Paramaribo, 30 April – The opening of public debate on Suriname’s 2026 national budget has been delayed, after National Assembly Speaker Ashwin Adhin confirmed that critical preconditions have yet to be met before formal deliberations can begin. In an interview with local outlet Starnieuws, Adhin explained that amendments to the country’s Comptability Act must first be finalized to create a legal framework for the budget process. On top of the required legislative changes, the executive branch has yet to submit several supplementary policy documents and full financial datasets required for parliamentary review.
Adhin emphasized that budget deliberation is far more than a procedural formality for the legislature. It is the core mechanism through which parliament exercises its constitutional oversight over government spending, sovereign debt management, public revenue streams, and the implementation of administration policy priorities. Launching debate without complete, accurate information would be irresponsible, he said, adding that the government must first provide full clarity on all outstanding line items and planned expenditure allocations. Once all required documentation is received, the 2026 budget will be immediately placed on the assembly’s urgent agenda. Adhin also noted that the council of ministers still awaits a comprehensive national debt plan from Finance and Planning Minister Adelien Wijnerman, a key document required for thorough review.
The debate over the 2026 budget comes as the Suriname Court of Audit highlighted long-running systemic flaws in public financial management in its recently released 2025 annual report. While the court acknowledged that incremental progress has been made in recent reforms, it found that misalignment between policy priorities and budget implementation remains a persistent shortcoming. Internal control systems within individual government ministries also continue to function inadequately, the audit body found.
As a result of these weak controls, errors and irregularities in public spending are not always caught in a timely fashion, the court reported. Additional challenges remain around upholding integrity and compliance with existing financial laws and regulations. Recent audits into domain land management, social welfare benefits, and public subsidy distribution confirmed that gaps in oversight and irregular spending practices are still widespread. The court also flagged compliance with financial reporting requirements by state-owned enterprises as an ongoing high-priority concern.
Against this backdrop, Adhin argued that rigorous, careful scrutiny of the 2026 budget is non-negotiable. Parliament must have full clarity to trace exactly how public resources are allocated, what existing sovereign debt obligations the government carries, and how new financing will be deployed to meet policy goals. The Court of Audit echoed this priority, noting that transparency and accountability are foundational to maintaining public trust in government institutions. It also stressed that discharge approval by the National Assembly is a critical link in the state’s financial accountability cycle; without completing this step, national financial oversight remains incomplete.
Adhin reaffirmed that while moving the budget process forward in a timely manner is important, speed cannot come at the cost of robust, thorough parliamentary financial oversight. The budget will only be taken up for full debate once all preconditions are met. “We will not rush this process at the expense of sound governance,” Adhin said, adding that once the required legal amendments are passed and all missing documents are submitted, the National Assembly will advance the budget process with full urgency.









