
Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister of Public Sector Reform, Mr Samuel Owusu-Agyei, has observed that in spite of the increasing benefits of globalisation, it has still not addressed the problems that poor African countries face.He named some of the problems as poverty, underdevelopment and civil strive and said these problems had made it difficult for poor countries in Africa to be fully integrated into world affairs.He was speaking at a two-day seminar organised by the Ministry of Public Sector Reform in collaboration with the Public Services Commission, Office of the Head of Civil Service and the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA), as well as the French Embassy, in Accra on Sunday.He said the benefits of globalisation were apparent but it had not provided the "milk and honey" to all.Mr Owusu-Agyei said while there were visible benefits of globalisation in most parts of the world, the story was different in developing countries.He said while it was true that globalisation encouraged free trade, there were also negative consequences because some countries tried to save their national markets.Mr Owusu-Agyei said this had made it difficult for poorer countries to compete with stronger nations that subsidised their agricultural sector.He said due to globalisation, companies from powerful industrialised nations used the people in poorer nations as cheap labour.He said they did this by offering the workers enough salary to entice them to endure extremely long hours and unsafe working conditions.Mr Owusu-Agyei said the abundance of cheap labour was giving some countries the power and incentive not to rectify the inequality between nations.He said Ghana was to a large extent involved in the global arena and urged the participants to deliberate on how much of the negative effects of globalisation Ghana was enduring and how she could manage globalisation adequately in order to reap more of the benefits.The Chairman of the Public Services Commission, Mr Sam N. Wood, noted that the response of countries to globalisation was significant because in a review of literature on the subject, one came across several models.He said every country stood the risk of not being a winner from globalisation if it proceeded on an assumption that there was a set of policies that could be presented on an "every-size-fit-all".Source: Daily Graphic
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Omanhene Kwabena Asante accuses GIADEC CEO of discrimination in mining concessions
36 minutes -
Majority of Ghanaian importers lack awareness of cargo insurance – Gyampo
42 minutes -
GJA Ashanti applauds Asantehene for securing land for new press centre
46 minutes -
Ghana to benefit from France’s National health platform following Paris talks
1 hour -
Due process must prevail in Ofori-Atta’s immigration and extradition cases – Lawyer
1 hour -
Oil palm fund will create coherent ecosystem, boost supply—DBG CEO
1 hour -
Police arrest man for illegal drug peddling at Pankrono
1 hour -
Industry collaboration key to solving skills mismatch – NYA CEO Osman Ayariga
1 hour -
Ghana, Egypt deepen security ties following high-level meeting
1 hour -
Every neurodivergent child deserves to thrive – AWARE 2026 walk set for North Legon
2 hours -
Ghana-Russia Centre, ATF donate to Princess Marie Louise Children’s Hospital
2 hours -
NPP increases polling station coverage per election committee from 10 to 25
2 hours -
Ghana card cannot be used for financial transactions – NIA debunks false reports
2 hours -
Successful conviction secured for illegal fish processing operation in Watford
2 hours -
Bowen: Ceasefire means respite for civilians, but it might not last long
2 hours