{UAH} Remarks by H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni at The reading of the National Budget – FY 2015/2016
Remarks
by
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA
at
The reading of the National Budget – FY 2015/2016
Kampala - 11th June, 2015
H.E. the Vice President,
Rt. Hon. Speaker,
His Lordship, the Chief Justice,
Rt. Hon. Prime Minister,
The Hon. Alhaji Kigongo,
Ladies and gentlemen,
You have all heard the speech of the Minister of Finance. The NRM,
over the last 29 years, has laid a basis for the metamorphosis of the
economy and society of Uganda from a Third World one to a First World
one in the coming years, the various obstacles notwithstanding. Some
of the obstacles are conceptual ─ failure to prioritize, for instance.
Other obstacles are moral ─ corruption of actors such as public
servants or political leaders failing to supervise and discipline the
civil servants. Other obstacles were historical ─ e.g. low levels of
education, under-developed infrastructure, a narrow internal market
occasioned by the colonial fragmentation of Africa. The NRM has,
patiently, worked on all these bottlenecks.
Working with our brothers in Africa, we have revived the East African
Community (EAC) and created the Common Market for Eastern and Southern
Africa (COMESA). This solves the problem of the market to some extent
and enables us to negotiate more credibly for access to the foreign
markets. Apart from the security challenges in the region that keep
popping up (Eastern Congo, South Sudan, Somalia, CAR, etc.), the
producers in Uganda and the region are now assured of the markets ─
regional and international.
The NRM has addressed the issue of the human resource development ─
education and health. The literacy rate was 43% in 1986. It has now
gone up to 75% today. The mortality rate for infants in 1986 was 156
per 1,000 babies born alive. It is now 54 per 1,000 babies born
alive. The average life expectancy was 43 years in 1986. It is now 58
years, today. The percentage of the people living below the poverty
line was 56.4% in 1992/1993. This reduced to 19.7% in 2012/2013
(Statistics from the Uganda Bureau of Statistics). We could have
achieved more if we were to fight corruption and my efforts in
prioritizing expenditure were to get more support.
I want to salute the NRM Caucus and other positive leaders for
supporting some of my prioritization measures since 2006 ─ the
Conference we had in Statistics House. Since that time, as I pointed
out in my State of the Nation Address, we have spent and we are
planning to spend quite abit of our money on electricity generation,
electricity transmission, the roads and scientific innovation in
addition to all the other expenditures on the other sectors. This has
had a marked impact on these sectors ─ electricity and roads ─ that
form the base of the economy. When Ugandans are able to travel on a
tarmac road from Oraba-Karuma-Kampala-Mbarara-Kabale to Kyanika/
Bunagana, a distance of 1,057 kms; then, from
Oraba-Karuma-Kampala-Mbarara to Murongo bridge, a distance of 906 kms,
respectively and from Malaba-Kampala-Fort-Portal-Lamia River a
distance of 630 kms; Malaba-Kampala -Fort Portal to Mpondwe, a
distance of 517kms respectively, I feel very pleased. Soon, Ugandans
will be able to drive on a tarmac road from Nimule up to Kampala and
from Moroto up to Kampala.
Concerning the electricity, as I pointed out in my State of the Nation
Address the other day, with the completion of Karuma and Isimba, as
well as the dozens of the mini-hydros, the geo-thermal, the planned
thermal and co-generation efforts, our generation capacity will go
from the present 840mgws to 1,974mgws by 2020. In the medium term,
with the addition of Ayago, Kiba, Uhuru, etc. power stations, our
generation will stand at 4,356mgws by 2035. That is still not enough
for a modern economy but we will have moved a long way from our
starting point of 60 mgws in 1986.
You all know of our plans with the railway. We have signed
appropriate Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) with the Chinese
Company, CHEC, to design and build a Standard Gauge Railway from
Malaba to Kampala, from Tororo to Nimule-Pakwach and from Kampala to
Mpondwe and Mirama Hill on the Congo and Rwanda borders. Some of the
roads are done with external support e.g. Arua-Oraba and
Gulu-Atiak-Nimule. I salute the Partners who thus, assist us. These
include the World Bank, the EU, the African Development Bank (ADB),
the British Trade Mark, the Islamic Development Bank, etc., etc.
The economy of Uganda has, in the past 29 years grown at the rate of
6.6% per annum in spite of the electricity, road, rail, ICT backbone
bottlenecks. After these bottlenecks are solved, the way we are
solving them, the economy will grow at the rate of 7-10% per annum.
