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Finance Ministry Launches National Budget Month | Wilmat Development Foundation
Budget & Governance 02 June 2026  ·  Wilmat Development Foundation

Finance Ministry Launches National Budget Month, Calls for Greater Citizen Participation Country-wide

As Uganda prepares for the 11th June 2026 budget reading, the Ministry of Finance has set the stage for a month of public engagement and Wilmat Development Foundation is proud to be part of the conversation, centering young people's voices in how Uganda's UGX 84.39 trillion budget should work for all.

Permanent Secretary and Secretary to the Treasury Dr Ramathan Ggoobi at the National Budget Month launch

Permanent Secretary and Secretary to the Treasury, Dr Ramathan Ggoobi addressing stakeholders at the launch of National Budget Month for FY 2026/27 in Kampala. | Photo: MoFPED

KAMPALA: The Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development has officially launched the National Budget Month for Financial Year 2026/27, reaffirming the government's commitment to transparency, accountability and citizen participation in the budget process. The national budget reading is confirmed for 11 June 2026 when the Minister of Finance will present the spending plan to Parliament.

Speaking at the launch held at the Ministry's Conference Hall in Kampala, Permanent Secretary and Secretary to the Treasury, Dr Ramathan Ggoobi said the FY 2026/27 budget was developed through an extensive consultative process involving the President, Cabinet, Parliament, ministries, departments and agencies, local governments, civil society organizations, development partners, the private sector, academia, community leaders, youth groups, women groups, persons with disabilities and citizens across the country.

TThe National Budget Month provides a platform for government to report on achievements, share opportunities in the new budget and receive feedback from citizens to inform future planning and policy decisions.

— Dr Ramathan Ggoobi, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Finance

The FY 2026/27 budget, approved by Parliament on April 24, 2026, is themed: "Full Monetization of Uganda's Economy through Commercial Agriculture, Industrialization, Expanding and Broadening Services, Digital Transformation and Market Access." It represents a total envelope of UGX 84.39 trillion with the economy projected to grow at 10.4 percent, driven in part by the anticipated launch of commercial oil production in late 2026.

National Budget Month launch event

Stakeholders and government officials at the National Budget Month launch event, Kampala, 11 June 2026. | Photo: MoFPED

Dr Ggoobi noted that since its introduction in 2018, the National Budget Month initiative has significantly strengthened public engagement in the budget process, improved awareness of government programmes and enhanced Uganda's standing in international budget transparency assessments.

59%
Uganda's budget transparency score (2023) up from 58% in 2021, above the global average of 45%
67%
Budget oversight score (2023) up from 59% in 2021 well above the global average of 52%

Implementation: Uganda's Biggest Challenge

While acknowledging meaningful progress in resource allocation, Dr Ggoobi was candid that Uganda's most pressing challenge has shifted from policy formulation to implementation. "For many years, the discussion centred on whether there is enough money. Today, Uganda's biggest challenge is no longer policy formulation or resource allocation. The major challenge is implementation," he said.

He added that the government is pursuing procurement reforms aimed at improving efficiency, reducing administrative costs and ensuring better value for money in public expenditure.

He further noted that more than 85 percent of government expenditure is directed towards the ATMS sectors: Agriculture, Tourism, Minerals and Science, Technology and Innovation and their supporting enablers, positioning these as the key growth engines under the Fourth National Development Plan (NDP IV) and the Ten-Fold Growth Strategy.

Acting Director of Budget Hannington Ashaba

Acting Director of Budget, Hannington Ashaba, during his welcoming address at the budget launch. | Photo: MoFPED

Director of Budget Sets the Tone

In his welcoming remarks, Acting Director of Budget Hannington Ashaba appreciated participants including government officials, finance ministry staff, Budget Transparency Initiative (BTI) partners and the press for their roles in preparing the FY 2026/27 national budget.

tToday, we officially launch the National Budget Month and its activities which will inform Ugandans about the priorities of Government for FY 2026/27 and how we are going to mobilize the required resources to finance these priorities.

— Hannington Ashaba, Acting Director of Budget, MoFPED

Ashaba urged all Ugandans to be ready to tap into opportunities emerging from the strategic growth areas of agro-industrialisation, tourism, mineral-based industrialisation including oil and gas, and science, technology and innovation, including ICT and the creative arts sector.

Julius Mukunda, CSBAG Executive Director

Julius Mukunda, Executive Director of CSBAG, speaking at the Budget Month launch. | Photo: CSBAG

Civil Society: A Blueprint for Growth But Discipline Matters

Julius Mukunda, Executive Director of the Civil Society Budget Advocacy Group (CSBAG) described the UGX 84.39 trillion FY 2026/27 budget as a massive blueprint for growth. He highlighted Uganda's economic resilience, noting that double-digit growth is achievable, investment in human capital is increasing and first oil production is drawing closer.

Mukunda called on all stakeholders to approach the process as partners, not adversaries, advocating for prudent public financial management and realistic budget priorities for sustainable development. He flagged the need to address high interest rates, strengthen fiscal discipline and rationalize non-critical public expenditure to ease pressure on the broader economy.

