AIA Philippines: As health risks evolve, protection needs to go further

AIA Philippines is urging Filipinos to rethink how they prepare for their health, as risks evolve over time and can occur more than once across different stages of life.

In today’s landscape, nearly one in five Filipinos is at risk of being diagnosed with cancer before the age of 75, according to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates. About one in five new cancers occur in people who’ve had cancer before. Heart disease and cancer share risk factors-having one makes you more prone to the other.*

At a recent immersive media event titled ‘All In for the Long Game of Health,’ AIA Philippines brought the realities of health risk into sharp focus, showing how serious illness doesn’t always announce itself, and rarely happens just once.

Drawing from its Rethink Healthy study, AIA highlighted a critical gap: while Filipinos are more health-conscious than ever, many still take action only after a crisis. Participants were challenged to confront common blind spots-such as equating ‘feeling healthy’ with being protected-and how this false sense of security delays preparation for risks that can evolve and compound over time. ‘While many Filipinos value good health, a common misconception persists: that feeling well now means critical illness is unlikely, leading many to delay preparation until a health crisis hits,’ Melissa Henson, chief marketing officer of AIA Philippines, said.

‘Because we feel healthy today, it is easy to assume serious illness won’t happen to us, or won’t happen again. But the reality is risks evolve, and preparation needs to happen before a crisis-not after,’ Henson continued.

‘That misconception has real consequences,’ added Gary Ogilvie, chief financial officer, AIA Philippines. ‘When critical illness strikes, it doesn’t just affect your health-it disrupts income, drains savings, and puts families under severe financial pressure. Treatment and recovery can cost a lot.’

Ogilvie further explained, ‘For instance, according to our research, serious illnesses like heart disease, stroke, cancer, pneumonia, and diabetes cost hundreds of thousands to over P2 million to treat. Government subsidy and HMOs cover only a portion. In most cases, the biggest expense is out of pocket, often P700,000 to over P1 million. This is why preparation matters: having financial protection in place early gives people the ability to focus on recovery, not on how to pay the bills.’

The event also underscored a growing reality: as people live longer and survive serious illnesses, the likelihood of facing multiple health challenges increases. For instance, up to 17% of cancer survivors may develop a new, different cancer later, highlighting how health risks can reappear in different forms over time.

These risks also come with significant financial impact, with treatment costs for major conditions such as heart attack or cancer reaching up to P1 million or more.

This evolving risk landscape is what AIA Critical Protect Plus was built for. As health risks evolve over time, the plan offers multi-claim coverage, allowing customers to claim up to three times across different major illness groups, including early-stage conditions, with protection up to age 100.

Rather than preparing for a single diagnosis, AIA Critical Protect Plus supports individuals through multiple health events across different life stages, helping maintain financial resilience even as risks evolve.

The immersive experience reinforced a broader message from AIA Philippines: health preparation isn’t a one-time choice made after a scare, but a long-term commitment that needs to keep pace with life, longevity and changing health risks.

‘Being prepared today means recognizing that risks evolve over the long game of health,’ Henson added. ‘It’s not just about support at the moment of diagnosis, but having protection that stays with you through different stages of illness, recovery, and what may come next.’

Wendy Valdez grateful for son’s successful major operation

Actress and former ‘Pinoy Big Brother’ housemate Wendy Valdez is grateful to the public for praying for her son Emmanuel Seth, who underwent a major surgery for his Spina bifida condition.

Through Instagram, Wendy shared some photos of her and Seth taken before the procedure was performed on her son, where she asked for prayers for Seth.

Following this, she posted again to announce that her eldest child’s surgery was a success.

‘Grateful and Heavy (Operation done). The recovery room felt both grateful and heavy at the same time,’ she said.

‘Whenever Seth opened his eyes, I smiled at him, so he would know I was there. I kept thanking God because my boy survived the operation. The doctors told us his vitals stayed good throughout the entire surgery, and that he was such a brave and cooperative boy whenever they needed to do things for him while he was awake, like inserting new needles or checking on him. They said he never fought them and was very easy to comfort and talk to despite everything he was going through,” the former actress shared.

