President John Mahama - Ghana
Posted
on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Tuesday,
December 16, 2014
President
John Dramani Mahama appears to be singing a new tune regarding the time-lines
his government’s self-inflicted economic crisis will abate.
After
failing to fulfill most of his government’s campaign promises and promising not
to make anymore promises, the President is now singing a new tune that
Ghanaians should wait for the end of 2015 before getting some respite from the
economic crisis.
It
started in 2013 when the President said the vehicle of governance was in first
gear and that 2014 was going to be economic turnaround for the country.
Economic Turnaround
On
Monday June 9, at a meeting with some Muslim chiefs at the Flagstaff House in
Accra, President Mahama declared emphatically that 2014 was supposed to be a
turnaround year for Ghana’s economy whilst acknowledging that it was hugely
challenged.
"It
is not Ghana alone. Those challenges affect almost all countries in the world.
Even the developed countries are facing those challenges...All of them are
going through austerity and are having to take measures to protect their
economies. In Ghana we are doing the same thing," he said.
The
President went ahead to outlining some of the causes of the difficulties the
economy is going through, including fall in prices of major primary export
commodities.
"Gold
and cocoa are our major exports. Between 2012 and 2013, as a result of the drop
in gold and cocoa prices on the international markets Ghana lost export
revenues to the tune of $1.3 billion. And that is what accounts for some of the
difficulties we are going through,” he said.
"We
are doing everything possible to ensure that [the problems are solved]. As I
said this year is a turnaround year and that the economy will come out of the
recession the country is facing," he had promised.
He
repeated the same message during the end Ramadan fasting in Kumasi assuring the
Muslim community and Ghanaians as well that everything will be ok by year end
which now turned to 2015.
Even
before the declaration, the President has said at his first anniversary that
the vehicle of government shifting to second gear from first gear and called on
Ghanaians to watch out for more.
All
the promises have not materialise with latest revelation that bloated civil
wage bill is to be blamed for the mess.
Al-Jazeera Promise
With
the economy still seriously challenged as 2014 is nearing an end, President
Mahama has now shifted his ‘turnaround economy’ to 2015, assuring the
people that the current challenges facing the economy would be ‘over’ by next
year.
Speaking on Al-Jazeera
News at the weekend, the President said Ghanaians had every reason to expect
better times in 2015.
He said he was basing
his prediction on programmes his government was undertaking as well as an
International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme which is expected to take off next
year even though DAILY GUIDE is reliably informed that an outright fund
programme might not be possible in 2015.
Going
HIPC
Besides, inflation has hit a five-year high with
cost of credit currently hovering around 35%, while Ghana's public debt has hit
levels which could see the country back to Highly Indebted Poor Country (HIPC)
according to some economics experts.
“I believe that the
worse is over; things should get better. Inflation is expected to start
declining from early next year and by end next year we are going to be at a
better place than we are this year,” he told the renowned network.
The President insisted
that there will not be any freeze on public sector wages as part of the IMF conditionalities
for the bailout programme.
Payroll
Admission
“Increase in the payroll has been one of the problems we are grappling and it is a factor which has brought where we are, but it is not about a freeze it is about making the pay rise predictable over the three years.
“Increase in the payroll has been one of the problems we are grappling and it is a factor which has brought where we are, but it is not about a freeze it is about making the pay rise predictable over the three years.
“So we’re looking to
negotiate what those increases would be so that it makes it predictable – how
government’s expenditure is going to go but I think that is something we can
deal with,” he said.
IMANI
Boss
President
of policy analysis think tank IMANI-Ghana Franklin Cudjoe commended the
President for openly admitting that Ghana was in economic crises and called on
Ghanaians to remember him in prayers.
He said on
his Facebook page after the
President’s interview: “You've got to give it to President Mahama. The
Aljazeera interview revealed to me a 360 degree presentation of the Mahama I
knew when we were both guests discussing the need for a national vision on
Super Morning Show before he became Vice-President.”
He said “The level of detail and the back bone with which he delivers his answers is always executed perfectly. Often he leaves even the sophisticated little room to object when he evades a few crucial questions,” he said.
“In the Aljazeera interview, he was honest about the challenges facing the economy and even suggests he will be glad to pay the ultimate political price...
He said “The level of detail and the back bone with which he delivers his answers is always executed perfectly. Often he leaves even the sophisticated little room to object when he evades a few crucial questions,” he said.
“In the Aljazeera interview, he was honest about the challenges facing the economy and even suggests he will be glad to pay the ultimate political price...
“When the interview was over, I asked myself, where did we go wrong? How did such a fine young gentleman, who looked every bit serious for a country such as Ghana, end up with so much confusion in deeds?” he asked.
“Whilst I
still look forlornly at the results of President’s Mahama’s stewardship so far,
I have but one thing to say, let us remember Mahama in our prayers so he could
leave a legacy that he himself would be proud of,” Mr Cudjoe added.
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