This higher rate of growth will start in the year 2020. This takes
into account efficiency improvements in infrastructure spending and
coming on stream of oil production. However, even at the present rate
of growth, Uganda will become a lower middle-income country by 2020 ─
i.e. in the next four years. That is when, Uganda will attain a GDP
per capita of US$1,039. We are, at present, at US$788 per capita
(2013/14) up from US$ 665 (2009/10) an increase of 18.5%. We could
have achieved more if, for instance, we had spent less on wages and
spent more on infrastructure. Out of our total Budget of Ug. Shs.
23,972 trillions, 2,894 (12%) trillions is spent on the Government
Wage Bill. From our own Domestic Revenue of Ug. Shs. 11,333 trillion,
wages would account for 26%. By even saving a quarter of this we would
be able to build one and half tarmac roads of the Kampala-Masaka type
per annum, where we spent Shs. 440 billion, in addition to whatever we
are doing now.
Anyway, our Baganda people say: "Ekitatta Muhima, tekimumalako e'nte"
─ "As long as a Muhima has life, he will always have cattle even if
some of those cattle died in big numbers; this is on account of his
dedication". Therefore, some disorientation, notwithstanding, the NRM
is set to achieve its strategic goal of modernizing Uganda.
One area we are going to address, as I pointed out in my State of the
Nation Address recently, is the area of value addition and
manufacturing so that we earn more forex earnings.
As you heard the Minister of Finance saying, our GDP is now Ug. Shs.
75 trillions. If the exchange rate was at Shs. 2000, our GDP size in
dollars would be USD38 billion. However, on account of a weakening
shilling, the size of GDP in dollars, as you heard the Minister
reading, is US$ 25 billion. By adding value to our raw-materials, our
GDP in dollars will rapidly grow. If we use the other method of
calculating GDP, the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) method, the GDP of
Uganda today is US$ 54 billion. Industrialization and value addition
are, therefore, a must. Some people misunderstand the chain of
production. When we say that we are spending about Shs. 500 billion
on agriculture, some people think that this is not enough. However,
when we spend Ug. Shs. 3,000 billion on the roads, that money assists
agriculture first and foremost. How about Defence and Security? Can
you have agriculture without peace? Therefore, please, take a
wholistic view of the budget and not a fragmented view.
I thank the Minister and I thank all of you.
11th June, 2015 UICC
--
Disclaimer:Everyone posting to this Forum bears the sole responsibility for any legal consequences of his or her postings, and hence statements and facts must be presented responsibly. Your continued membership signifies that you agree to this disclaimer and pledge to abide by our Rules and Guidelines.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.
by
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA
at
The reading of the National Budget – FY 2015/2016
Kampala - 11th June, 2015
H.E. the Vice President,
Rt. Hon. Speaker,
His Lordship, the Chief Justice,
Rt. Hon. Prime Minister,
The Hon. Alhaji Kigongo,
Ladies and gentlemen,
You have all heard the speech of the Minister of Finance. The NRM,
over the last 29 years, has laid a basis for the metamorphosis of the
economy and society of Uganda from a Third World one to a First World
one in the coming years, the various obstacles notwithstanding. Some
of the obstacles are conceptual ─ failure to prioritize, for instance.
Other obstacles are moral ─ corruption of actors such as public
servants or political leaders failing to supervise and discipline the
civil servants. Other obstacles were historical ─ e.g. low levels of
education, under-developed infrastructure, a narrow internal market
occasioned by the colonial fragmentation of Africa. The NRM has,
patiently, worked on all these bottlenecks.
Working with our brothers in Africa, we have revived the East African
Community (EAC) and created the Common Market for Eastern and Southern
Africa (COMESA). This solves the problem of the market to some extent
and enables us to negotiate more credibly for access to the foreign
markets. Apart from the security challenges in the region that keep
popping up (Eastern Congo, South Sudan, Somalia, CAR, etc.), the
producers in Uganda and the region are now assured of the markets ─
regional and international.
The NRM has addressed the issue of the human resource development ─
education and health. The literacy rate was 43% in 1986. It has now
gone up to 75% today. The mortality rate for infants in 1986 was 156
per 1,000 babies born alive. It is now 54 per 1,000 babies born
alive. The average life expectancy was 43 years in 1986. It is now 58
years, today. The percentage of the people living below the poverty
line was 56.4% in 1992/1993. This reduced to 19.7% in 2012/2013
(Statistics from the Uganda Bureau of Statistics). We could have
achieved more if we were to fight corruption and my efforts in
prioritizing expenditure were to get more support.