Wendy said that seeing her son struggle breaks her heart. She shared how Seth started shaking and felt dizzy and asked her when the dizziness would stop. She would reassure her son that he would be okay.

‘Seeing your child survive something so major fills your heart with gratitude, but seeing them in pain afterward is a different kind of heaviness only a parent can understand. Still, God carried Seth through the surgery,and I am so thankful. Operation was a victory, but I know the healing journey continues. God is with us,” the former housemate said.

According to the Mayo Clinic, Spina bifida is a condition that occurs when the spine and spinal cord do not form properly. “It is a type of neural tube defect. The neural tube is the structure in a developing embryo that later becomes the baby’s brain and spinal cord and the tissues that enclose them.”

Wendy revealed in 2018 that her son Seth has the health condition.

NYSC member trains 500 students on vocational skills in FCT

A member of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Oluwatosin Isedowo, has empowered over 500 students of Government Secondary School, Wuse Zone 3, Abuja, with practical vocational and entrepreneurial skills in line with Nigeria’s evolving educational curriculum.

The initiative, tagged: ‘Educate the Dreamers Project’, was implemented as Isedowo’s Community Development Service (CDS) project during her primary assignment at Custom Broadcasting Network, the media arm of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS).

The four-day training exposed students to hands-on learning in solar installation and maintenance, fashion design and digital literacy, key areas aligned with the Federal Government’s renewed focus on vocational and technical education in secondary schools.

Educate The Dreamers (ETD) is an initiative aimed at providing quality education and skills training for secondary school students, including out-of-school teenagers and financially challenged students in Nigeria.

Speaking during the grand finale and donation of training equipment to the school, Isedowo described the project as a platform designed not only to teach practical skills, but also to create life-changing opportunities for young people.

‘Today marks the grand finale of the Educate the Dreamers Project, a community development service initiative designed to provide quality education, vocational empowerment and life-changing opportunities for young people, especially students in public schools,’ she said.

She explained that beyond the training, equipment was donated to ensure the students continue practising and improving their skills long after the programme.

‘Our goal was not just to teach skills, but to create opportunities that will have lasting impact. That is why today, beyond training, we are also donating equipment to support continuous learning,’ she stated.

As part of the intervention, Isedowo announced scholarship support for three underprivileged students, with their school fees fully paid for one academic session.

She disclosed that the initiative, which has already impacted 500 students, aims to expand its reach to 1,000 students per school across selected government colleges in each of Nigeria’s six geopolitical zones.

According to her, the project has now evolved into the Educate the Dreamers Foundation, with a vision to reach thousands of public school students nationwide.

‘My motivation for this project is personal. I know where I am coming from, and I understand how skills and opportunities can transform lives. Today, I am simply extending a hand to the younger generation,’ she said.

In her remarks, the Principal of Government Secondary School, Wuse Zone 3, Josephine Ugwu, described the intervention as timely and transformative, particularly with the implementation of the new curriculum emphasising vocational and entrepreneurial education.

She said the programme had sparked enthusiasm among students and provided exposure beyond conventional classroom learning.

‘What happened here over the past week represents what 21st-century education should look like. I saw our students excited, engaged and working together as teams,’ she said.

Ugwu noted that the donation of training equipment, particularly an industrial sewing machine, would significantly improve practical learning in the school.

‘Before now, our students trained mainly with manual machines. With this new equipment, they will now gain exposure to industrial-standard tools, which better prepares them for real-world opportunities,’ she added.

She urged students to embrace skill acquisition alongside academic excellence, stressing that certificates alone are no longer enough in today’s competitive world.

Also speaking at the event, Comptroller Mbwidiffu Ibrahim, Head of the Corporate Social Responsibility Unit of the Nigeria Customs Service, commended Isedowo for her resilience and commitment to youth development.

She encouraged students not to abandon their dreams and emphasised the importance of practical skills in nation-building.

‘Skill is not the new currency; skill has always been the currency. Whatever you find to do with your hands, do it very well,’ she said.

