DACF: Minority says Finance Minister breached Article 252

“the debts were partly settled in 2020 with money borrowed during the Covid-19 intervention, with ₵144 Million’.

The National Democratic Congress Minority in Parliament has accused the Minister of Finance Ken Ofori Atta of breaching Article 252 Clauses (2) and (3) of the 1992 Constitution without recourse to its ramifications on decentralization and development at the local level.

According to the MPs, the government through the Finance Ministry has deprived the District Assemblies Common Fund, DACF of the needed funds for the discharge of its constitutionally mandated duties. They noted that money due the Common Fund were under-provided for and owed to the Fund for 2017 and 2018.

The MPs allege that “the debts were partly settled in 2020 with money borrowed during the Covid-19 intervention, with ₵144 Million’.

Article 252 (1) (2) (3)of the 1992 Constitution provides that there shall be a fund to be known as the District Assemblies Common Fund and subject to the provisions of this Constitution, Parliament shall make provision for the allocation of not less than five percent of the total revenues of Ghana to the District Assemblies for development, and the amount shall be paid into the District Assemblies Common Fund in quarterly instalments and that the money accruing to the District Assemblies Common Fund shall be distributed among all the District Assemblies on the basis of a formula approved by Parliament.

At a press briefing in Parliament on 21st October, 2021, the Minority Ranking Member on Local Government Member of Parliament for Ho Central, Benjamin Kpodo, cited the government for misapplication of the fund.

“Indeed the DACF is simply not working today, having been rendered impotent. The monies due to the Fund have not been given to the Fund to enable it to carry out its mandate as abundantly outlined by the Constitution and the relevant Act,” he stated.

The MPs chastised the Ministry of Finance for “arbitrarily determining that the amount due to the DACF for one quarter of the year is not due until after the end of the next quarter.

For instance, the first quarter of the year ends in March; but money for the Common Fund will only be due after the end of the second quarter in June.

The question is does it take three months to determine what revenue was realized in a particular quarter, especially in these days of computer technology? Again we see this as a ploy to retain the monies due to the DACF at the centre”, they questioned.

“Mr. Kpodo said the Ministry of Finance has failed to release funds to the DACF for several quarters over 2020 — 2021. This is a clear violation of the 1992 constitution, Article 252 (2). Indeed, payments have not been made by quarterly instalments”.

They also noted that “The Ministry of Finance is very heavily indebted to the DACF. The amount has run to about two billion Ghana Cedis (GHS2, 000,000.00+) made up with: 2019 — GHS700 Million (per the Auditor-General’s report), 2020 — GHS587 Million 2021 – GHS884Million (Estimates for 1st and 2nd Quarters).

“Curiously a release letter issued by the Ministry of Finance indicated an amount of GHS434, 587,416.00 for the fourth quarter of 2020; this amount was lower by GHS210, 301,339 than the amount computed by the same Ministry of Finance by which the allocation should have been GHS644, 888,755.00. During reconciliations, the Chief Director of the Ministry stated that the Ministry did not release the full amount because that would have exceeded the legally appropriated allocation to the DACF”.

The Finance Ministry is yet to react to the concerns.

DACFFinance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta