Dear Editor,
The recent announcement by the Ministry of Agriculture to distribute grants to 7,000 individuals within the fisherfolk sector raises more questions about “phantom math” than it does about genuine relief. In a climate where the formal taxpayer is squeezed for every cent, the sudden emergence of a round, unverified number of beneficiaries is not just an anomaly; it is an affront to fiscal transparency.
The Math that doesn’t add up
Where did the number 7,000 come from? In the absence of a national registry or a verified census of this industry, it appears the ministry has worked backward: they didn’t count the people to find the cost; they counted the cash and invented the people to match.
Subsidizing the informal, penalizing the productive
The most jarring reality is that 90% of these recipients operate outside the tax net. While the self-employed and informal workers certainly face hardships, a system that prioritizes those who do not contribute to the “national purse” over the compliant taxpayers who fill it is a system upside down.
“When public funds are used to subsidize the untaxed while the tax-paying middle class is ignored, the government isn’t providing a safety net—it’s managing a patronage system.”
The “Ghost” in the Machine
Reports are already surfacing of “non-business” individuals—friends, relatives, and political associates—collecting these grants. Without a public, searchable database of recipients, this “relief effort” is a black box.
Hard questions for the Ministry
We deserve more than a press release; we deserve an audit.
Public money is not a gift from the Ministry; it is a trust held on behalf of the taxpayer. It is time we stop treating the national budget like a private checking account for political optics.