Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for Abuakwa South, Kingsley Agyemang, has strongly questioned John Mahama’s claim that his administration created one million jobs in 2025, arguing that unemployed youth across the country cannot see the impact of the reported opportunities.
In his 2026 State of the Nation Address in Parliament, the President listed job creation as a major achievement of his first year in office. He cited data from the Ghana Statistical Service, saying government policies were helping to reduce unemployment.
However, apeaking to party executives in Kyebi, Dr. Agyemang insists the figure must translate into visible opportunities nationwide. According to him, if one million jobs were indeed created, every constituency should be recording thousands of new positions.
“The President says one million jobs were created in 2025. If so, unemployed youth should be able to point to them,” he said. “Each constituency should have more than 3,600 jobs. Where are they?”
He explained that Ghana has 275 constituencies, meaning a simple distribution would produce about 3,600 new jobs per constituency within a year.
The MP argues that such numbers should result in clear reductions in unemployment and improved household incomes. Dr. Agyemang further stressed that national statistics alone are not enough.
He said the true test of job creation is whether young people are securing employment, graduates are entering the workforce, and businesses are expanding their staff strength. President Mahama, however, maintains that his government is creating jobs through industrial growth, support for small and medium enterprises, and the rollout of the 24-hour economy policy.
Butising concerns about transparency, Dr. Agyemang is demanding clearer and more detailed data, including sector-by-sector breakdowns, the nature of the jobs, whether permanent or temporary and how they are distributed across the country.
The Abuakwa South MP also noted that many young people continue to struggle to find stable work. He argued that if one million jobs had truly been created, communities would already be feeling the impact, but that is not the case in his constituency.
He stressed that Ghanaians want more than headline figures. They want tangible evidence in their daily lives. Until the government provides clear proof across all constituencies, he maintains, the claim remains questionable.
Latest Stories
-
Black Galaxies name 32-man squad for Accra camping
10 minutes -
Mason sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment for defiling a 4-year-old girl
10 minutes -
French-born Ghanaian defender Beres Owusu impresses in Grazer AK draw
22 minutes -
BOST to lose GH¢40m from suspended margins on fuel—Deputy MD
45 minutes -
PPA should be made an independent body — Procurement expert
47 minutes -
Protecting our kids online
48 minutes -
Iranian woman arrested in US for allegedly trafficking arms to Sudan
50 minutes -
More than 200 rescued from IS-linked group in DR Congo
50 minutes -
Deputy AG reveals why High Court proceeded with OSP ruling despite pending Supreme Court case
52 minutes -
Attorney-General unaware of OSP court case until ruling – Dr Srem-Sai
54 minutes -
Bank of Ghana clarifies treatment of earnings for content creators
1 hour -
Outrage over Israeli soldier’s vandalism of Jesus statue in Lebanon
1 hour -
“Procedure matters”: Deputy AG defends strict constitutionalism in OSP ruling
1 hour -
Quo Warranto OSP: Exercise of public power must be grounded in law – Dr Srem-Sai says
1 hour -
‘I was criticised for setting up a radio school without a university degree’ – Tommy Annan Forson reveals
1 hour