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In Budget speech, Gambia’s domestic revenue forcast to grow by 4% in 2011

Abdu_ColleyPANA - Gambia's domestic revenue is expected to grow by 4.0% in 2011, mainly from taxes and non-taxable items, the country's Minister of Finance, Mr. Abdou Kolley, indicated Saturday when he presented the nation's budget to the National Assembly in Banjul, the capital, PANA reported from here.Abdu_Colley
He said domestic revenue was projected to grow to a figure over the 2010 budget of 4.59 billion Dalasis or 14.6 percent of the GDP, of which D4.07 billion will be collected from taxes and D522 million  from non-taxable items.
Project grants are to amount to D981 million, while external debts will be D506 million. Interest payment on debts is projected to increase  by 20.5 percent from D762 million in 2010 to D919 million in 2011.
He said “This yields are relatively tight budget constraint, where total government expenditures and net lending will be limited to D6.12 billion or 19.5 percent of the GDP compared to the 20.3 percent of GDP in the 2010 budget."
He revealed that expenditure on wages and salaries are budgeted to gulp D1.67 billion, reflecting an 11.5 percent increase over the budget estimate of D1.50 billion in 2010.
He also said the current expenditure is 2.26 billion are budgeted to increase by 3.0 percent over budget estimate of D2.19 billion in 2010.
The minister said that the overall fiscal deficit for 2011 was projected at D466 million, amounting 1.5 percent of the GDP in 2010, saying the deficit would be fully financed through domestic and external resources. The net-external financing is estimated at D328 million while domestic financing is projected at D120 million.
“The 2011 budget and economic policy focus more on the economic and financial policies that the government intends to pursue in realization of the government’s vision of creating a “better Gambia” as enshrined in vision 2020”, he said.
He added that the implementation of these polices would yield the desired result of creating a prosperous and thriving nation which will provide opportunities for better life for all Gambians.
The 2011 budget, like the 2010 budget, places emphasis on aligning expenditure to priorities that best support the achievement of the PRSP-II and Millennium Development Goals as well as other activities that will stimulate economic growth and development.
He further said government, in 2011, would increase investments in agriculture, education, health, infrastructure and tourism, saying that government would also scale up intervention in public financial management to ensure improved fiscal discipline and improved quality of expenditure outcomes.
He revealed that revised balance of payments (BOP) estimates for 2009 indicated an improved overall balance of US$ 5.6 million dollars, a deficit of US$ 38.9 million in 2008.
The minister admitted that the year 2010 witnessed a regain in exports of made-filaments, groundnuts and cashew nuts, saying  that better marketing strategies adopted  by the Gambia Groundnut Corporation and  the formation of the Gambia Transportation Association helped to increase exports of groundnuts

Comments  

 
0 #6 2010-12-22 09:29
Tonyaa, the Gambia Auditor's and Accountant
General offices are full of clowns that are supposedly educated, some of them in the west. If there is changes in The Gambia non of these people should be employed naer anything that deal with finance.
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0 #5 2010-12-20 23:55
y wasting ur time listenig such non sense budget speech.wat bout audit office, are thy holdin d professor accountable.where is our money, things must come to light one day
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0 #4 2010-12-20 19:47
yet again you fooling the gambians with your budget.revenue you expect to grow never goes in the goverment coffers you greedy cheats.its time for the real budget mr minister or you been force to lie like the others did shame on you all.
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0 #3 2010-12-20 14:50
Yet again another window dressing budget for the Gambia. this budget is for the 'audience'. The real budget of the Gambia will one day suffice. I feel sorry the successor of the idiotic government. Promose, promise and promise. Mr minister, where is the anticpated growth coming from for 2011? Don't think people are silly. shame on all of you in this man's government.
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0 #2 2010-12-20 13:31
No, Mo, no!
We certainly do not need do we need weapons when people are scratching the earth to feed themselves?
Maybe those who continue to make themselves blinded by these happenings ought to be forced to see these things. It's incredibly serious, my brothers and sisters. Something has to be done, to get our country off the hands of an amateur and an ignorant political brut who leads us on the bases of his misguided feelings.
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+1 #1 2010-12-20 13:15
This Budget leaves me to wonder whether we can achieve the lofty vision of making Gambia the best country in Africa. Vision 2020 will continue to prove elusive if the fiscal dificit that is so characteristic of Jammeh's Government is left unchecked. Ghana, an equally impoverished nation like the Gambia, has just been declassified from low-income to middle-income and have just started producing oil after only 3 years following it discovery. Our big-mouthed President made a promise around the same time that our nation will soon start exporting oil.Up until now nothing has been heard about the oil discovery. Today, the euphoria of the oil discovery has given way to destitution as we continue to live with the humiliation of being among the most 'aided' and 'indebted' countries in Africa, leaving many to wonder where we got those millions of dollars to pay for the intercepted arms in Nigeria. Do we need weapons when people are scratching the earth to feed themselves?
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