Ibrahim also revealed that Isedowo faced serious challenges while planning the project but remained determined to complete it.

On his part, the Senior Technical Adviser to the President on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Dr Bala Yusuf Yunusa, said the initiative aligns with the federal government’s youth empowerment and sustainable development agenda.

He noted that the programme contributes directly to the achievement of SDG 4 on quality education and SDG 8 on decent work and economic growth, while also supporting poverty reduction and economic inclusion.

‘This initiative is at the heart of the youth empowerment strategy being implemented at both national and sub-national levels. The skills being imparted here have the capacity to create employment opportunities and reduce poverty,’ he said.

The event attracted educators, government officials, development partners and members of the community, who praised the initiative as a model for practical education and youth empowerment in Nigeria.

Intra-African trade, industrialisation to dominate Afreximbank annual meetings

Preparations have intensified for the 33rd Annual Meetings of African Export-Import Bank, with African leaders, policymakers and investors expected to focus on boosting intra-African trade and industrialisation amid growing global economic uncertainties.

The meetings, scheduled to be held in Egypt from June 21 to 24, 2026, are expected to attract about 4,000 delegates, including heads of state, finance ministers, central bank governors, investors, bankers and private sector operators from across the continent and beyond.

Organisers said the event would be held under the theme: ‘Intra-African Trade and Industrialisation: Pathway to Economic Sovereignty’.

Speaking during a media briefing ahead of the meetings, President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Afreximbank, George Elombi, said Africa’s future economic growth would depend largely on stronger trade ties among African countries, increased industrial processing and deeper economic integration.

According to him, Africa must reposition itself by strengthening internal trade relationships and reducing dependence on external markets in the face of rising geopolitical and global trade pressures.

‘The message is simple: Africa’s next phase of growth must be driven by intra-African trade, by industrial processing and by greater economic integration amongst our countries,’ Elombi said.

He noted that the continent had spent decades building institutions and frameworks to support regional integration, including the African Continental Free Trade Area and the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System.

Elombi added that Afreximbank was promoting initiatives such as the Collaborative Transit Guarantee Scheme aimed at reducing customs bottlenecks and improving cross-border movement of goods.

He stressed that the major challenge facing the continent was transforming Africa’s vast production capacity and investment opportunities into sustainable economic growth and industrial development.

The Afreximbank president also said the bank remained financially resilient despite the challenging global operating environment.

According to him, the bank’s total assets had risen to $49.4 billion, while shareholders’ funds stood at approximately $8.6 billion.

He disclosed that the lender maintained a capital adequacy ratio of 23 percent and a non-performing loans ratio of 2.4 percent, reflecting strong investor confidence in the institution.

‘So we have a strong bank,’ Elombi said. ‘Investor confidence has remained very strong in Afreximbank and we believe that will be the case even in this difficult year of 2026,’ he said.

He explained that the annual meetings would also serve as a platform for investment discussions and business deals across strategic sectors, including logistics, mineral processing, trade finance and energy security.

Elombi said improving transport infrastructure and logistics systems would be critical to expanding intra-African trade and unlocking the benefits of regional integration.

He further highlighted opportunities in mineral beneficiation, noting that although Africa possesses abundant mineral resources, processing capacity remains limited outside countries such as South Africa and Morocco.

According to him, African governments must channel investments towards sectors capable of driving industrial growth and value addition across the continent.

‘The money is available,’ he said. ‘What we need is the expertise and the determination of governments to direct in what areas to put the investment,’ he added.

Governor of the Central Bank of Egypt, Hassan Abdalla, described Egypt’s partnership with Afreximbank as strategic and fundamental.

Egypt hosts Afreximbank’s headquarters and remains one of the institution’s founding shareholders.

Abdalla said the partnership reflected a shared commitment to promoting African trade, industrialisation and regional cooperation.

‘Over the years, Afreximbank has established itself as one of the continent’s most impactful financial institutions and a key driver for Africa’s transformation,’ he said.

He added that African economies were increasingly moving towards diversification and resilience as countries sought to maximise the value of the continent’s natural resources and economic potential.

