Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for Damongo, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has criticised the Mahama administration over what he describes as the slow and ineffective rollout of the government’s flagship 24-hour economy policy, nearly a year into its tenure.
Contributing to the debate on the 24-Hour Economy Authority Bill in Parliament on Thursday, February 5, Mr Jinapor argued that the proposed three-shift, eight-hour job system has yet to take practical effect across state institutions and has failed to deliver the promised jobs for unemployed youth.
He contended that the Office of the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, is the only state institution operating some form of shift system, and even that, he noted, does not run on a full 24-hour basis.
“Eleven months into the NDC administration, their flagship programme of a 24-hour economy, with the three-shift system for unemployed Ghanaian youth, the only place working some form of shifts today is the Office of the Speaker of Parliament—and even that is not a full 24-hour operation,” he stated.
Mr Jinapor also opposed the proposal to establish a new authority to oversee the policy, insisting that existing institutions could adequately support job creation. He cited the Ghana Export Promotion Authority (GEPA) as an agency whose mandate already aligns with export-led growth under a 24-hour economy.
“You do not need another authority to promote exports and thereby create a 24-hour economy. We already have the Ghana Export Promotion Authority, whose sole mandate is to promote exports,” he argued.
The Damongo MP further described the bill as a move that would primarily benefit political appointees rather than address widespread youth unemployment.
“This is another gimmick. It is meant to buy time and give false hope to the unemployed youth. This authority will only create jobs for a few—another CEO, deputy CEOs and managers—while the suffering youth from Bolgatanga to Keta, Bosome Freho and across the length and breadth of the country remain without jobs,” he said.
Mr Jinapor concluded that public frustration is growing over what he described as repeated promises without concrete action.
“Ghanaians are tired of hope; they want action. Nearly a year on, instead of implementing the 24-hour economy, the government is asking us to create another layer of bureaucracy,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
Clarion Clarkewoode returns with mew Afrobeats single, ‘AyƐ Kwa’
12 minutes -
GES concludes probe into Savelugu SHS feeding incident after viral video
17 minutes -
Victoria Ivy Obeng drops debut gospel EP dubbed ‘My Passion’
19 minutes -
Government lifts curfew on Binduri Township following return of calm
24 minutes -
DVLA publishes 2026 service fees to ensure transparency
25 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: Maintaining leadership visibility during execution
27 minutes -
Aid workers missing after airstrikes hit South Sudan hospital
28 minutes -
Love language beyond words: Showing care through smart money moves
30 minutes -
AfCFTA will fail Africa’s youth without free movement of talent – NYA CEO Osman Ayariga
35 minutes -
MTN Ghana partners Thrive & Shine to accelerate AI literacy and empower Ghanaian youth
42 minutes -
Russian general shot several times in Moscow
56 minutes -
Ministry of Gender and UNFPA observe International Day of Zero Tolerance for FGM in Ghana
58 minutes -
Japanese-backed KUMON programme transforms maths learning at Ebenezer Baptist Christian School
1 hour -
Nkawie SHTS receives two-year ban for misconduct at Ashanti Inter-School Athletics
1 hour -
FGM remains a serious concern in Ghana despite legal gains – Gender Ministry, UNFPA warn
1 hour
