Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana’s economic conversation has for too long been reduced to what we can dig out of the ground. Yet the numbers alone expose the poverty of this thinking. Dairy is New Zealand’s biggest export earner, generating about 19 billion dollars annually, while Vietnam produces over 22 billion dollars from shoes alone. Meanwhile, Ghana, for all the devastation of rivers, forests and communities through mostly illegal mining, managed only 10 billion dollars from mining last year, barely half of what New Zealand and Vietnam earn from producing milk and shoes.
The irony is painful. We short change ourselves by exporting our gold and minerals, only to use the same foreign exchange to import shoes, milk, secondhand clothes and even noodles, all of which we could have produced locally to create wealth, jobs and sustainable livelihoods. It is foolishness on a national scale, where the hardest part is done, digging the gold out of the ground, yet the real value is lost because we refuse to build industries that meet our own needs.
This is not just an economic shortfall, it is a thinking problem. We continue to choose the easiest but most destructive path, ignoring the more sustainable and profitable alternatives other nations are embracing. Countries like Singapore and Switzerland, with no gold mines, oil fields or diamond reserves, are outperforming resource-rich nations simply by using their brains, building systems, creating services and innovating industries that the world pays for.
The lesson is clear. The alternative to galamsey must be compelling, structured and economically attractive. Ghana can turn its focus to simple but powerful industries such as furniture making, bamboo production, textiles and garments, and other light manufacturing sectors. These industries can absorb labour, create sustainable livelihoods, and generate export earnings far beyond what galamsey delivers.
The future of Ghana’s economy does not lie in the mud stained pans of galamsey pits but in the boldness to chart a smarter course where knowledge, innovation, and sustainability drive wealth creation. It is time to elevate the national conversation beyond lamenting illegal mining. Let us deliberately invest in alternatives that prove more rewarding than galamsey, both for the pocket and for the planet.
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