According to Abdalla, the annual meetings would provide a platform for discussions on trade finance, regional integration and reforms to the global financial system to better address the interests of developing economies.

He also said preparations for the meetings were progressing steadily through collaboration between the Central Bank of Egypt, Afreximbank and other Egyptian authorities to ensure world-class logistics, security and protocol arrangements.

‘We do not view the Afreximbank annual meetings as merely a conference,’ Abdalla said. ‘We consider it a strategic milestone in our collective journey towards building a more integrated, industrialised, resilient and economically sovereign African continent.’

Dela Rosa remains in Senate building after gunshot chaos – lawyer

Sen. Ronald ‘Bato’ Dela Rosa reportedly remained inside the Senate premises after several gunshots were heard inside.

Dela Rosa was seen in a picture together with his lawyer Israelito Torreon.

‘There are those who say that the shooting was just a diversion tactic to get Senator Dela Rosa out of the Senate, so let’s post this to put a stop to those stories,’ Torreon said in a Facebook post early Thursday morning.

Earlier, several shots were heard inside the second floor of the building.

Interior chief Jonvic Remulla later told the media that the first shots came from personnel of the Senate Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms.

The International Criminal Court on May 11 confirmed that an arrest warrant against Dela Rosa over alleged crimes against humanity linked to the Duterte administration’s drug war.

The Supreme Court did not issue the temporary restraining order he sought against the ICC warrant.

Dela Rosa, former president Rodrigo Duterte’s chief drug war enforcer, has been staying at the Senate premises under what senators call a ‘protective custody’ after the ICC warrant against him.

HEAT INDEX WATCH: 49 areas to reach ‘danger’ level on Thursday, May 14

Forty-nine areas across the country are forecast to reach ‘danger’ level heat indices on Thursday, May 14, said the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa).

Heat index refers to the heat the body feels when air temperature and humidity are combined.

Once it ranges between 42°C and 51°C, Pagasa automatically categorizes it as ‘danger’ level due to increased risks of heat cramps and heat exhaustion which could then lead to heat stroke.

Based on Pagasa’s forecast as of 5 p.m. of Wednesday, May 14, the following areas are expected hit danger level indices on Thursday:

