By Kellen Owente
If there is one dream President Museveni has carried and repeatedly expressed over the years, it is not about praise, monuments or political victories. It is the simple but profound hope of seeing every Ugandan household rise beyond poverty and secure a dignified place in the nation’s economic journey.
Whether addressing farmers, youth groups, religious leaders or Parliament, he has consistently returned to one central message: Uganda’s transformation will only be complete when every household is integrated into the money economy and actively engaged in productive enterprise.
That dream was once again brought into sharp focus last week during the reading of the 2026/27 National Budget at Kololo.
As leaders applauded the country’s economic progress and listened to the Finance Minister, Hon. Henry Musasizi, outline government priorities, the President returned to what he considers Uganda’s most critical unfinished mission ,ensuring that ordinary citizens are firmly connected to wealth creation opportunities.
He reminded the nation that about 33% of Ugandans still remain outside the money economy, and questioned why citizens should continue to endure poverty when significant public resources meant to transform their livelihoods are lost through misuse, diversion, and corruption.
His concern is direct and unavoidable. No development programme can succeed if resources do not reach the intended beneficiaries. Every stolen shilling is not merely a financial loss to the state ,it is a stolen opportunity from a household struggling to rise above poverty.
Over the years, Government has made deliberate and large-scale investments aimed at expanding household incomes and anchoring wealth creation at the grassroots.
In the 2026/27 financial year, an additional Shs2.49 trillion has been allocated to wealth creation initiatives. Over the last five years, Shs4.4 trillion has been disbursed to all 10,589 parishes under the Parish Development Model (PDM), directly targeting millions of Ugandans at the household level.
Government has also invested Shs760 billion in Emyooga, establishing thousands of SACCOs and empowering over 2.48 million members. Through the Uganda Development Bank, Shs1.6 trillion has been deployed to finance strategic enterprises, while youth and women empowerment programmes continue to expand access to productive capital.
These figures point to an undeniable reality: Uganda is no longer constrained by lack of policy, funding, or programmes. The foundation for transformation has been laid. The remaining gap lies in execution, discipline, and accountability.
Across the country, there are already visible examples of transformation , households that have moved from subsistence to enterprise because they accessed capital and used it productively. These cases demonstrate that poverty can be defeated when opportunity is properly utilised.
This is why the President’s message remains both urgent and consistent. Wealth creation is not a government project alone; it is a national responsibility that demands discipline at every level.
Leaders must protect public resources with vigilance and ensure that programmes reach their intended beneficiaries. Citizens must reject corruption and commit to productive investment. Beneficiaries must treat these interventions not as handouts, but as platforms for long-term wealth creation.
Uganda’s path to prosperity now depends less on policy declaration and more on execution discipline ,converting funding into enterprises, and opportunity into sustainable wealth.
After years of advancing the same vision with consistency, the question is no longer whether the message is clear.
The question is whether we, as Ugandans, are finally ready and willing to turn this dream into reality.
This must be the kisanja of no sleep , an era of relentless execution where every leader, institution and citizen takes responsibility for building a nation where every household has a place in the money economy and every family can look to the future with confidence.
The writer works with Presidential Press Unit ( PPU) .