Audio By Carbonatix
The Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, has emphasised the critical role of the private sector in the development of Ghana's road infrastructure.
According to him, the government's budget is insufficient to meet the country's road financing needs.
Speaking at the 50th Anniversary celebration of the Ghana Highways Authority, Dr. Bawumia highlighted the financial constraints faced by successive governments and proposed a shift towards private sector involvement as a sustainable solution.
“It is very clear to me that the private sector is the key because the budget cannot sustain the financing of roads because we just don’t have the resources in the budget.
"Even if we spent all the money of the budget on roads, you will still have a shortfall. And we have so many other demands on this very narrow budget that we have. So the private sector is the key. I think we can all agree on that as we think about innovative financing solutions.”
Dr. Bawumia pointed out that historical trends show successive governments overcommitting in the area of roads, which strains the budget and leads to underfunded projects.
He proposed that the burden of financing should shift from the government to the private sector to ensure sustainable infrastructure development.
“What is clear to me, historically, is that successive governments have tried to do too much in the area of roads and commit a lot which really stretches the budget. That seems to be what is going on and so my view is that we need to shift the burden from government to the private sector,” he explained.
Dr. Bawumia, who is also a presidential candidate for the upcoming general elections, committed to reducing government expenditure by 3% of GDP in favor of the private sector if elected.
He emphasised that this realignment of expenditure would prioritise infrastructure and road development.
“This is why I have committed as a presidential candidate for the upcoming general elections that when I do my next budget, I am reducing government expenditure by 3% of GDP in favor of the private sector.
“We want to realign expenditure from the public sector to the private sector and most of that will be into infrastructure and roads.”
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s Kyere Mensah nominated to World Agriculture Forum Council
5 minutes -
Creative Canvas 2025: King Promise — The systems player
17 minutes -
Wherever we go, our polling station executives are yearning for Dr Bawumia – NPP coordinators
25 minutes -
Agricultural cooperatives emerging as climate champions in rural Ghana
58 minutes -
Fire Service rescues two in truck accident at Asukawkaw
59 minutes -
Ashland Foundation donates food items to Krachi Local Prison
59 minutes -
Akatsi North DCE warns PWD beneficiaries against selling livelihood support items
1 hour -
Salaga South MP calls for unity and peace at Kulaw 2025 Youth Homecoming
3 hours -
GPL 2025/2026: Gold Stars triumph over Dreams in five-goal thriller
3 hours -
Ibrahim Mahama supports disability groups with Christmas donation
4 hours -
2025/26 GPL: Berekum Chelsea come from behind to beat XI Wonders 3-1
4 hours -
NACOC dismantles drug dens in Eastern and Greater Accra regions in ‘Operation White Ember’
4 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Aduana fight from two goals down to draw against Young Apostles
4 hours -
Emmanuel Dzivenu: The ‘stolen’ birthday
4 hours -
ECG announces technical challenge with MMS-compliant meters; says it’s being fixed
4 hours