Naia Pasay City, Metro Manila – 43ºC

Science Garden Quezon City, Metro Manila – 42ºC

Dagupan City, Pangasinan – 43ºC

Tuguegarao City, Cagayan – 44ºC

NVSU Bayombong, Nueva Vizcaya – 43ºC

ISU Echague, Isabela – 44ºC

Baler (Radar), Aurora – 43ºC

Casiguran, Aurora – 44ºC

Iba, Zambales – 42ºC

Clark Airport (DMIA), Pampanga -42ºC

CLSU Muñoz, Nueva Ecija – 43ºC

Cubi Pt., Subic Bay Olongapo City – 43ºC

San Ildefonso, Bulacan – 45ºC

TAU Camiling, Tarlac – 45ºC

Hacienda Luisita, Tarlac – 42ºC

Tayabas City, Quezon – 42ºC

Sangley Point, Cavite City, Cavite – 44ºC

Ambulong, Tanauan Batangas – 43ºC

Infanta, Quezon – 43ºC

Alabat, Quezon – 43ºC

NAS-UPLB, Los Baños, Laguna -42ºC

Calapan, Oriental Mindoro – 42ºC

Coron, Palawan – 44ºC

San Jose, Occidental Mindoro – 43ºC

Puerto Princesa City, Palawan – 42ºC

Aborlan, Palawan – 42ºC

Cuyo, Palawan – 44ºC

Daet, Camarines Norte -43ºC

Legazpi City, Albay -42ºC

Masbate City, Masbate – 43ºC

Juban, Sorsogon – 43ºC

CBSUA-Pili, Camarines Sur – 42ºC

Mambusao, Capiz – 42ºC

Iloilo City, Iloilo – 44ºC

Dumangas, Iloilo – 44ºC

Siquijor, Siquijor – 42ºC

Catarman, Northern Samar – 43ºC

Catbalogan, Western Samar – 42ºC

Tacloban City, Leyte – 43ºC

VSU-Baybay, Leyte – 42ºC

Borongan, Eastern Samar – 45ºC

Guiuan, Eastern Samar – 43ºC

Maasin, Southern Leyte -44ºC

Dipolog, Zamboanga del Norte – 44ºC

Zamboanga City, Zamboanga del Sur – 43ºC

Davao City, Davao del Sur – 42ºC

Surigao City, Surigao del Norte – 44ºC

Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur – 47ºC

Butuan City, Agusan del Norte – 47ºC

AAUA SUG president appoints 40 aides, special advisers

The newly elected President of the Adekunle Ajasin University Students’ Union, Akungba-Akoko, (AAUASU), Ondo State, Folagbade Greatness Ayoola, popularly known as ‘Greatness of AAUASU,’ has appointed about 40 aides and special advisers.

In a memo issued from the Office of the Students’ Union President, the AAUASU leadership announced appointments into several positions, including Chief of Staff, personal assistants, directors and special advisers.

According to the memo, the appointments were aimed at ensuring effective administration within the students’ union.

The memo stated that the appointments were made ‘to ensure top-notch administration and proper effectiveness of the AAUASU presidency.’

According to the union leadership, all the appointees had been ‘screened and deemed fit to perform well in these responsibilities.’

Among those appointed are Olayinka Oluwaferanmi Emmanuel as Chief of Staff and Oluwafemi Olalekan Israel as Deputy Chief of Staff.

Other appointees include Omotunwase Success Ayomide as Senior Personal Assistant to the President, Obagaye Micheal as Personal Assistant II to the President, Olaleye Kausara as Secretary to the President and Ajileye Henry Olawale as Chief Press Secretary.

The administration also created several directorate positions, including Director of Protocol, Director of Media and Publicity, Director of Travels and Exchange, Director of Gender, Director of Photography and Videography, and Director of Housing, Agents and Accommodations.

The memo read in part, ‘Special advisers were appointed on Strategy, Special Duties, Logistics, Academic Affairs, Christianity and Spiritual Matters, Union Projects, Health Services, Social Media Engagements, Female Sensitisation and Women Affairs, Associations and Mobility, Campus Transportation, and Sports and Recreation.’

It added that other portfolios included ‘External Affairs, Sanitation, Presidential Movements and Physical Fitness, Letters and Documentation, Graphics and Content Creation, Budgeting and Finance, Law and Constitutional Matters, Students’ Welfare, Islamic Affairs, Political Matters, Fundraising and Sponsorships, Information and Communication Technology, and Security Affairs.’

Ayoola also announced security-related appointments, including ADC 1 (IPCC), while positions for ADC 2 (Man O War) and ADC 3 (Cadet Corps) are yet to be filled.

Taiwan’s new chapter in digital-driven healthcare

As the world confronts the challenges of population aging and healthcare workforce shortages, digital transformation in healthcare is no longer optional but essential. Taiwan has introduced the ‘Healthy Taiwan’ vision, placing ‘driving digital healthcare’ at its core. By integrating big data, artificial intelligence (AI), and cloud technologies, the system aims to improve healthcare quality and efficiency while moving toward a new healthcare model centered on holistic, person-centered care.

Taiwan benefits from both a robust ICT industry and the foundation of its National Health Insurance (NHI) system, which has accumulated high-quality healthcare data over time and laid a critical foundation for smart healthcare development. Building on this, we have introduced a national digital health platform known as the ‘3-3-3 Framework,’ integrating three major health spaces, three key health data standards, and three National AI governance centers to establish a comprehensive digital health infrastructure. Under this framework, we are promoting the integration of electronic medical records across more than 400 hospitals nationwide and adopting international standards such as Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) to ensure cross-institutional interoperability. Within a Zero Trust cybersecurity framework, healthcare data can be securely shared and effectively utilised.

