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Even with funds, Sindh govt fails to deliver development schemes

Edevelop

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KARACHI: The Sindh government claims to have utilised around 70 per cent of its Rs185 billion development budget for the current year, 2013-14. The 10-month progress report, however, paints a dismal picture in terms of the release and utilisation of funds in major sectors.

The report, which is available with The Express Tribune, reveals zero per cent expenditure in over 100 crucial schemes falling under the domain of the health and education departments alone. Moreover, not a single penny was spent on 230 schemes and 75 schemes in the roads and local government departments respectively.

Education

“The government has allocated Rs5,010 million for the up-gradation of primary schools to middle schools in Sindh,” reads the report. “The finance department has released Rs50 million for the scheme but the utilisation is zero in the 10 months of this fiscal year.” Similarly, Rs500 million was earmarked to provide better facilities at colleges. Despite having the funds, the department failed to initiate this programme too.


The establishment of comprehensive schools was a unique feature in the provincial budget, for which the education department was allocated Rs3,775 million. These funds have all gone to waste as the progress report shows zero utilisation.

Some of the major educational schemes that show zero per cent of the budget utilisation include the establishment of Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto University of Law at Karachi, Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Cadet College, Garhi Khuda Bux, in Larkana, building computer labs in existing colleges of the province, provision of sports and transport facilities at high schools, early education reforms and curriculum development. “Around 158 development schemes were to be initiated by the education department in the current year,” a senior official in the education department told The Express Tribune. “The finance department has not released a single penny for 60 important projects and schemes.”

Health

In the health sector, a hefty sum was allocated for 180 schemes. The progress report shows, however, that either a paltry amount has been utilised in some instances while the status of expenditure is missing in others.

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There are around 49 schemes against which the expenditure status is zero. An ambulance service, equipped with ventilators and oxygen cylinders, is among other schemes that have yet be executed for want of funds. A budget of Rs195 million was allocated for this scheme, which has yet to be released.

The document shows that Thalassaemia centres were to be established at Civil Hospital, Karachi, Lyari General Hospital, Liaquat University Hospital, Hyderabad, and Peoples Medical College, Benazirabad. There is also provision in the budget to start urological diagnostic services at five district hospitals in the province. The government failed, however, fund for these.

Similarly, Rs35 million had been allocated for the establishment of an infectious disease control department in all the teaching hospitals, but the funds are yet to be released.

Other schemes that remain on paper include the establishment of an accident emergency and trauma centre in New Karachi, Paeds Institute of Heart Diseases in Karachi, SIUT multi-organ transplantation and biological Centre at Kathore, Karachi, a kidney centre at Hyderabad, Thalessaemia control activities across the province, the provision of CT scan and MRI equipment at public hospitals and the child survival programme in Sindh. The government has not released funds for any of these schemes.

Other sectors

With the water crises one of the major issues of contention for Karachi citizens, Rs1000 million had been earmarked for the Greater Karachi Water Supply Scheme (K-4). The 10-month progress report shows there has been no expenditure on the project. Meanwhile, there was provision of Rs150 million for the Sindh Emergency Service (Rescue 1122) and Disaster preparedness projects. Both schemes are still limited to on paper.

When contacted, the adviser to CM on finance, Murad Ali Shah, refused to comment on the issue. “I will not speak to media,” he said abruptly. Finance secretary was also unwilling to speak on the issue.

On the other hand, the minister for parliamentary affairs, Dr Sikandar Mandhro and information minister Sharjeel Memon insisted that they have utilised more than 70 per cent of the budget.

“There are few projects which need the approval of higher authorities,” said Dr Mandhro, as he defended his government. “Some schemes are delayed because of technical hurdles otherwise we have done better than other provinces,” he said, referring to the utilisation of provincial development budget of Rs185 billion.

No work to show: Even with funds, Sindh govt fails to deliver development schemes – The Express Tribune
 
They don't care because PPP have monopoly there.
 
@Areesh @HRK - Bhai Sahiban kisss ko vote dei diyaa haiii ? :disagree:

Noora & Noora Jr. might not be the brightest bulbs in the country but they sure as hell utilize at least some of those funds even if on the wrong projects ! o_O
 
Noora & Noora Jr. might not be the brightest bulbs in the country o_O

And you don't need to. In a country called Pakistan all you need is a stick in your hand. Hardworking people always win
 
And you don't need to. In a country called Pakistan all you need is a stick in your hand. Hardworking people always win

How does that relate to my post ? :crazy:
 
Well you tell us what you mean by 'brigtest' ?

They - the Politicians - are stupid as hell; especially PML N !

You don't build a bloody metro bus when people in Lahore (yes....Lahore) are being treated like sh*t in public hospitals; I had the chance to visit one just a stone's throw away from Metro Track where rats were prowling the ward & the walls & the floor was worse than a public toilet - If the patient doesn't die of whatever disease he came here for then he sure as hell may catch something from the fillllth that was infested in that hospital !
 
And you don't need to. In a country called Pakistan all you need is a stick in your hand. Hardworking people always win

Before making a metro, atleast improve the conditions of health in Rawalpindi. Sharam tm ko magar nahi aati. Jump up and down on metro while silent on the report of how hospitals in rawalpindi are deteriorating

Well you tell us what you mean by 'brigtest' ?




4.14pc GDP growth recorded, highest since 2008-09

Ishaq dar lying about numbers

Analysis: Get your numbers straight, minister
By Farooq Tirmizi
Published: June 4, 2014

717271-BudgetDESIGNFAIZANDAWOOD-1401844784-695-640x480.jpg
The minister paid lip service to the notion that the government needs to increase the share of direct taxes in its overall revenue in order to make the tax code more progressive. DESIGN-FAIZAN DAWOOD/FILE




NEW YORK: Finance Minister Ishaq Dar appears to have been put on earth to make his predecessor Hafeez Shaikh look good by comparison. For all his flaws and inability to run a responsible fiscal policy, Shaikh at least tried to introduce more transparency in the budget process and did not try to artificially make the numbers look good. Dar, by contrast, relied on a combination of obfuscation and inaccuracies to make his record look better than it actually is.


