K.Y. Amoako - ACET Founder
Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
The African Center for Economic
Transformation (ACET) presented its 2014 African Transformation Report on
Ghana’s economy indicating that the economy achieved record-breaking growth in
recent years.
However, ACET noted that in spite of the
record-breaking growth, the economy in not ‘transforming.’
At the launch of the report, leading
economists, policymakers and business leaders gathered at the Alisa Hotel in
Accra on Monday to discuss to the problems before coming out with a new
framework for Ghana’s economic transformation.
In attendance were gurus like Dr. Kwesi
Botchwey, Chairman of Ghana National Gas Company, Ken Ofori-Atta, Chief Executive Officer
(CEO) of Databank, Ishmael Yamson, former Chair of the Economic Advisory Council and Nana Owusu Afari, former president of
the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI).
Others were P.V. Obeng,
Chairman of the National Development Planning Commission (NDPC), Kwame Pianim, former Chairman of United Bank for Africa, K.Y. Amoako, former Executive Secretary of
the UN’s Economic Commission for Africa and founder of ACET, Prof. Ernest
Aryeetey, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana, Dr. Yaw Ansu, ACET’s
Chief Economist, Abena D. Oduro, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Economics
at the University of Ghana Prof. Joe Amoako-Tuffour, Senior Adviser at ACET as
well as Tony Oteng-Gyasi, CEO of Tropical Cables and Conductors.
The report introduced the African Transformation Index, which ranks 21
Sub-Saharan countries on their economic transformation.
Ghana came in 16th place overall, a drop of seven places since
2000 partly because the country’s exports are becoming less sophisticated:
foodstuffs and gold dominate (82%) while the share of manufactured products is dropping
(around 15% in 2008).
In countries that successfully transformed earlier, such as Brazil,
Indonesia, Malaysia, and South Korea, the opposite trend has occurred since the
1980s.
In ACET’s view, while
transformation has become a ‘buzzword’ recently, the report had clarified its
meaning and provided a framework for measuring it to guide country strategies.
The report said that Africa’s current growth patterns are not sustainable
and will not drive development or equality and said Africa needed growth with
DEPTH—namely Diversification, Export competitiveness, increased Productivity,
and Technological innovation—all leading to Human wellbeing.
On foreign direct
investment (FDI), the report looked beyond the headline numbers to investigate
how much is going to manufacturing and revealed that Ghana had four
manufacturing plants financed by FDI, compared with Kenya’s 11 and South
Africa’s 61.
Mr. Pianim suggested that the report can be used as a
guide to help move Ghana up the ranking, saying “what we have here in this
excellent report… is an organizing framework for economic transformation.”
Ms. Oduro, on her part, said there was the need for a consistent national
vision that transcends party lines, saying “what is missing in this country is
continuity of policy. Everyone wants to come in and show they are doing
something different.”
P.V. Obeng said “we have become
devotees of the principles of transformation, and we have to find the political
system that will transform our economy,” before underscoring the need for the NDPC
to be depoliticized.
K.Y. Amoako, ACET’s president and founder, explained that his outfit is a
“think-and-do” tank that has supported several African
governments in policy formulation as well as implementation.
He said the “transformation must be a national project.
No comments:
Post a Comment