With these policies in place, tangible results are already beginning to emerge. In chronic disease management, the ‘Family Physician Platform’ incorporates AI-based risk prediction to support physicians in delivering personalised care, facilitating a shift from reactive treatment to proactive health management. In terms of healthcare data integration, the MediCloud system provides real-time access to patient records and medication information, while enhanced visualisation of examination results and AI-assisted medical imaging interpretation further improve healthcare quality and patient safety.

Personal health management has also been strengthened. The ‘My Health Bank’ platform has surpassed a 50 per cent adoption rate and can be integrated with data from wearable devices, encouraging individuals to take a more active role in managing their health. In digitalisation of cancer treatment, Taiwan utilises the FHIR standard to exchange Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) data, accelerating the review process for catastrophic illness certification and related medical use, thereby improving access to timely treatment. In addition, the promotion of virtual health insurance cards, e-prescriptions, and telemedicine services is effectively overcoming temporal and geographical barriers, expanding access to rural and home-based care.

Taiwan has established a comprehensive governance framework to advance the development of clinical AI. Nineteen national medical AI centers have been established, covering responsible governance, clinical validation, and impact evaluation, ensuring that AI is safe and reliable across the entire process from development to application. To date, more than 50 AI medical products have received regulatory approval, supporting early cancer detection, prediction of cardiac events, and clinical decision-making support. Taiwan also has 13 hospitals ranked among Newsweek’s ‘World’s Best Smart Hospitals 2026,’ placing second in Asia and demonstrating strong international competitiveness. In addition, Taiwan is advancing federated learning platforms that enable cross-institutional and cross-border AI model validation without transferring sensitive data, and has begun collaborating with partners in Southeast Asia to establish trusted international data-sharing models.

Diseases know no borders, and global health governance requires comprehensive collaboration. Taiwan has established a smart healthcare ecosystem driven by data, enabled by AI, and supported by interoperable standards, extending medical services from hospitals into communities and daily life and realising holistic care. Taiwan’s practical experience demonstrates that we are capable of contributing to the international community.

However, Taiwan continues to be excluded from full participation in the World Health Organisation and its related mechanisms. United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 and World Health Assembly (WHA) Resolution 25.1 neither mention Taiwan nor exclude Taiwan from participating in WHO and the WHA.

We sincerely urge WHO and relevant stakeholders to support Taiwan’s inclusion in the global health system, thereby strengthening its completeness and resilience. Taiwan will continue to advance smart healthcare through digital innovation and contribute to global health and well-being. Together, we can realize the vision of health as a fundamental human right as set forth in the WHO Constitution, as well as the commitment of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals to leave no one behind.

Ecobank commits $3bn to boost African trade, value chains

Ecobank Group has announced a landmark $3 billion trade finance commitment over the next three years aimed at accelerating intra-African and global trade.

The announcement was made during the Africa Forward Summit held in Nairobi, as part of the bank’s active participation in the Africa-France Impact Coalition, an initiative led under the patronage of Emmanuel Macron and William Ruto.

According to Ecobank, the commitment is designed to support integrated value chains, strengthen economic sovereignty across the continent, and reinforce the group’s position as a key financial gateway connecting Africa to global markets.

Building on its operations across 34 African countries, Ecobank said it will collaborate with Development Finance Institutions (DFIs), including Proparco, to deploy the funds across strategic sectors such as agribusiness, manufacturing, and general commerce.

The bank stated that the initiative will expand access to competitive trade finance while supporting Africa’s long-term industrialisation agenda through investments in sustainable infrastructure, resilient supply chains, and human capital development.

By strengthening liquidity, providing guarantees, and deploying specialised trade instruments, Ecobank said African businesses will be better positioned to secure critical inputs, access new markets, and build resilience within increasingly complex global supply chains.

Speaking on the initiative, Jeremy Awori described the Africa-France Impact Coalition as a transformative platform for shared sovereignty and integrated supply chains.

‘Africa is rising and trading. By leveraging our Paris banking hub and partnerships with DFIs like Proparco, we are connecting African opportunities with global capital. This initiative is more than a financial commitment; it is a catalyst for trade, investment and talent – the pillars of Africa’s next decade,’ Awori said.

