Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority in Parliament has described the government's Planting for Food and Jobs (PJF) Programme as a scam.
According to the NDC MPs, it was an avenue deliberately crafted to loot the limited resources of the state.
In a press statement issued on Wednesday, August 30, and signed by its Deputy Ranking on the Agriculture Committee in Parliament, Dr Godfred Seidu Jasaw, the Caucus said the program failed to achieve its intended goals.
https://myjoyonline.com/akufo-addo-launches-phase-ii-of-planting-for-food-and-jobs-programme/
"The president launched Planting for Food and Jobs Phase 2 in Tamale two days ago. This was after the minister responsible for finance informed us through his midyear budget to Parliament in July 2023 that the planting for food and jobs (PFJ) program had ended since December 2022."
"This is a clear admission of our position that the PFJ program had failed and that it was a mere state resource looting platform disguised as a flagship program," excerpts of the statement said.
Their comments follow the recently launched second phase of the program by President Akufo-Addo.
The President during the launch said it would create an annual average of two hundred and ten thousand (210,000) new farm-related jobs.
The new phase according to the president will exclude other jobs along the agricultural value chains.
“The impact of the Programme is expected to be in the area of job creation, with some 1.2 million farmers to be enrolled in the first year. In the next four years, the Programme is destined to record an annual average of 210,000 new farm-related jobs.
"This will exclude other jobs along the agricultural value chains estimated at an annual average of 420,000 over the same period,” President Akufo-Addo assured.
He indicated that the 2nd phase of the Programme also seeks to improve service delivery to maximise impact.
“The second phase, by design, takes a holistic view and places greater emphasis on value chain approaches by focusing on strengthening linkages between actors along eleven selected agricultural commodity value chains broadly categorised into grains, roots and tuber, vegetables and poultry.
Latest Stories
-
UK remains preferred study destination for Ghanaians – British Council
3 minutes -
Ghana Medical Trust Fund: Maame Samma Peprah ignites chain of giving through ‘Kyerɛ Wo Dɔ Drive’
14 minutes -
A new children’s book celebrates Ghanaian culture and early literacy through food storytelling
23 minutes -
Right To Play deepens fight against child labour through MLMR and MRMF projects
25 minutes -
Former Amansie South DCE, MP unveil TESCON booth initiative for tertiary institutions
47 minutes -
Travel and tour CEO Ishamel Kofi Adjei honoured at Ghana Industry CEOs Awards
1 hour -
How deadly attack on tomato traders in Burkina Faso is reshaping Ghana’s food market
1 hour -
“We will begin the renovation of the State Banquet Hall this year” – Mahama
2 hours -
The death of the media buy: Why world cup 2026 is an attention stress test
2 hours -
UK withdraws Tehran embassy staff as US-Iran tension sparks concern across region
2 hours -
Internal reforms and trade shifts drive IMF upgrade for sub-Saharan Africa to 4.6% in 2026
2 hours -
World Cup ticket resale prices hit record high as June kickoff approaches
2 hours -
Bridging Africa’s education gap: From job seekers to job creators
2 hours -
KNUST, UENR and partners move to close industry skills gap and aid disadvantaged students
2 hours -
Let’s save lives – Akandoh tells hospital staff
3 hours
