Dr. Mohammed Amin Adam
Finance Minister, Dr Mohammed Amin Adam, today presented the budget for the first quarter of 2025 to parliament.
The mini budget was stuck in the middle of a disagreement between the then minority NDC and majority NPP in Parliament over some outstanding government business notably some request for tax waivers.
The outgoing government is requesting 68.1 billion cedis to keep the government running until the incoming John Mahama government presents its substantive budget for 2025.
Second Deputy Speaker of Parliament, Andrew Asiamah Amoako referred the document to the Budget and Finance Committees for detailed review. The committees were tasked with scrutinising the figures and policies before reporting back to the House for debate and approval.
The temporary budget will take care of the salaries of public sector workers, statutory payments, critical infrastructure maintenance, and fund the government’s social intervention programmes.
On December 20, 2024, Parliament adjourned without the reading of the mini-budget statement.
The Vote on Account, a provisional financial measure, was essential for government operations until the full 2025 budget is approved by the incoming administration.
However, parliamentary proceedings were stalled when the Finance Minister failed to appear, leaving members, especially on the NDC side frustrated.
A Daily Guide Report