Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah says the country’s economy is resilient enough to fund the new massive healthcare infrastructure across the country.
He said the Akufo-Addo-led
Government, over the past three years, had prudently managed the economy, hence
it was capable to mobilise resources to fund the 88 District Hospitals and
other COVID-19 Response Programmes.
He, however, acknowledged the concerns expressed
by some critics of the Government that it would not be able to raise the needed
funds to complete the projects, saying it was based on their knowledge that the
economy was not on a sound footing before the current administration took
charge.
But, the Minister said, following three years of
sound macroeconomic and fiscal policies by the administration, the economy had
made giant strides with positive primary surplus.
Mr Oppong Nkrumah was addressing a media
briefing, in Accra, on Tuesday, to offer more explanations to Government’s
interventions to contain the spread of COVID-19.
The Minister recalled some of the COVID-19
interventions as follows: One hundred million dollars $100 initial support for
the construction of screening stations at the country’s entry points; 1.2
billion Ghana cedis for the provision of food packs for residents in lockdown
areas; 600 million Ghana cedis soft loans for small and medium scale
enterprises (SMEs) that have been hit hard by the pandemic and 200 million
Ghana cedis for the provision of free water for all Ghanaians.
Others are one billion Ghana cedis for
subsidising electricity consumption; tax cuts and 50 per cent top up of the
basic salary of frontline health workers and six billion Ghana cedis injected
into the 2020 Budget.
Additionally, the Government had secured $500
million free interest payment facility from the World Bank that would create
fiscal space for the economy.
In view of the sound economic outlook, Mr Oppong
Nkrumah said, some private organisations also managed to provide financial
support to the COVID-19 Trust Fund.
For his part, Mr Kwaku Agyeman-Manu, the Health
Minister, said the Government had already set in motion plans to construct 22
District Hospitals before the announcement on Sunday, April 26 by the
President.
Consequently, the President did not make the
promise to construct the new district hospitals out of the vacuum, but based on
a carefully laid out plan.
The Minister stated that the 22 District
Hospitals were part of a projection made from the health sector’s allocation of
the Sino-hydro facility between Ghanaian and the Chinese governments.
“We had also selected to do 22 district
hospitals even before the President’s announcement,” he explained.
“When we got an indication of allocation of the
Sinohydro facility that the government was arranging to take, we listed 22
Districts without hospitals to begin construction.”
The Minister gave the assurance that the
government was committed to completing the ongoing health infrastructure in
order to provide quality healthcare to the citizenry.
“No existing health project has been
abandoned by the Akufo-Addo’s Government,” he emphasised, as he gave a
breakdown of ongoing projects across the country.
Responding to critics who argued that the
government could not raise funds for the interventions, the Minister said that
though there was no expenditure to manage COVID-19 pandemic, the Government
delved deep to provide funding for some COVID-19 response programmes.
Ghana’s confirmed cases for the respiratory
disease have risen from 1,550 as of Sunday, April 26 to 1,671, thus, witnessing
121 new cases.
The deaths have also gone up by five, making it
16. However, there are 188 recoveries.
Source: Ghana News Agency