Uganda stands at the edge of a moment it has chased for decades — a moment when the country finally stops crawling toward prosperity and begins to run. The Budget Speech for FY 2026/27 is not just another ritual of numbers and applause at Kololo. It is a declaration of intent, a statement that the era of incremental progress is over.
The government is now speaking the language of leaps, not steps; of multiplication, not addition. The Tenfold Growth Strategy is no longer a slogan. It is the battle plan for transforming Uganda into a 500‑billion‑dollar economy, and the message is unmistakable: the time for timid ambition has passed.
The Minister of Finance does not hide the urgency. He reminds the nation that Uganda enters this new political term “from a position of strength,” with inflation low, exports rising, investment surging and the economy projected to grow at 10.2 percent once oil begins to flow later this year.
But beneath the calm confidence lies a deeper truth — that the old model of growth is no longer enough. Uganda cannot afford to grow by 5 or 6 percent when its population is exploding, its youth are restless, and global competition is unforgiving.
The country must grow faster, deeper and more deliberately. It must grow in a way that reaches the boda rider in Gulu, the market vendor in Kalerwe, the farmer in Isingiro, the youth in Arua, the creative in Makindye. Growth must stop being a statistic and become a lived experience.
That is why the government’s first weapon in this tenfold push is the mass mobilisation of households into the money economy. For years, Uganda’s greatest economic tragedy has been that millions of its citizens work hard yet remain poor because they operate outside the commercial system.
The Budget Speech confronts this head‑on. The Parish Development Model is described not as a cash‑drop programme but as “a structural transformation programme,” a deliberate attempt to uproot subsistence from the soil of Uganda’s economy.
With Shs 4.4 trillion already injected into 10,589 parishes and over 4 million beneficiaries reached, the government is now shifting from mere access to capital toward productivity, value addition and market access. The next phase is even more ambitious: building a self‑sustaining financial ecosystem — ultimately a PDM Bank — that will outlive political cycles and permanently anchor rural households in commercial activity.
But PDM is only the beginning. The government is throwing its weight behind every rung of the enterprise ladder. Emyooga, with its 2.48 million members, is becoming a national engine of micro‑enterprise.
The Katale Loan Facility is injecting affordable capital into the beating heart of Uganda’s urban economy — the markets where millions trade daily. The Small Business Fund is rescuing SMEs that survived COVID only to be suffocated by expensive credit. The Agricultural Credit Facility is pushing farmers toward mechanisation, irrigation and commercial scale.
Large‑scale farmers are being supported to expand grain and animal feed production, while Uganda Development Bank, capitalised with Shs 1.6 trillion, is financing the factories, hotels, farms and construction firms that form the backbone of industrialisation.
Women and youth are not left behind; their funds continue to grow, and even the creative sector, long ignored, now has a Shs 33 billion revolving fund. In total, Shs 2.49 trillion is being poured into wealth‑creation programmes this year. This is not charity. It is economic mobilisation on a national scale.
Yet even this massive mobilisation is only the foundation. The real engine of tenfold growth lies in the four strategic sectors the government calls ATMS: Agro‑Industrialisation, Tourism, Minerals (including oil and gas), and Science, Technology and Innovation.
These are not random choices. They are Uganda’s strongest cards in the global economic game, the sectors where the country has natural advantage, global demand and transformative potential.
Agro‑industrialisation is the crown jewel. Uganda’s soil is generous, its climate forgiving, its farmers hardworking. But for too long, the country has exported raw commodities and imported finished products.
The Budget Speech is blunt: Uganda’s future will not come from producing more raw goods but from “increasing productivity, expanding value addition, strengthening agro‑processing and improving market access.” That is why government is investing in agricultural science — completing the anti‑tick vaccine facility at Nakyesasa, producing 36 million doses in its first year, and advancing research on disease‑resistant crops and livestock.
It is why irrigation projects — Kabuyanda, Atari, Wadelai, Acomai, Namaitsu, Chembombai, Sipi — are being accelerated to free farmers from the tyranny of rainfall. It is why mechanisation centres and animal disease control hubs are being built across the country. It is why coffee production is expanding into Northern Uganda, with over 1.4 million seedlings distributed. Uganda is not just trying to feed itself; it is trying to dominate regional and global markets.
Tourism, too, is rising from the ashes of COVID‑19 with a vengeance. With receipts now at USD 1.86 billion — higher than pre‑pandemic levels — the government is doubling down on tourism infrastructure, security and economic diplomacy.
Tourism is one of the few sectors where Uganda can earn billions without importing raw materials. It is a sector where beauty, culture and wildlife become currency. In a world hungry for authentic experiences, Uganda is positioning itself as a premium destination.
But the most dramatic transformation is coming from beneath the ground. With commercial oil production set to begin later this year, Uganda is preparing for its first taste of petro‑driven growth. The Budget Speech projects a leap to 10.2 percent growth — a level not seen since the reform era of the 1990s.
Oil will not only bring export earnings; it will ignite petrochemicals, steel, construction, logistics, services and manufacturing. It will attract investors, expand infrastructure and create jobs. Minerals such as gold, iron ore and rare earths will add to this momentum. Uganda is entering the age of resource‑powered industrialisation.
Science, technology and innovation form the final pillar of the ATMS engine. In a world where data is the new oil and innovation the new currency, Uganda cannot afford to lag behind. The government is investing in digital transformation, innovation hubs, ICT infrastructure and creative industries. This is not a luxury. It is the price of global relevance.
Yet even the most powerful engines cannot run without fuel. That fuel is the national enablers — macroeconomic stability, infrastructure, domestic revenue, human capital and market access.
The Budget Speech proudly notes that inflation is at 3.8 percent, the shilling is stable, foreign reserves have doubled to USD 6 billion, exports have grown by 204 percent in five years, and remittances have surged to USD 2.8 billion.
These are not abstract numbers. They are the pillars of investor confidence. They are the reason foreign direct investment stands at USD 3.2 billion. They are the reason Uganda can dream of tenfold growth.
Domestic revenue mobilisation is equally critical. Government plans to raise Shs 45.6 trillion this year, a bold step toward fiscal independence. Infrastructure remains a priority, with public debt having financed roads, electricity, water systems, industrial parks, ICT backbone and urban development.
These investments reduce the cost of doing business and make Uganda competitive. Human capital development continues through expanded access to health and education. And exports, now at USD 18.04 billion, are being pushed through value addition, regional integration and trade diplomacy.
In the end, the Tenfold Growth Strategy is not a miracle. It is a choice — a choice to mobilise households, concentrate investment, strengthen enablers and unleash Uganda’s potential. It is a choice to stop surviving and start thriving.
The Budget Speech captures this spirit with clarity: the challenge is not just to grow the economy, but to ensure that growth “translates into jobs, household incomes, enterprise development and prosperity for every Ugandan.” That is the promise of tenfold growth. That is the mission of FY 2026/27. And that is the future Uganda is now racing toward.
The writer is the Deputy Resident City Commissioner for Nakawa Division in Kampala.





