Let us start with some of the headline numbers: the budget deficit is projected to be 5.8% of the total size of the economy during the outgoing fiscal year 2014, compared to the 8.2% of GDP it was the year before. That sounds impressive, unless you consider the fact that Dar artificially inflated the 2013 deficit by transferring a massive chunk of circular debt payments to that year. Without those, the 2013 deficit would have been closer to 6.5% of GDP. This year’s deficit is lower, yes, but not by as much as the minister made it look.

And then there are the specific components of the government’s strategy to reduce the deficit. One of the biggest ways the federal government reduces the overall deficit is by forcing provincial governments to run a surplus, in effect trampling the fiscal sovereignty guaranteed to them under the constitution and the National Finance Commission Award. But the legal niceties are not even what is most wrong with this policy.

The provincial governments are where we spend money on health and education. By forcing those governments to run surpluses (which Islamabad achieves by not releasing the money on time), we are effectively eviscerating the country’s ability to invest in the health and education of our citizens. In other words, Dar is willing to let schools and hospitals crumble in order to make his numbers work.

Indeed, Dar appears to be so obsessed with making the numbers work that he seems to have forgotten that budget numbers have meaning, that they represent choices of where the government wants to lead the nation and the economy, and that ignoring their effects can have devastating consequences. Unfortunately, it seems that the minister appears to have relied far too much on tired old advice from unimaginative bureaucrats who see their job not as managing the economy, but balancing the government’s books.

It certainly did not have to be this way. Unlike almost any of his predecessors, Dar got a full year in office before he had to present what could justifiably be called his first budget, giving him unparalleled opportunity to shape the document according to his own vision for the economy. Unfortunately for the country, it appears that either he does not have a vision for the economy or, in the few places that he does, it is to benefit the already privileged economic elite of the country.

The minister paid lip service to the notion that the government needs to increase the share of direct taxes in its overall revenue in order to make the tax code more progressive. However, in the entire budget speech, I counted precisely zero ideas that would make the tax code more progressive. Oh, to be sure, there were plenty of proposals to increase what the government calls “direct taxes”, but they are levied as withholding taxes, in a manner identical to that of indirect taxes, effectively rendering them as regressive as regular indirect taxes.

The only time Dar even mentioned an increase of taxes for the economic elite was in very general terms when he announced that all Statutory Regulatory Orders (SROs) would be eliminated over a period of three years. SROs are issued by the Federal Board of Revenue, often flouting existing tax law, and reduce the effective tax rate for some of the largest and most profitable businesses in the country. A firm commitment to end all of them is good, but without specifics, it is a hollow promise.

On the crucial matter of ending unaffordable energy subsidies, the minister said little beyond generic statements. In short, this budget does nothing to eliminate the structural weaknesses of the Pakistani economy. Indeed, in some ways, it may end up exacerbating them.

It is a terrifying thought to be pining for the good old days of Hafeez Shaikh.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 4th, 2014.
 
They - the Politicians - are stupid as hell; especially PML N !

You don't build a bloody metro bus when people in Lahore (yes....Lahore) are being treated like sh*t in public hospitals; I had the chance to visit one just a stone's throw away from Metro Track where rats were prowling the ward & the walls & the floor was worse than a public toilet - If the patient doesn't die of whatever disease he came here for then he sure as hell may catch something from the fillllth that was infested in that hospital !

Why don't you tell 77% Lahorites who approve such projects ?

Just so you know London got its first public transport system in the 1800s when people were living in sh!t and poverty levels were as fricken high as 80% Don't give me a lecture on rats. I have lived in that very same city where you could still see them today !

For the last time why do you guys assume i'm against human development ? Have i said something ? Please don't try to make me dumb. I know the problems. You just can't expect 95% poverty level to go to 0 %. in 65 years of which most of the governance had been under dictatorship. Stop living in lalal land.
 
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Why don't you tell 77% Lahorites who approve such projects ?

Just so you know London got its first public transport system in the 1800s when people were living in sh!t and poverty levels were as fricken high as 80% Don't give me a lecture on rats. I have lived in that very same city where you could still see them today !

For the last time why do you guys assume i'm against human development ? Have i said something ? Please don't try to make me dumb. I know the problems. You can't expect from 95% poverty level to 0 %. in 65 years of which most have been under dictator. Stop living in lalal land.

Whether London got her first public transport system in the 1800s or 1800 BC I don't give a frig because I'm trying to consider something on its merits :

Which is better - A Bus Service or refurbishing & perhaps creating new Hospitals throughout the Province using the same money ?

And no one is expecting the Nooras to turn Lahore into Singapore in the blink of an eye but simply to get their damn priorities right - I'd rather be treated than be transported !
 
Whether London got her first public transport system in the 1800s or 1800 BC I don't give a frig because I'm trying to consider something on its merits :

Which is better - A Bus Service or refurbishing & perhaps creating new Hospitals throughout the Province using the same money ?

And no one is expecting the Nooras to turn Lahore into Singapore in the blink of an eye but simply to get their damn priorities right - I'd rather be treated than be transported !

butt tu nai larai kara de hai.

beta ab aram say ye baat sono


24% of GDP ( $ 11 Billion) goes to Defence.

Whats the result ?

- Lost all Wars against India
- Still domestic terrorism

kya $300 million aik shehr deserve nahi karta kya ??? itnay chawal hai hum ??? :hitwall: :hitwall:
 

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