(L-R around table: MPs Manuel Tilman, Aderito Hugo da Costa and Cipriana Pereira. Guteriano Neves, Alexandra Arnassalon, Charles Scheiner and Juvinal Dias from La'o Hamutuk.)
We presented a 16-page submission (full text in Tetum and English) with the following main points:
The Resource Curse is truly here.
- The “Dutch disease” of inflation, currently over 13%, exacerbates poverty in Timor-Leste.
- We continue to neglect non-oil development and depend on imports.
- Our people are our most important resource, but the budget will cut the share for health and education while infrastructure mega-projects get most of the money.
- The MDG-Suco program exemplifies careless budget practices.
- Timor-Leste is a world leader in budget escalation, with a 407% four-year increase second only to Zimbabwe.
- The budget will spend 7.2% of our petroleum wealth from the Petroleum Fund, more than double the Estimated Sustainable Income. By 2014, Petroleum Fund withdrawals will be larger than oil revenues deposited into the Fund.
- Special Funds continue to erode Parliamentary authority, and the Budget documents are not accurate or complete about how the Infrastructure Fund is being used.
- Parliament needs complete information on expected project costs, such as the $950 million national electricity project, the $1.4 billion south coast highway, and other elements of the Tasi Mane petroleum infrastructure project.
- Electricity continues to dominate, receiving more than $370 million, with results lower than expectations.
- Agriculture deserves more than 1% of the budget, since it is the livelihood of more than 80% of our population.
- Parliament needs more information before approving borrowing. This budget is the first request to authorize loans, $33 million, but future loans will be much larger.
- The Tasi Mane project could be a multi-billion-dollar white elephant.
- The South Coast Highway will eat up another billion or more.
- The Timor-Leste Investment Company gets $200 million, which may be squandered on futile, useless, money-losing projects.














