeking orders to stop the OC from investigating him.

On June 24 2008, National Court Judge, Justice Derek Hartshorn rejected an application by Sir Michael for a temporary injunction to stop the OC from investigating him.

When rejecting Sir Michael’s temporary injunction, Judge Hartshorn ruled that it was not in the interest of the justice of the general public that lawful authorities should be prevented from performing their legal and constitutional duties.

Sir Michael had gone to court asking the court to grant him certain declarations and a permanent injunction preventing the OC from continuing its investigations.

However, Judge Hartshorn stated that Sir Michael did not have a strong case to stop the OC from continuing its investigations.

Section 4 of the Organic Law on the Duties and Responsibilities of the Leadership requires every person who is subject to the Leadership Code to furnish the OC every year details of assets, income and other required information.

 

Mothers plea for space

Problems at the Port Moresby General Hospital women’s ward seem to go on and on, The National reports.
Mothers have no beds and have to sleep on the bare floors due to overcrowding, there are no proper facilities for in-patients to use and midwives are hard to find, with about two a day. 
Workers attributed all these to lack of funds. 
Ward nurses and doctors described the challenge as “overwhelming; not enough beds and unfinished construction work due to lack of funds”. 
Statistics indicate an average 40-to-50 delivery a day and, with space an acute problem, mothers are forced to sleep along the corridors and even in the reception area of ward 10.

10 mums train in coffee quality control

WOMEN should also be seen as equal partners in business and not just as mothers and housewives, The National reports.

Ten mothers recently graduated with certificates in coffee quality control in a training workshop conducted by Coffee Industry Corp (CIC) in Okopa district, Eastern Highlands.

The training attracted 86 participants from the Tarabo coffee growers association of which 10 are mothers.

Eastern Highlands province smallholder coffee growers association chairman James Korarome said women should receive equal distribution of coffee income just as their male folks.

He added that most often, it was  the case where women did  all the hard work in processing coffee while the men dominate the marketing side of it, resulting in unfair distribution of income.

The coffee quality training comes under the CIC participatory rural participatory programme (PRAP) in bringing awareness and training to coffee farmers nationwide.

Korarome also issued a challenge to the men to respect women farmers to ensure quality production of coffee beans.

Meanwhile, general manager for CIC’s research and  grower service division, Dr Mark Kenny urged the graduates to return to their coffee gardens and apply the skills acquired and become advocates of quality coffee in their area.

 

 

MPs face bill

Women move into capital to push for reserved seats

 

PRESSURE is mounting on members of parliament to vote today to pass legislations to increase the number of women representatives in the house, The National reports.

The campaign to pass this legislation had gained momentum with women leaders from different parts of the country flying to Port Moresby this week to drum up support from their MPs.

And, yesterday, entrants to the Miss South Pacific beauty pageant added their voice to this cause by signing a statement of support. Ten of them signed, saying: “Women of the Pacific are watching this parliament for the vote.”

The bill, if passed, will have 22 seats reserved for women. It sought to amend section 101 of the constitution. To succeed, it needed an absolute majority of 72 MPs voting in favour of the bill.

Women leaders hoped parliament would sit right through this week and next week to entertain the bill and other important legislations pending in the house.

But, with the opposition’s budget reply at the top of the agenda today, and talks of a vote of no-confidence, there were speculations the government might adjourn parliament after the budget is voted on.

On the other hand, if the government is secured in its numbers during the vote on the 2011 budget, it would bring in the women’s bill and others to be deliberated and voted on.

Leader of government business and Minister for National Planning and Implementation Paul Tiensten did not provide a clear strategy yesterday, saying the government caucus would meet today to discuss how to handle the budget and the bills.

The government risked invoking the ire of women leaders and supporters of this legislation if it defers the bill.

“A lot of effort and resources have gone into this, and the least we expect is for the bill to at least make it to the floor to be voted on,” a woman representative said yesterday.

Because it was an important constitutional legislation, MPs will vote through resolutions along party lines.

 

 

Budget reply is priority, says Tiensten

By ISAAC NICHOLAS

 

THE opposition’s reply on next year’s budget will take precedence over all government business in parliament today, including the proposed bill on the reserved seats for women, The National reports.

Leader of government business Paul Tiensten said the opposition would be expected to reply to the budget at 2pm and debate would follow until the passage of the 2011 money plan.

This was expected to take three weeks.

“The government caucus will (this morning) decide on the programme on critical bills to be dealt with by parliament,” Tiensten said yesterday.

“We may sit for three weeks to deal with the huge government agenda, including the women’s reserved seats bill, but the government caucus will decide on the programme and see how we will manage.”

He said the three-week sitting would, at least, meet the 63-day requirement for parliament to sit in a calendar year.

Tiensten, who is National Planning and Monitoring minister, brushed aside claims of a vote of no-confidence against the prime minister.

He said moves by the opposition had backfired after they targeted the man who will entertain their motion – Speaker of Parliament Jeffrey Nape.

“The opposition should be constructive and provide alternative policies.

“We have a country to run and there is no way you can weave magic to resolve the country’s problems, which the opposition is pushing.

“They should sit down and formulate alternative policies and take them to the elections to get the mandate of the people to return and run the country.”

Tiensten was also expected to make a budget statement on the medium-term development plan (MTDP) in parliament today.

He said the MTDP was a measurable document that had been fully costed at K65 billion for the next five years, aimed at creating jobs, growing the economy and improving the quality of life for all Papua New Guineans.

He also condemned the recent “politics of shooting down personalities” instead of providing alternative policies and plans and how to fund them.

Tiensten also disputed the free education policy mooted by the opposition, saying it was not sustainable and funding it would mean sacrificing other sectors such as agriculture, infrastructure and economic development.

“You have to cost such policies.

“How much will you put into free education and, at the end of the day, what will you get out of it?” he asked.

“We have to be responsible in what we say, otherwise, we are kidding ourselves.”

 

PMGH women's ward runs short of space

By GRACE AUKA

UPNG journalism student

 

THE women’s ward at the Port Moresby General Hospital (PMGH) is facing overcrowding, lack of proper facilities and shortage of midwives due to shortage of funds, The National reports.

This was revealed by the hospital staff during a donation of linens by NCD Governor Powes Parkop his wife Jean and a group of women to ward 9 of the PMGH last Friday.

These concerns were raised by unit nurse coordinator Sr Jennifer Piakalyia and Dr Apeawusu Amoa, who said the ward was in distress and needed more support particularly for mothers. 

“The challenge faced by the hospital is overwhelming and it still needs more funds because currently there is not enough beds, unfinished construction work on a building next to ward 9, this all comes down to lack of funds,” Amoa said.

He emphasised that the hospital needed more funding and support for the women in PNG in order for them to be kept in a comfortable and caring environment when admitted to the hospital.

According to Piakalya, the number of women delivering a day was 40-50, but there were not enough hospital beds, forcing some of them to sleep and rest along the corridors and even in the reception area of ward 10.   

“The number of midwives has decreased, in a day there are only two midwives on duty to help mothers to deliver their babies,” she said.

The donation came from the women’s own effort and funds from a family project.

It comprised 100 pillows, 198 pillow cases and 174 bed sheets.