Budget Month launch event panel

A wider view of the National Budget Month launch event. | Photo: MoFPED

Key Budget Month Activities

The launch kicks off a nationwide calendar of budget engagement activities running through July 2026:

  • Jun 4–Jul 7 Pre- and post-budget media engagements nationwide
  • Jun 11 National Budget Reading: Parliament, Kampala
  • Jun 18 National Youth Budget Dialogue: WDF, WaterAid, NYAP, MCLD Uganda, Touch The Heart Uganda, CIDI & Partners
  • Jun 19 Post-Budget Investment Dialogue: CSBAG, ACODE & UDN
  • Jun 23 National Private Sector Dialogue: Private Sector Foundation Uganda
  • Ongoing Regional post-budget awareness campaigns across all regions
  • Jul 9 Post-budget tax dialogues (URA) & Open Budget Survey results launch
WDF at the Launch

We Were in the Room and We Are Excited

Wilmat Development Foundation was proudly represented at the launch of National Budget Month on 01 June 2026. We are deeply encouraged by the direction this budget season is taking, particularly the emphasis on consultation, citizen ownership and transparency in public finance management.

The energy at the launch was palpable. Hearing the Permanent Secretary speak with clarity about implementation as the country's next frontier, and listening to civil society partners insist on fiscal discipline and inclusivity, reaffirmed our conviction that Uganda is on the right path but that young people must be an active part of the journey, not passive spectators.

As an organization committed to youth-led accountability and inclusive governance, WDF is thrilled to participate in this year's budget engagements. We believe that a budget that does not speak to young people's realities will fall short of delivering the transformation Uganda needs. That is why we are doing more than observing we are advocating, organizing and convening.

What Young People Are Asking of FY 2026/27 Budget

Uganda is one of the youngest nations on earth, with over 78 percent of its population under 30. Yet too often, youth priorities are mentioned as afterthoughts in budget consultations rather than central pillars. As part of our Youth in Accountability programme, WDF calls on the government to ensure the FY 2026/27 budget genuinely incorporates the following youth priorities:

  • 01 Youth Employment & Enterprise Financing: Significantly scale up dedicated youth enterprise funds under the Parish Development Model and GROW Programme, ensuring equitable access for young women, young persons with disabilities and rural youth with simplified application processes and mentorship support.
  • 02 Digital Skills & ICT Infrastructure: Prioritize investment in digital literacy training, affordable internet connectivity and ICT hubs in schools and communities, so that Uganda's digital transformation agenda creates real opportunities for young people rather than leaving them behind.
  • 03 TVET and Skilling for the Economy: Increase allocations to Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) institutions to align skills development with the ATMS growth sectors, particularly in agro-processing, mineral value addition and the creative arts industry.
  • 04 Youth Mental Health & Wellbeing: Recognize youth mental health as a public health priority with a dedicated budget line under the health sector, supporting community-based psychosocial services especially for young people in post-conflict regions.
  • 05 Youth Participation in Budget Implementation: Establish formal mechanisms for youth-led monitoring of government programmes at parish and sub-county levels, ensuring that funds allocated to ATMS sectors and the PDM actually reach intended beneficiaries transparently.
  • 06 Climate-Smart Agriculture for Young Farmers: Target a meaningful share of agricultural budget increases specifically at young and first-generation farmers, with irrigation support, input subsidies and access to land through cooperative models.
Coming Up · Save the Date

The 1st National Youth Budget Conference & Dialogue 2026

Hot off the 11 June 2026 budget reading, Wilmat Development Foundation and Partners will convene the National Youth Budget Conference and Dialogue a landmark platform where young Ugandans from all regions will interrogate what the FY 2026/27 national cake means for them and how they can access it.

The conference will bring together young people, economists, civil society leaders, government officials and private sector actors to dissect the budget's implications for youth employment, digital transformation, agricultural enterprise, WaSH, TVET and youth governance. We will not just analyze the numbers we will produce actionable youth budget priorities and recommendations to be presented to Parliament and relevant ministries.

This is our moment. The budget has been read. Now young people will read it back to power.

Youth Employment Digital Economy Agri-Enterprise Budget Literacy Youth Accountability Policy Advocacy

WDF commends the Ministry of Finance for sustaining the National Budget Month tradition and for the growing transparency scores Uganda has recorded. We equally commend Budget Transparency Initiative partners including CSBAG, ACODE, UDN, UNICEF Uganda, SEATINI Uganda, the Uganda Revenue Authority and the Private Sector Foundation Uganda for keeping accountability at the heart of the budget conversation.

As the National Budget is presented on 11 June 2026 and deliberations unfold through July, we call on all young Ugandans to engage, attend community dialogues, follow the budget discussions, ask questions and hold duty-bearers accountable. The national budget is not a government document. It is a people's document. Claim it.

#KnowYourBudget26 #OpenGovUg National Budget Month Youth Accountability FY 2026/27 Budget Dr Ramathan Ggoobi WDF Uganda NDP IV