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5 PUBLIC SPENDING IN FAVOUR OF THE FORESTRY SECTOR

The administration and management of forestry resources are entrusted to the Ministry for the Environment, Water, Forests, Hunting and Fisheries. For the financing of action in the development of the sector, organisations were set up under the auspices of the Ministry. At the outset, towards the end of the 1960s, three offices came into being. They were:

The organisations were dissolved in July 1993 to be replaced the same year by another one for financing activities, which was the Fund for Forestry and Tourism Development (FFTD). This public establishment endowed with legal powers and financial autonomy was created by order number 93-0111 of 8 July 1993. It had the mission of financing the Development Programme for the Forestry, Fauna and Tourism sectors and to ensure the follow up and monitoring of the carrying out of these actions.

The net assets as well as the other resources of the organisations mentioned above (ONF, NCPDF, and CARTO) are allocated to the FFTD. These statutes were approved by decree taken by the Cabinet.

The FFTD was dissolved by the January 1999 finance law and was redirected a year later under the form of a Special Allocation Account – Forestry and Tourism Development (SAA-FTD). The 2000-finance law which created the Special Allocation Account of the Public Revenue Department specifies that the operations on these accounts are planned, authorised and carried out in the same conditions as those operations for the general budget. The total amount of spending pledged or ordered for these accounts at no time can exceed the total amount of revenue in those accounts.

Still according to the 2000 finance law, revenue from this account is made up of:

Authorised expenditure on this account is the following:

The distribution of spending between these four posts is set annually by joint decree from the Minister for Finance, the Minister for the Environment, Water, Forestry, Hunting and Fisheries and from the Minister for Tourism. The clauses concerning the operation and current management of the account are set by order from the Minister for Finance.

The FFTD being the main public forestry institution, the summary of its budget for the year 2000 is the following:

Table 9 Summary of FFTD budget for year 2000

Titles

Resources (FCFA)

Expenditure (FCFA)

Forestry revenue

735,000,000

 

Hunting revenue

150,000,000

 

Tourism revenue

65,000,000

 

FFTD equipment

 

57,000,000

Forestry programmes

 

284,000,000

Hunting programmes

 

70,000,000

Tourism programmes

 

121,526,000

FFTD operations

 

87,671,000

Contribution to organisations

 

87,000,000

Project counterparts

 

227,803,000

Redundancy payments

 

15,000,000

Totals

950,000,000

950,000,000

The information in this table comes from FFTD book-keeping. These amounts are those actually collected during 2000. The differences with the data in Table 5 come from the fact that it is the end of the tax year. Certain invoices for revenue issued in the name of the FFTD by the Forestry Office have not yet been paid by the companies due to pay them. This reflects the problem of tax collection evoked in Section 3.2. Table 11 gives details of spending of activities for 2000. Table 10 reiterates the total revenue as well as spending in favour of the forestry development for the past five years.

Table 10 Total revenue and spending in favour of forestry development 1996-2000 (in thousands of FCFA)

Titles

Years

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

Revenue

867,483

864,909

1,152,359

703,132

1,507,562

Spending

         

Reforestation, development and protection of forests

108,569

149,432

182,392

168,704

301,946

Teaching

0

720

50

4,215

4,260

Training and work experience

0

0

8,852

10,765

14,389

Forestry research

0

21,537

28,128

4,214

1,640

Total spending

108,569

171,689

219,423

187,899

322,234

Spending compared with revenue

12.5%

19.8%

19.0%

26.7%

21.3%

Table 11 Details of spending on activities for year 2000

Titles

Amount

(in FCFA)

Forestry programmes (29.8% of spending)

 

Equipment for heads of worksites

1,000,000

Equipment for forestry guards

2,500,000

National tree day

6,000,000

Seedlings (seeds and bags)

7,000,000

Follow-up and monitoring of forestry activities

44,500,000

Meetings, seminars, conferences and workshops

20,000,000

Environmental programme

10,000,000

Fishing and pisciculture

3,000,000

Follow-up committee, Yaoundι declaration

12,000,000

Reforestation work and other in the Regional Offices for Water and Forestry

178,000,000

Total

284,000,000

Personnel costs (4% of spending)

 

Wages

25,956,000

Social contributions

2,015,000

Other premiums and medical expenses

10,930,000

Total

38,901,000

Operating costs (9.1% of spending)

 

Total

87,671,000

Contributions to international organisations (9.1% of spending)

 

Forestry organisations(OAB, OIBT, PNVE, Basin of Lake Chad)

64,000,000

Fauna organisation (OCFSA)

10, 500,000

Tourism organisations (OMT)

12,500,000

Total

87,000,000

Counterparts in financing conventions (23.9% of spending)

 

AIAF project

103,000,000

Cell for Forestry Management(Berbιrati)

70,000,000

ARC/CFD/ SAA-DFT

15,000,000

ECOFAC/RCA

27,000,000

PRGIE

12,803,000

Total

227,803,000

As it was mentioned for Table 9, data for Table 10 comes from the FFTD accounting and the difference with data in Table 5, comes once again, with the delay in collecting the invoices for revenue.

It should be pointed out that the central State budget through the intermediary of the Public Revenue Department finances the operations of the Ministry for the Environment, Water, Forestry, Hunting and Fisheries and the institutions for forestry training which are:

It should also be noted that as well as students choosing the water and forestry option, these establishments also train students of other disciplines such as agriculture and livestock breeding.

The table to follow presents the summary of this expenditure from the Public Revenue Department for the Ministry for the Environment, Water, Forestry, Hunting and Fisheries and the two training establishments for the past five years.

Table 12 Spending from the Public Revenue Department for the operations of the two training establishments and the Ministry responsible for forestry (in thousands of FCFA)

Titles 

Years

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

Operations of training establishments

72,000

49,978

46,500

79,400

79,400

Personnel of Ministry for Water and Forestry

336,484

285,484

323,053

323,053

323,053

Current and misc. expenditure from the Ministry for Water and Forestry

48,809

42,118

42,800

42,800

42,800

Total

515,253

412,353

377,580

457,293

445,253

Source: Finance law

In the area of investment, the forestry sector was subject to continuous government attention as the importance of projects carried out in the different areas demonstrates. In the area of forestry:

The following table regroups the public investment in favour of the forestry sector from 1992-1997.

Table 13 Public investment in the forest sub-sector 1992-1997 (in millions of FCFA)

Years

Initial forecast

Realisation of spending

Rate of realisation

Foreseen spending

Unforeseen spending

Total spending

Foreseen spending

Total spending

1992

1,378

1,180

376

1,556

86%

113%

1993

1,615

1,408

49

1,457

87%

90%

1994

2,518

2,412

308

2,720

96%

108%

1996

1,308

   

374

 

29%

1997

770

   

677

 

88%

Source: Reports of realisation of State investment (Ministere for the Economy, Ministry for Planning and Ministry for International Co-operation, 1992-1997).

Table 12 presents the spending carried out, foreseen in the State budget for the years 1996 – 2000 in favour of public forestry institutions (training establishments and the ministry responsible for forestry). The spending was done with revenue from several State sources (the Public Revenue Department). With regard to Table 13, it presents the amount of investment carried out by the State in the area of forestry (the projects) based on borrowings and foreign subsidies.

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