Ecobank noted that the $3 billion commitment reflects growing confidence in Africa’s capacity to industrialise, scale production, and compete effectively in global trade, especially at a time when intra-African trade is gaining momentum.

Central to the initiative is EBISA, Ecobank’s Paris-based banking platform, which will serve as the gateway connecting African enterprises with international markets.

The bank explained that EBISA will facilitate cross-border investment and trade flows while supporting ‘Made in Africa’ and ‘Co-Made in Africa and France’ business ecosystems.

Ecobank added that the initiative will focus not only on capital deployment but also on empowering entrepreneurs, SMEs, youth innovators, and women-led businesses across the continent.

The Public Finance puzzle: Why planning reforms fail

Uganda’s ambitious shift to programme-based national planning under the Third National Development Plan (NDP III) was meant to transform the way the government spends public money, delivers services, and measures results. Instead of ministries operating in silos, the country envisioned integrated programmes working together toward common national goals.

But after the expiry of the years in the period into NDP III implementation, a persistent mismatch between the traditional sector-based Public Financial Management (PFM) framework and the programme-based National Development Plan approach continues to undermine efficiency, accountability, and service delivery.

At the heart of the challenge lies a difficult reality: while Uganda has made major progress in digitising financial systems and improving oversight, implementation capacity remains weak, coordination fragmented, and corruption still drains public resources.

Bold shift in national planning

The NDP III marked a significant departure from Uganda’s previous planning model. The framework replaced fragmented sectoral planning with integrated, multi-sectoral programmes designed to improve coordination and strengthen public expenditure management.

Government also introduced modernised digital financial systems such as the Integrated Financial Management System (IFMS), Programme-Based Budgeting System (PBS), and Integrated Bank of Projects (IBP), all aimed at improving real-time tracking of public finances and projects.

According to Dr Wnnie Nabiddo, senior manager for research and development performance at the National Planning Authority (NPA), the reforms have yielded gains in budget transparency, accountability, and reporting.

‘The Public Financial Management framework has enhanced budget transparency and control by enabling more efficient, accurate, and real-time tracking of government finances and projects,’ she noted.

The Office of the Auditor General (OAG) also expanded its audit functions during the NDP III period, strengthening accountability through value-for-money audits and the now influential Certificate of Budget Compliance.

The certificate has become an important benchmark linking government expenditure to actual development results.

Capacity problem

Despite the reforms, Uganda’s transition to programme-based planning remains incomplete. Dr Nabiddo says many Ministries, Departments, Agencies (MDAs), and local governments still lack the technical and institutional capacity required to operationalise programme-based planning effectively.

In some institutions, she says fragmented planning practices still dominate. Planning remains aspirational rather than strategic, with weak prioritisation and poor sequencing of projects.

While digital systems are in place, which have improved reporting and expenditure tracking, implementation on the ground often tells a different story. Projects still face delays, cost overruns, and weak execution.

‘Closing implementation gaps requires streamlined processes, effective coordination, timely project execution, and enhanced capacity at all levels of government,’ Dr Nabiddo said.

Monitoring without action

Uganda has also strengthened monitoring and evaluation (M and E) systems during NDP III, introducing performance reporting frameworks and performance contracts for accounting officers. At the end of NDP Three, 30 percent of accounting officers’ performance assessments are tied to the implementation of NDP commitments.

Performance reporting has improved accountability, but experts say the findings are rarely used in decision-making.

‘There is limited follow-up and uptake of monitoring and evaluation findings,’ Dr Nabiddo observed. ‘M and E generates valuable insights, but follow-up and use remain inconsistent across MDAs and local governments.’

Weak implementation of recommendations has limited the impact of these systems on planning and budgeting.

The government has operationalised the Integrated NDP Monitoring and Evaluation System in some institutions, but full integration with key systems such as IFMS, PBS, Human Capital Management Systems, and other management information systems remains incomplete.

Many agencies still rely on stand-alone systems, manual reporting processes, and irregular reviews.

