Author's note: This piece was wriiten on 24/4/2013. It is being posted today, because I was unable to do so on the day. Please read on:
Driving through the city of Accra yesterday, I was struck by the sense of optimism in the air. It was palpable.
Far from being in despair, as the doomsayers in our midst insist, it
occurred to me that on the whole, Ghanaians are indeed a happy people -
many full of hope about their own future prospects.
Despite the buffeting the economy is experiencing, with an escalating
budget deficit caused largely by a ballooning public-sector wage bill,
many middle class Ghanaians are prospering - and the evidence is in the
amazing buildings springing up all over Accra; the many shops selling a
cornucopia of expensive consumer items found in the best shops in
Europe, Asia and the USA and Canada, etc; and the many new saloon cars and
SUV's one sees on our traffic-choked roads.
Clearly, one part of the nation is doing rather well, whiles those they are
leaving behind need to be given a helping hand, to lift themselves out
of poverty by their own bootstraps.
We need not however wring our hands in despair about the plight of the
disadvantaged. Something positive can done to give more of them a
helping hand - and give them a fighting chance to succeed.
To enable the government to empower the millions of disadvantaged
Ghanaians - particularly the rural poor - keen to escape from the
poverty trap, initiatives like the Local Enterprises Skills Development
Programme (LESDEP), and the Ghana Youth Employment and Entrepreneurial
Development Agency (GYEEDA), must be fine-tuned and made more
accessible to people at the grassroots-level nationwide.
In addition to the taxi cabs being provided by the GYEEDA on a
"work-and-pay" installment basis, for example, mini-buses must also be
provided on the same terms - with a small profit margin added to the
total amount to be repaid by beneficiaries - to pay for insurance
against defaulting, and to support that particular GYEEDA initiative.
Naturally, satellite tracking of all vehicles provided beneficiaries by GYEEDA is vital - and ought be made possible.
To make such schemes financially sustainable, it would help if all those
who wanted to take part in the LESDEP and GYEEDA initiatives, were
made to buy a special lottery ticket, which would automatically qualify
them to participate in those initiatives.
The money raised by the National Lotteries Authority (NLA) in that
special lottery, would help augment the money provided LESDEP and
GYEEDA by taxpayers.
Better management that rids the initiatives of the alleged corruption bedeviling them, would also make more funds available to expand those
initiatives right across the nation.
President Mahama says he wants to make Ghana a land of opportunities for its people.
Well, yet another way to create opportunities for SME's in Ghana's
furniture industry, for example, is to implement the brilliant idea by a
member of the National Democratic Congress' (NDC) communications team -
Mr. Fred Agbenu - that government ministries, departments and
agencies ought to be obliged to buy only made in Ghana furniture.
The government ought to bring a bill before Parliament so that that brilliant idea can be passed into law.
That will create jobs and help furniture makers in Ghana to grow and
prosper - if implemented by the NDC regime of President Mahama.
Above all, to enable the government to have the wherewithal to fund such
empowerment initiatives, in addition to cutting down on wasteful
expenditure in the public sector, President Mahama's government must do
all it can to plug the loopholes that enable corrupt individuals to
siphon off taxpayers' money.
New legislation that financially rewards those who provide information
about the theft of public funds, which leads to the prosecution and
conviction of those found guilty of corruption by the law courts, ought
to be brought before Parliament too, and passed quickly.
It will help expose the many crooked schemes devised by sundry rogues
and nation-wreckers engaged in corruption, which makes it possible
for the dishonest to milk Mother Ghana dry.
That is one of the most effective ways of ensuring that the public purse is protected by the citizenry.
Finally, to help us transition to a low-emission development model - and
as part of a forest climate services partnership between Ghana and
Norway (and other Scandinavian nations), wealth could be created in
rural Ghana, by protecting existing forests and through agro-forestry
initiatives.
A similar partnership between Guyana and Norway, in which Guyana
actively protects its forests to mitigate the impact of global climate
change, has earned Guyana about some US$115 millions thus far. It is
money that could dramatically transform rural Ghana
As part of such a low carbon development agenda, for example, rural
cooperatives could be formed to rehabilitate land destroyed by illegal
mining - by growing jetropha trees on them to produce bio-diesel.
Through lateral thinking on the part of our leaders, it is indeed
possible for the Ghanaian nation-state to play its part, in empowering
the disadvantaged in Ghana.
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Email: peakofi.thompson@gmail.com.
Saturday, 27 April 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment