The
President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has reiterated the commitment of his
government to establishing the Infrastructure for Poverty Eradication Programme
(IPEP) – the vehicle which will ensure that each of the 275 constituencies
receives the equivalent of $1 million per year for infrastructural development.
According
to President Akufo-Addo, this Fund will be administered by three (3)
development authorities, namely, the Coastal Belt Development Authority, the
Middle Belt Development Authority and the Northern Development Authority.
The
Bill for the establishment of these Authorities, the President revealed, will
be laid before Parliament when the House reconvenes later this month.
President
Akufo-Addo made this known on Saturday, May 6, 2017, at a meeting with the
Ghanaian community resident in Cote d’Ivoire, as part of the activities he is undertaking
in his 3-day official visit to that country.
“This
year’s budget contains the money for the 1 million per year per constituency
policy, the financial provision has been made. However, because my government
and I are accountable to the Ghanaian people, we want to be diligent in
everything we do. I do not want a repetition of the scandals that rocked SADA
(Savannah Accelerated Development Authority) to befall my government and the
three development authorities we want to establish,” the President said.
“I will plead with you and the Ghanaian people, who are eagerly
awaiting the commencement of this policy, to exercise a little patience as we
seek to do the correct thing. It might even be the case that, once the bill is laid
before Parliament, some may even suggest improvements to the bill. But, at
least, we have made provision in this year’s budget for this policy to begin.”
Touching
on his broad vision for the country, he told the audience gathered at the
packed theatre in Treichville, a suburb of Abidjan, that his vision is hinged
on modernising Ghanaian agriculture to enhance its productivity; a clear
industrial policy, and rationalising the financial sector so that it supports
growth in agriculture, and growth in manufacturing and industry.
It
is for this reason, he told the gathering, that on April 19, 2017, he launched
the programme for “Planting for Food and Jobs”, at Goaso, in the Brong Ahafo
Region.
This
programme, he stressed, is the basis of the answer to the twin-problem of the
migration of youth to city centres in search of non-existent jobs, as well as
an end to the disgraceful spectacle of Ghana importing food stuffs from
neighbouring countries.
With
a looming shortage of agricultural extension officers in Ghana in the next two
to three years, largely as a result of the then Mahama administration’s
decision not to employ any of the 3,200 graduates from the country’s 5 Colleges
of Agriculture between 2011 and 2015, President Akufo-Addo told the gathering
that that his government has, in the last 3 months, employed 1,200 of these
graduates.
He
assured further that “in 2018, we will employ 2,000 more extension officers,
with the solemn pledge of employing more graduates from our Colleges of
Agriculture in the subsequent years.”
On
the economic front, President Akufo-Addo noted that his government has
introduced measures to stimulate growth of the private sector. Amongst others,
a monetary policy that will stabilise the currency and reduce significantly the
cost of borrowing, in addition to a raft of tax cuts, he said, have been put in
place to bring relief to businesses, with the aim of lowering the cost of doing
business and shifting the focus of our economy from taxation to production.
This
process of economic transformation, the President stressed, has to go along
with ensuring that the most basic elements of social justice are met.
“To
this end, we want to make quality basic education, i.e. education from
kindergarten through to secondary school, accessible to all of Ghana’s
children. Beginning with the intake from the 2017/2018 academic year, parents
will no longer bear the cost of taking their children to secondary school. Free
SHS is coming from September 2017,” he added, to a rapturous response from the
packed auditorium.
President Akufo-Addo also assured the Ghanaian community in Cote d’Ivoire of his government’s commitment of engaging with the Electoral Commission to ensuring the full implementation of the Representation of the People’s Amendment Law (ROPAL), to enable them exercise their franchise in local elections.
“There are many countries in West Africa and
around the world that do allow their citizens overseas to vote. I cannot
understand why, in Ghana, we do not allow that to happen,” he said.
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