President John Dramani Mahama has stated that the first term of his government focused on infras ... read full comment
General News of Thursday, 4 February 2016
Source: Starrfmonline.com
My 2nd term is for cash in your pockets – Mahama
President John Dramani Mahama has stated that the first term of his government focused on infrastructural developments and job creation across the country.
According to him, his second term will focus on "putting money into the pockets of Ghanaians".
He said having money without basic infrastructure is economically meaningless adding that it is better to sacrifice for more pressing needs in life.
“Times come when we have to squeeze ourselves a bit to do the precious things that we need in life. We cannot have money in our pockets when the roads are not good.
"What is the use of money in your pocket when you are sick and you cannot get a hospital to be cured. So sometimes when we are squeezing ourselves it is to do the essential things in life.
“It is good politics to say things are hard but the money we are raising, we are using for things that would benefit this country, you cannot have jobs when you don’t have social infrastructure, so we have spent these last four years to bring these social infrastructure back to scratch.
“So when I win the second term then we will start putting money in your pockets,” President Mahama said when he commissioned the Fourth Community Day Senior High School at Nyanoa-Kwaobaah in the Upper West Akyem District of the Eastern region on Thursday.
GH 8 years ago
development model for emerging African nations.
So what went wrong? How and why did the brilliant, charismatic Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, the outspoken Marxist/Communist, Pan-African Founding Father of Ghana, begin his political s ... read full comment
development model for emerging African nations.
So what went wrong? How and why did the brilliant, charismatic Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, the outspoken Marxist/Communist, Pan-African Founding Father of Ghana, begin his political slide and ultimate ignominious fall from power?
The list of reasons is lengthy and complex but it is safe to say, that Nkrumah's decline began in early 1960. Until then, the population, because he had lead them to Independence from Britain, was generally willing to overlook Nkrumah's Marxist/Communist ideological pronouncements, his costly demands for pomp and splendor and his assumption of more and more power, in many cases, usurping elected and Traditional Authority.
However, beginning in mid-1960, at about the time that he assumed the Presidency and approved the new Republican Constitution, the economic fallibility of Ghana clearly manifested itself and materially effected the lives of all Ghanaians. From 1960 to 1965, world cocoa prices plummeted, and the enormous development spending begun by Nkrumah four years earlier, severely impacted the country's economy. Foreign exchange and government's reserves shrank and disappeared. Unemployment rose dramatically. Food prices skyrocketed up over 250% from 1957 levels and up a phenomenal 66% in 1965. Eventually, there were massive food and essentials shortages effecting every area, sector and individual in Ghana. Econmic growth, which had ranged from 9% to 12% per annum until 1960, dropped to 2% to 3%, insufficient to sustain a population expanding at almost 3% per year.
Nkrumah's response was an austere socialist budget which imposed flawed Marxist concepts of economic resuscitation on the population, primarily through harsh and unrealistic taxation. Financial mismanagement and economic chaos increased and the country was eventually poised at the brink of national bankruptcy and international disgrace.
In the meantime, to shore up his eroding political strength, Nkrumah assumed more and more power which he exercised capriciously. Obsessed with personal safety after two failed assassination attempts, he established a very well and heavily armed Secret Security Service and Presidential Guard recruited from abroad and under his direct control. Resentment by the ill-equipped Army and Police followed.
In 1964, Nkrumah declared himself President for Life and summarily banned all opposition political parties. His enemies, real and imagined, were detained. In the process, innocent people from all over Ghana were swept up and imprisoned in complete abuse of their individual rights and liberties. Laws were suspended and/or manipulated to prop up Nkrumah's faltering regime.
The power of traditional Chiefs was diminished and, in some cases, removed. This in a country where traditional authority through the great Akan chiefs had existed for a thousand years.
In the meantime, the Cult of Nkrumahism continued to develop and propound preposterous quasi-marxist theory and dogma hatched in the name of Nkrumah, at the Ideological Institute at Winebba. The Nkrumah cult, created by Nkrumah himself to perpetuate and mythicize himself, forced acquiescence by all, to what was called "the Nkrumahist Gospel".
