Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
The recent survey of the Centre for
Democratic Development (CDD) has revealed that the majority of Ghanaians
believe the country is heading in a wrong direction.
The survey captured the mood of the respondents
who were disillusioned about the state of hopelessness in the country, with a
good majority of them holding unemployment, power crisis and education as key
priorities that should drive the policy direction of candidates in this year's
elections.
“The mood of the electorate going into the 2016 polls is broadly negative. Seven in 10 Ghanaians believe the country is going in the wrong direction; and nearly half blame this ‘completely’ or ‘mostly’ on the government. Only a quarter think the country is headed in the right direction,” Senior Research Fellow at CDD, Daniel Armah Attoh, told journalists in Accra yesterday during the presentation of the report on ‘Popular opinions on issues at stake in the 2016 election.’
CDD said opinions
of 2,400 adults of voting age were sampled between July 2 and
18, 2016.
The respondents claimed
that although the economic conditions are not the best, their voting pattern
would not be swayed by gifts from politicians.
They were spread across 163 districts and 291 towns and villages in the
country.
The survey also
indicated that a little over one-third of Ghanaians are of the
opinion that their living conditions are better than that of others.
Majority of the
respondents, Mr Attoh said, are optimistic that their living conditions would
be improved at least a year from now.
This category of
respondents claimed that the hardship was largely because the government had
performed poorly in the delivery of a range of social goods.
To improve their
living conditions, a narrow majority of Ghanaians still believe that a new
government would do a better job when voted into power.
“Indeed a narrow
majority believe that another political party can do a better job and factors
such as bad roads, government corruption, high prices of goods and others would
influence the outcome of the votes…,” Mr Armah Attoh said.
Assessing the
performance of President John Mahama, his approval rating took a dip.
“Nonetheless, Ghanaians are split in their
evaluation of the job performance of the president and Members of Parliament
(MPs). Nearly half approve the overall job performance of the president and
their respective MPs, but the rest disapprove,” Armah
Attoh said.
Influential Factors
According to the survey report, the majority
of Ghanaians have said factors, including candidates’ offer of gifts, their
religious faith, or the region a candidate comes from, will not influence the
way they will vote during the December 7 general elections.
According to them, they would rather
concentrate on candidates who would offer to fix bad roads, power crisis, high
prices of food, among other national problems.
“Nearly four in every 10 Ghanaians say
they vote on the basis of the merits of the candidate, and that party affiliation
is secondary,” it said, adding, “A majority of Ghanaians ‘strongly agree’ or
‘agree’ with the statement that they vote for the parliamentary candidate of
the political party that advances ideas they share.”
The survey findings which respondents were
selected nationally said, “Solid majorities of Ghanaians claim the following
factors would have a great deal of or some influence on their choice of
candidates and parties in 2016: bad roads, government corruption, power
outages, high prices of food, access to medical care, use of abusive language,
posture of politicians, etc.”
Priority Issues
The report said Ghanaians place
unemployment, electricity and education on top of policy priorities they want
the 2016 polls to address.
“And yet, a clear majority assesses
government’s performance in addressing their policy priorities negatively,” it
said, adding, “Indeed, a narrow majority seems to believe that another
political party can do a better job of addressing their first most important
problem.”
The report said, “Nearly half approve the
overall job performance of the president and their respective MPs, but the rest
disapprove.”
Economic situation
According to the report, “Majority of
Ghanaians offer highly negative evaluation of national economic (7 in 10) and
their own living conditions (65 percent), adding, “However, more are optimistic
rather than pessimistic about the prospect of improvement a year from now.”
It said the government received poor
grades “from a clear majority of Ghanaians across a range of macroeconomic
indicators: narrowing income gaps, keeping prices down, creating jobs,
improving living standards of the poor and managing the economy.”
It continued, “Majorities rate the
government as ‘very’ or ‘fairly’ bad in the delivery of a range of economic and
social goods: providing reliable electricity, combating corruption, ensuring
enough food for everyone, providing water and sanitation, improving basic
health services and maintaining bridges/roads and addressing educational needs.
“Government performance is somewhat
positive with respect to crime and violence prevention, where a minority (4 in
10) offers negative assessment.”
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