Audio By Carbonatix
A renowned procurement consultant, Collins Agyemang Sarpong, has advised corporate and public institutions to embrace prudent and value-based measures in their disposal of unusable, obsolete, surplus and redundant assets in accordance with laid down procedures.
“Procurement entities must dispose of assets that have become unserviceable in a manner that is efficient, consistent, equitable and seeks to achieve value for money. That is one way of freeing up capital that has been locked up on those items in the stores within business their operations,” he said at a webinar organized by ProSupp Consult for stores and inventory officers on the theme: “The disposal of assets, equipment and vehicles as per the Public Procurement Act 663, as amended 914”.
According to Mr. Sarpong, government spends between 18- and-25% of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) on the procurement of goods, services and works to assist in the effective delivery of services to the citizenry, however, a significant portion of such assets are disposed of when they become obsolete, surplus, unserviceable and redundant.
Cumulatively, Ghana’s public sector has spent about $74.37 billion of the nation’s GDP on goods, works and services for the period spanning 2019 to 2022. Procurement of goods took a significant portion with $44.622 billion whilst works and services accounted for $22.3 11 billion and $7.437 billion respectively, the renowned consultant stated.
The astute procurement consultant indicated that a significant amount of money could be retrieved on these assets if businesses adopted the right measures and skills during the disposal processes.
Mr. Sarpong therefore recommended that procurement officers, especially those in stores, inventory and warehousing must strive to achieve the best net return on investment, appropriately handle items that would require special consideration in their disposal and ensure that disposal procedures are undertaken in a fair, transparent and accountable manner.
On the issue of stores, inventory and warehouse officers being sidelined by organizations in the decision-making process, he advised people in the profession to continuously develop themselves with modern contemporary skills to command the needed respect and recognition that would allow them to become more efficient and productive.
“As procurement and supply professionals, we need to rebrand ourselves as stores people and also dress to fit the work with the right attires and tools to command the needed respect in the organization you represent,” he noted.
The one-day webinar was a curtain-raiser to ProSupp Consult’s upcoming training on contemporary stores and inventory management scheduled for February 28 to March 1, at the Coconut Grove Regency Hotel in Accra.
Latest Stories
-
The Real Greek restaurant chain on brink of collapse
27 seconds -
Injuries denied me my full potential – Former Ghana defender Daniel Opare
31 seconds -
Kpandai: Man lynched following witchcraft accusation
4 minutes -
Prince Adu-Owusu: The love that never had a chance
7 minutes -
AnimaxFYB Studios to debut feature animation ‘ORAYA’ at Cannes market
17 minutes -
May Day Egg Sale draws crowds to Joy FM car park with big discounts
29 minutes -
Dark World of BECE: GES bans invigilators, teachers implicated in BECE malpractices 8 months after expose’
46 minutes -
US convicts Nigerians and Ghanaians involved in $215 global scam
1 hour -
Stand by mothers – Sheikh Aremeyaw Shaibu urges fathers to lead by example on Mother’s Day
1 hour -
Bank of Ghana’s ‘staggering’ 2025 losses cost of policy failure – Gideon Boako
1 hour -
They Left for Work, Not for Death: Honouring fallen workers across Canada, Ghana, and the world
2 hours -
Parliament to approve new asset declaration regime – Mahama
2 hours -
Gov’t has revived collapsing SOEs – Mahama cites TOR, ADB, NIB
2 hours -
Politically motivated policy choices drove BoG’s 2025 losses – Gideon Boako
2 hours -
Adamus Resources saga: Lands Minister grants two-week reprieve as ministerial committee reviews lease revocation
2 hours