To those of us who watched these events unfold during the years of Nkrumah's leadership, it was not a matter of if the bubble would burst, rather, when. On 21 February, 1966, President Kwame Nkrumah flew out of Accra bound for Hanoi, Democratic Republic of North Vietnam at the invitation of President Ho Chi Minh. Nkrumah was journeying to Hanoi prepared to offer his Vietnam War solution. Ghana was left in the control of a three-man Presidential Commission, consisting of a traditional Chief and two politicians.
On 24 February, 1966, the bubble did not merely burst, it exploded! In the early morning hours, Ghana's armed forces, with the cooperation of the National Police, took over government in "Operation Cold Chop", a well organized coup d'etat. The first announcement made from Radio Ghana said that the coup was led by Colonel Emmanual Kwasi Kotoka of the 2nd Infantry Brigade. Kotoka, an outstanding soldier, was a national hero, honored for valor and bravery while serving as part of Ghana's United Nations 1960 and 1961 Congo contingent. A National Liberation Council was formed to run the affairs of state. Parliament was dissolved. Nkrumah's ruling political organization, the Convention People's Party (C.P.P.), was banned and Nkrumah himself was dismissed as President of Ghana's First Republic. The reign of the Osegyefo, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, was over.
GH 8 years ago
GOVERNMENT [1960-1966]
From independence in 1957, Ghana enjoyed economic prosperity with a relatively high
growth rate, substantial foreign exchange reserve and a strong civil service to guide
economic growth.2 To promote ... read full comment
GOVERNMENT [1960-1966]
From independence in 1957, Ghana enjoyed economic prosperity with a relatively high
growth rate, substantial foreign exchange reserve and a strong civil service to guide
economic growth.2 To promote socioeconomic development, the government instituted
a policy of free education, healthcare and initiated mass industrialization. However,
coupled with external shocks arising from deteriorating price of cocoa, the economic
situation retrogressed from bad to worse. In 1965, Ghana was faced with the challenge
of dealing with an economic downturn and, needing an external bailout, approached
IMF. The Fund proposed a reduction in government spending to levels that could be
covered by government revenues in order to fight inflation.3 The Nkrumah government,
however, rejected these conditions. Adopting these policies would have thwarted the
expansionist development programmes which included diversification of the Ghanaian
2 Hutchful, E. (1985). IMF Adjustment Policies in Ghana since 1966. African Development, 10 (1), 5.
3 Aryeetey, E. and Fosu, A. (2000). Economic Growth in Ghana: 1960-2000. A Paper Prepared for AERC
Growth Project.
4
economy through import substituting industrialization.4 Moreover, if Nkrumah had
accepted IMF loan and conditionalities, it would have affected the momentum of his
economic development strategy.5 The IMF policies would have forced Nkrumah to cut
back on capital spending (i.e. building of schools, hospitals, and particularly his pet
economic programme: the import substituting industrialization). Since Nkrumah
government was overthrown in 1966, it is impossible to determine whether its policies
could have tackled the economic downturn without the IMF support.
This notwithstanding, available data indicates that Ghana’s socio-economic situation as
of 1965 - a year before the overthrow- was not only gloomy (according to some
analysts) but also heralded the nation’s economic doom.6 Besides the high level of debt
stock which stood at USD$500 million in 1965 (from a negligible amount in 1960), the
external reserve position had deteriorated considerably between 1957 when net
reserves stood at US$269 million and 1966 when they were negative at –US$391
million.7 This outcome resulted in a deteriorating balance of payments position and also
the poor credit rating accorded the country. Consequently, inflation ballooned from 0.98
percent in 1964 to 26.4 percent in 1965 (see Fig. 2.1)8.
General News of Thursday, 4 February 2016
Source: Starrfmonline.com
My 2nd term is for cash in your pockets – Mahama
President John Dramani Mahama has stated that the first term of his government focused on infras ...
read full comment
development model for emerging African nations.
So what went wrong? How and why did the brilliant, charismatic Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, the outspoken Marxist/Communist, Pan-African Founding Father of Ghana, begin his political s ...
read full comment
GOVERNMENT [1960-1966]
From independence in 1957, Ghana enjoyed economic prosperity with a relatively high
growth rate, substantial foreign exchange reserve and a strong civil service to guide
economic growth.2 To promote ...
read full comment