Data gaps undermining planning

Reliable statistics are essential for evidence-based planning, yet Uganda still struggles with fragmented and outdated data systems.

Although national statistics production has improved through surveys, censuses, and administrative data systems, gaps remain significant.

Data is often released outside the planning cycle, limiting its usefulness for budgeting and policy formulation.

Administrative systems across MDAs and local governments remain largely manual, fragmented, and unstandardised.

National evaluations also remain weakly institutionalised. According to experts, many evaluations are ad hoc, underfunded, and insufficiently integrated into the planning and budgeting cycle.

Oversight institutions have, nonetheless, become more assertive during the NDP III period.

The Office of the Auditor General expanded audit coverage across central government entities, statutory bodies, local governments, and development projects.

Meanwhile, Parliament has taken a more active role in scrutinising budgets, expenditure reports, and audit findings, contributing to stronger accountability debates.

Government has also made efforts to mainstream cross-cutting priorities such as climate change, disability inclusion, gender equality, youth empowerment, refugee management, science and innovation, health, nutrition, and implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Agenda 2063, and East African Community Vision 2050. But integrating these issues consistently across all levels of government remains a challenge.

Corruption takes centre stage

As Uganda prepares for the Fourth National Development Plan (NDP IV), corruption has emerged as a central concern.

Dr Nabiddo revealed that during the recent Kyankwanzi retreat with Members of Parliament, President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni directed that corruption be incorporated as a key consideration within NDP IV and the country’s ten-fold growth strategy.

‘This directive echoes a clear recognition that corruption is a major structural impediment to growth,’ she explained.

Corruption, she said, undermines public expenditure effectiveness, weakens investor confidence, and constrains service delivery.

Government’s new reform push

The Acting Accountant General, Mr Godfrey Ssemugooma, says the government is pursuing reforms to tackle corruption, duplication of institutions, and financial mismanagement.

‘Public finance is the driving force that moves a nation from aspiration to achievement, from potential to prosperity,’ Mr Ssemugooma said.

According to him, Uganda’s macroeconomic stability depends not only on the Ministry of Finance and Bank of Uganda, but also on disciplined financial management practices across all government institutions.

‘When financial reports are timely, decision-making improves. When systems are credible, markets gain confidence in the government. When expenditure is well managed, deficits remain manageable,’ he said.

The reforms include tighter financial controls, automation of procurement and asset management systems, and restrictions preventing diversion of funds from capital projects to recurrent expenditure.

Government is also intensifying the Rationalisation of Government Agencies and Public Expenditure (RAPEX) programme, aimed at eliminating duplication and reducing bureaucracy.

Ssemugooma cited past arrangements where the Treasury allocated funds to one agency only for the money to be transferred again to another government institution.

‘This created unnecessary bureaucracy and duplication. RAPEX is about ensuring government works as one coordinated institution,’ he explained.

Domestic arrears and delayed projects

Despite progress, major financial management challenges remain unresolved.

Government is still struggling with procurement inefficiencies, delayed project implementation, domestic arrears, and constrained fiscal space.

For the first time in Uganda’s history, the government budgeted Shs1.4 trillion to clear domestic arrears. While payments were delayed pending verification by the Auditor General and KPMG, approximately Shs 900 billion has already been released.

Still, many government projects continue to miss deadlines, exceed budgets, or fail to meet expected quality standards.

Capacity gaps at both central and local government levels continue to affect service delivery. Mr Ssemugooma also acknowledged a deeper institutional problem: a culture focused more on compliance than outcomes.

‘So long as the law is followed, some institutions consider themselves successful whether they deliver results or not,’ he said. ‘That mindset shift-from compliance to measurable outcomes-remains a major challenge,’ Mr Ssemugooma said.

Private sector frustrations

The private sector says delayed government payments remain a major obstacle to economic growth.

Ms Erinah Masiga, head of finance at Uganda Baati Limited, said private firms supplying goods and services to the government still suffer from the delayed release of funds.

Delayed payments often affect cash flows, investment decisions, and business sustainability.