South Sudan’s parliament has passed its 2017/2018 budget but,
after four years of war, acknowledged it does not know where much of the
funding will come from.
Lawmakers voted to boost
spending by more than 30 per cent, to 46.5 billion South Sudanese pounds
($300 million) from the 2016/2017 budget of 29.6 billion.
Wani
Buyu Dyori, undersecretary for planning at the Finance Ministry, told
reporters after the approval of the budget on Monday that funding would
be “difficult”.
As an example, of why he noted that the
main road from Uganda, where most of the country’s food is imported
from, is currently flooded and impassable.
Supplies of
fuel and food to the capital, Juba, have halted, he said, risking
further food shortages and shutting off one of the few sources of
non-oil revenue.
“The business community is not getting goods in and whom do we tax if are not coming?”
The finance ministry said last month that it needs donors to fund more than a third of the proposed budget.
Countries
are reluctant to do so due to conflict, corruption and mismanagement.
Civil servants and soldiers go unpaid for months.
“We are also looking for loans,” he said, without giving details.
Civil
war broke out in 2013 and continues to disrupt the functioning of the
government in Juba. The war also slashed oil output, source of nearly
100 per cent of hard currency earnings, causing hyperinflation that has
rendered the South Sudan Pound (SSP) almost worthless.
The
largest expenditure categories in the 46.5 billion SSP ($300 million)
are for security, accounting for 27 per cent of approved spending, and
administration, accounting for nearly 29 per cent. Administration
includes the office of the president, Salva Kiir.
South
Sudan’s leaders and their families have amassed great wealth during the
conflict, according to a report by US advocacy group The Sentry, which
was co-founded by actor George Clooney. The government dismissed the
findings.
The
ministry said last month that oil production will fall to around
110,000 barrels per day this year, down from 130,000 which was already
half of output at the country’s peak.
The United
Nations declared famine in parts of the country in February. The war has
forced more than a quarter of the population of 12 million to flee
their homes.
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