Audio By Carbonatix
The Ranking Member of Parliament’s Finance Committee has called on the Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia to apologise to Ghanaians for failing to fix the economy as he promised while in opposition.
According to Dr Cassiel Ato Forson, the policies supervised by the Head of the Economic Management Team have rather aggravated the woes of the ordinary Ghanaian.
“I urge him to appear before us as a country and apologise, he should apologise to the people of Ghana for giving us hope and for promising heaven only to deliver hell, because we have seen his acts and how he has managed the economy and everyone knows that he has failed,” he said.
Dr Bawumia ahead of the 2016 election was touted as the Economic Messiah who would save the country’s economy by stabilising the depreciating currency and taking measures that would improve the financial situation of the citizens.
Six years on, the country is experiencing similar economic challenges, even though, the ‘Economic Messiah’ is the incumbent Vice President and the Head of the Economic Management Team.
It is on the back of this that Dr Forson is asking Dr Bawumia to render an unqualified apology.
“You have failed and sadly you are running away from the responsibility that is not a mark of leadership, a leader is the one who accepts responsibility and moves on.”
The NDC legislator also took on the Vice President for blaming the erstwhile John Mahama administration for Ghana’s current economic crisis and government’s decision to seek financial assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Justifying why Ghana is seeking assistance from IMF, the Vice President on Thursday outlined four factors.
While attributing 50 percent to external factors, Dr Bawumia noted that policies of the previous administration - Energy Sector Excess Capacity Payments, Banking Sector Clean-Up, have contributed to Ghana’s economic woes.
But Dr Forson disagrees.
According to him, Dr Bawumia should own up to his mistakes and stop shifting blame.
“The situation we find ourselves today can never be attributed to international situations or policies that they inherited. This is a government that has proven to be wasteful, incompetent and useless.
“So I want to ask our Vice President to simply take responsibility, because we will not accept the way he is trying to shift blame. He has messed us up. He is responsible for the mess that we are in and he should just accept that, simple,” he told the press on Friday.
He further blamed the state of the economy on the government's insatiable appetite for borrowing and giving out unbridled tax exemptions.
“For me, our Vice President has failed as the head of our Economic Management Team. He has managed the economic situation in a very bad way. He has mismanaged the economy,” he was categorical.
Latest Stories
-
Egg-citing deals as The Multimedia Group’s X’mas Egg Market sells out on Day 1, returns tomorrow
21 minutes -
NPP Primaries: Electoral Area Coordinators in Yunyoo, Chereponi and Saboba declare support for Bawumia
47 minutes -
Revocation of L.I. 2462 step in the right direction – Lands Ministry Spokesperson
2 hours -
Afeku urges creation of world-class hospitality training school in Volta Region
2 hours -
Ghana’s unemployment rate eases slightly to 13.0% in 2025 third quarter
2 hours -
Climate change forcing migration as Farm Radio engages stakeholders on solutions
2 hours -
Financial knowledge secures the future – NIB to Police Ladies
2 hours -
Afeku calls for major tourism investment in Volta Region to drive jobs and growth
2 hours -
BoG to engage more agencies to clamp down on unlicensed financial institutions
2 hours -
US-based Ghanaian Lawyers, Embassy explore ‘Law Day’ to improve legal education among Ghanaians
2 hours -
Tourism overlooked despite its power to transform economy – Catherine Afeku
2 hours -
Standards compliance in Ghana still a work in progress – GSA official
2 hours -
Fentuo, Tariq Lamptey Foundation donate jerseys to Tarsor Basic School
2 hours -
Go beyond profit: Business must empower people – Margins ID Group CEO urges youth
2 hours -
One of the most critical things now is how to manage Ghana’s debt – Joyce Bawah
2 hours