I want to salute the NRM Caucus and other positive leaders for
supporting some of my prioritization measures since 2006 ─ the
Conference we had in Statistics House. Since that time, as I pointed
out in my State of the Nation Address, we have spent and we are
planning to spend quite abit of our money on electricity generation,
electricity transmission, the roads and scientific innovation in
addition to all the other expenditures on the other sectors. This has
had a marked impact on these sectors ─ electricity and roads ─ that
form the base of the economy. When Ugandans are able to travel on a
tarmac road from Oraba-Karuma-Kampala-Mbarara-Kabale to Kyanika/
Bunagana, a distance of 1,057 kms; then, from
Oraba-Karuma-Kampala-Mbarara to Murongo bridge, a distance of 906 kms,
respectively and from Malaba-Kampala-Fort-Portal-Lamia River a
distance of 630 kms; Malaba-Kampala -Fort Portal to Mpondwe, a
distance of 517kms respectively, I feel very pleased. Soon, Ugandans
will be able to drive on a tarmac road from Nimule up to Kampala and
from Moroto up to Kampala.
Concerning the electricity, as I pointed out in my State of the Nation
Address the other day, with the completion of Karuma and Isimba, as
well as the dozens of the mini-hydros, the geo-thermal, the planned
thermal and co-generation efforts, our generation capacity will go
from the present 840mgws to 1,974mgws by 2020. In the medium term,
with the addition of Ayago, Kiba, Uhuru, etc. power stations, our
generation will stand at 4,356mgws by 2035. That is still not enough
for a modern economy but we will have moved a long way from our
starting point of 60 mgws in 1986.
You all know of our plans with the railway. We have signed
appropriate Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) with the Chinese
Company, CHEC, to design and build a Standard Gauge Railway from
Malaba to Kampala, from Tororo to Nimule-Pakwach and from Kampala to
Mpondwe and Mirama Hill on the Congo and Rwanda borders. Some of the
roads are done with external support e.g. Arua-Oraba and
Gulu-Atiak-Nimule. I salute the Partners who thus, assist us. These
include the World Bank, the EU, the African Development Bank (ADB),
the British Trade Mark, the Islamic Development Bank, etc., etc.
The economy of Uganda has, in the past 29 years grown at the rate of
6.6% per annum in spite of the electricity, road, rail, ICT backbone
bottlenecks. After these bottlenecks are solved, the way we are
solving them, the economy will grow at the rate of 7-10% per annum.
This higher rate of growth will start in the year 2020. This takes
into account efficiency improvements in infrastructure spending and
coming on stream of oil production. However, even at the present rate
of growth, Uganda will become a lower middle-income country by 2020 ─
i.e. in the next four years. That is when, Uganda will attain a GDP
per capita of US$1,039. We are, at present, at US$788 per capita
(2013/14) up from US$ 665 (2009/10) an increase of 18.5%. We could
have achieved more if, for instance, we had spent less on wages and
spent more on infrastructure. Out of our total Budget of Ug. Shs.
23,972 trillions, 2,894 (12%) trillions is spent on the Government
Wage Bill. From our own Domestic Revenue of Ug. Shs. 11,333 trillion,
wages would account for 26%. By even saving a quarter of this we would
be able to build one and half tarmac roads of the Kampala-Masaka type
per annum, where we spent Shs. 440 billion, in addition to whatever we
are doing now.
Anyway, our Baganda people say: "Ekitatta Muhima, tekimumalako e'nte"
─ "As long as a Muhima has life, he will always have cattle even if
some of those cattle died in big numbers; this is on account of his
dedication". Therefore, some disorientation, notwithstanding, the NRM
is set to achieve its strategic goal of modernizing Uganda.
One area we are going to address, as I pointed out in my State of the
Nation Address recently, is the area of value addition and
manufacturing so that we earn more forex earnings.
As you heard the Minister of Finance saying, our GDP is now Ug. Shs.
75 trillions. If the exchange rate was at Shs. 2000, our GDP size in
dollars would be USD38 billion. However, on account of a weakening
shilling, the size of GDP in dollars, as you heard the Minister
reading, is US$ 25 billion. By adding value to our raw-materials, our
GDP in dollars will rapidly grow. If we use the other method of
calculating GDP, the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) method, the GDP of
Uganda today is US$ 54 billion. Industrialization and value addition
are, therefore, a must. Some people misunderstand the chain of
production. When we say that we are spending about Shs. 500 billion
on agriculture, some people think that this is not enough. However,
when we spend Ug. Shs. 3,000 billion on the roads, that money assists
agriculture first and foremost. How about Defence and Security? Can
you have agriculture without peace? Therefore, please, take a
wholistic view of the budget and not a fragmented view.
I thank the Minister and I thank all of you.
11th June, 2015 UICC
--
Disclaimer:Everyone posting to this Forum bears the sole responsibility for any legal consequences of his or her postings, and hence statements and facts must be presented responsibly. Your continued membership signifies that you agree to this disclaimer and pledge to abide by our Rules and Guidelines.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.
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