Audio By Carbonatix
The National Development Planning Commission (NDPC) has reaffirmed its commitment to developing a long-term, inclusive national development framework as it engages key stakeholders in the Western Region.
The consultations, part of a nationwide effort, aim to align local priorities with national objectives and strengthen implementation mechanisms.
During the engagement, NDPC Chairman Dr. Nii Moi Thompson stressed that Ghana’s challenge is no longer the absence of plans, but weak enforcement, inefficiencies, and lack of institutional discipline.

“We have produced several well-intentioned development frameworks over the years. The critical issue is not drafting documents; it is ensuring disciplined implementation and institutional commitment,” he said.
Dr. Thompson urged policymakers to prioritise national progress over partisan interests, noting that “development challenges do not wear party colours.”

He highlighted the importance of structural transformation, cautioning that overreliance on agriculture without robust industrial growth could exacerbate unemployment.
Dr. Thompson also pointed out gaps in revenue mobilisation, by-law enforcement, and resource management, emphasising that selective application of regulations undermines public trust and weakens governance.

The NDPC Director-General, Dr. Audrey Smock Amoah, underscored the role of disciplined planning and monitoring in driving sustainable development.
She outlined the Commission’s Medium Term Development Policy framework for 2026–2029, which focuses on economic growth, social development, infrastructure, governance, and international relations.
Dr. Smock Amoah also highlighted progress, noting that eight out of 16 Regional Coordinating Councils, including the Western Region, had their plans certified, alongside 102 districts nationwide. Certificates, she said, signify accountability, discipline, and readiness to implement plans effectively.

Western Regional Minister Joseph Nelson emphasised the value of sound land administration and investment in human capital for driving regional development.
Both the NDPC and regional authorities encouraged local governments to maintain proactive planning practices and contribute meaningfully to Ghana’s broader development goals.
Latest Stories
-
Right to Information Commission holds courtesy meeting with Communication Minister
12 minutes -
The Cocoa Conundrum: Why Ghana’s farmers are poor despite making the world’s best chocolate
21 minutes -
National Teacher Licensure Examination not cancelled – NTC
26 minutes -
Artificial Intelligence: Africa gov’ts must adopt, adapt, and indigenise, but do not copy and paste
39 minutes -
Most power outages fixed in Kumasi, Accra; repairs ongoing in Tema, Adenta – Richmond Rockson
42 minutes -
The Deadly Foot-Slog: From Ghana to Canada
49 minutes -
OSP probes GHS25.8m palm oil diversion involving customs, national security
1 hour -
Today’s Front pages: Tuesday, February 24, 2026
1 hour -
CSIR introduces new technology to help farmers prevent crop diseases
2 hours -
Suspend the Violence, Not the Sports: A smarter response to school rivalry attacks
2 hours -
Shisha, cigarettes smoking fuelling breast cancer in Ghana – Dr. Beatrice Wiafe sounds alarm
2 hours -
Obrachire SHS student demands justice after brutal assault at inter-schools sports event
2 hours -
UniMAC SRC External Affairs Office secure partnership with St. Philip Enterprise
3 hours -
Ford Foundation grantees advance climate justice across West Africa
3 hours -
Simi breaks silence on backlash over old tweets
3 hours
