12 October 2012

Perbendaharaan akui anggaran kos Pakatan tepat...


Kenyataan Datuk Seri Husni Hanadzlah, Menteri Kewangan II yang disiarkan oleh The Sun [1] disambut baik oleh Jawatankuasa Manifesto dan Dasar Pakatan Rakyat yang bertanggungjawab merangka Belanjawan Pakatan Rakyat 2013.

 Ia mengesahkan bahawa Kerajaan Persekutuan memandang serius segala cadangan dan penyelesaian ekonomi yang dikemukakan oleh Pakatan Rakyat. 

Ini membayangkan juga bahawa keupayaan pentadbiran Pakatan Rakyat dan kemampuannya merancang ekonomi negara turut dihormati dan digeruni oleh Barisan Nasional.

Oleh sebab itulah, sepanjang bermulanya persidangan Parlimen sesi ini, ahli-ahli Parlimen Barisan Nasional lebih gemar menghabiskan masa yang diperuntukkan membahaskan Belanjawan Pakatan Rakyat 2013

Mereka lebih takutkan pengaruh dan perbandingan dasar yang dibawa oleh Belanjawan Pakatan Rakyat 2013 sehingga mereka mengabaikan terus belanjawan yang dibentangkan Perdana Menteri sendiri.

Tidak cukup dengan itu, menteri-menteri kanan seperti Datuk Seri Husni Hanadzlah sendiri mengerah kakitangan awam di Perbendaharaan dan jabatan-jabatan lain bekerja lebih masa untuk mencari bidasan bagi menjawab cadangan dasar yang dibuat Pakatan Rakyat, seperti yang dibacakan oleh beliau semalam.

Baca seterusnya di sini. - harakahdaily


PR budget is "all inclusive"...

The Pakatan Rakyat shadow budget with a total allocation of RM232 billion is "all-inclusive" and enough to cover its proposed expenditures, said PKR strategic director Rafizi Ramli.

Speaking during a joint press conference with Pakatan Rakyat manifesto and policies committee members at Parliament lobby today, Rafizi was responding to Second Finance Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Husni Hanadzlah's claim that PR's budget is "mathematically wrong". 

Ahmad Husni had on Wednesday reportedly said that PR's budget was "incomplete" and did not include most of its operating expenditures, thus arriving at the figure of only RMRM185.3 billion.

Treasury Department estimates the operating expenditures of the opposition coalitions budget to be RM224.3 billion. 

He had also said the treasury had analysed both the federal budget and PR's shadow budget, and found that the federal budget is "complete and well-explained". 

"The treasury's analysis which was used by Husni to support his argument, however, only serves to confirm that PR's estimated costs to fund our expenditures are correct," said Rafizi who pointed out that the treasury had concurred with PR's RM6 billion proposed allocation to abolish toll charges. 

PR had also pledged to provide free education at all levels with an estimated cost of RM4 billion, and Rafizi said the treasury in its analysis had merely increased the figure by RM1 billion.

On Husni's argument that 72,000 jobs will be loss from PR's reduced allocation for government servant's emolument from RM58.6 billion to RM56 billion, Rafizi merely said that "it does not make sense".
"There is an additional allocation of RM4 billion under PR's budget to cover the 8% proposed increase in salary for government servants. 

"We had also allocated RM2 billion to increase the salary of some 300,000 civil servants currently earning below the (PR's) proposed minimum wage of RM1,100," said Rafizi.

He stressed that PR is also looking at reviewing additional costs incurred by the government for "non-financial rewards" and converting it into monetary benefits.

On claims of missing items in PR's budget, Rafizi instead said a detailed breakdown of all proposed programmes have been tabled with total allocation of RM41.9 billion.

"This allocation is made by taking into account potential for savings through eradicating corruption and plugging leakages in government spending," he added. 

Rafizi pointed out that based on PR's proposed target of 20% savings from the RM216.4 billion federal government's expenditure, there is RM43 billion in funds which can then be channelled for implementation of its policies. 

Meanwhile, Dzulkelfly Ahmad (PAS-Kuala Selangor) also took a swipe at Husni and challenged the minister for a debate that goes beyond "just mere numbers".

"We need to look at the government's fiscal approach … That is where PR is coming from," he said, stressing on the importance to dismantle all economic practices aimed at distorting the market and benefiting only a select few.- theSundaily



 

cheers.

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