
Audio By Carbonatix
President Akufo-Addo has said one of his government's major preoccupations has been to put in place sound economic fundamentals that promote the enabling atmosphere for entrepreneurs to thrive and create jobs.
He said, “It has taken a lot of hard work and strong nerves to stay on the straight and narrow path to get the economy to start growing from the deep hole it was in. I am happy to report that all the indicators are pointing in the right direction.”
The President stated that GDP growth rate has more than doubled, from 3.6% in 2016, the lowest in two decades, to 8.5% in 2017; inflation has reduced from 15.4%, at the end of 2016, to 10.4% in March 2017; interest rates are going down; the cedi has stabilised; fiscal deficit has reduced from 9.3% in 2016, to 6% of GDP in 2017; adding that there are positive signs of revival in the industrial sector, with growth increasing from an abysmal negative 0.5% in 2016 to 17.7% in 2017.
Additionally, President Akufo-Addo noted that his government has introduced a number of deliberate interventions to reduce the cost of doing business and formalize the economy.
“The e-business registration system, the paperless port clearance system, the digital addressing system, the mobile interoperability system, and the national identification card system, would all help quicken the pace of change to bring us into the technology-driven era and make our businesses competitive,” he said.
President Akufo-Addo made this known Tuesday when he delivered a speech at the Baba Yara Sports Stadium to commemorate May Day.
In the pursuit to create an enabling environment for businesses to thrive, President Akufo-Addo noted that Government has abolished a raft of nuisance taxes, to shift the focus from an emphasis on taxation to an emphasis on production.
“The reduction in electricity tariffs is a major plank in this policy, and the effects should be visible soon in an improvement in cost of doing business and confidence in the economy as a whole.
"Chairperson, it is not often that there is such good news on the economic front in our country, so I believe it bears spelling it out here that, as from 1st April, residential customers, are enjoying a 17.5% reduction,” he said.
The President added, “non-residential customers, such as tailors, fitters, barbers, hairdressers, carpenters, mechanics, electricians, and chop bar operators, have seen their electricity bills cut by 30%; the mining companies are now benefitting from a 10% reduction; whilst special load tariff customers, such as our manufacturing companies and industries, are also enjoying a 25% reduction. Long may it continue that our affairs are managed efficiently to enable relief to be brought to the Ghanaian consumer and industry.”
As these reforms and changes work their way through the system, President Akufo-Addo was certain that “we should, very soon, be seeing a vigorous turnaround in the creation of jobs in the private sector.”
Despite his administration’s belief in the capacity of the private sector, the President indicated that his government would not be a helpless bystander that would simply look on in hope that the private sector would create jobs.
To build on the jobs created in agriculture, through the Programme for Planting for Food and Jobs, he noted that there has also been recruitment into the public sector of personnel in critical sectors like education, where 33,160 teachers were recruited by the Ghana Education Service.
In the health sector, the President stressed that 16,502 new health workers were employed last year, with 32,000 more nurses being employed this year.
“It is important to note that there was no employment in the public sector in these two critical areas for more than three years before my government took over last year,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
GTEC warns against unaccredited university learning centres, institutions with expired accreditation
22 seconds -
Tapentadol ‘red’ not approved for medical use in Ghana; sale and possession illegal – Health Minister
2 minutes -
8 companies apply to cultivate industrial cannabis in Ghana – Interior Minister
4 minutes -
EEZZY Group Foundation pledges GHS 800,000 to support Team Ghana’s Glasgow 2026 campaign
35 minutes -
Broadcaster Kojo Dickson confirms exit from Angel FM/TV after months of speculation
1 hour -
Sierra Leone introduces mandatory online health declaration for all travellers
1 hour -
SSNIT launches Membership Value Programme to offer contributors benefits beyond pensions
1 hour -
Why Europe’s Angel Networks are redirecting early‑stage capital toward Africa’s accelerating AI ecosystem
1 hour -
Gov’t must step in to secure land for waste management in Accra — Richard Fiadomor
1 hour -
Gov’t deploys 506 Feed Ghana Brigade officers nationwide to strengthen agricultural extension services
2 hours -
A response to Prof Kwaku Asare’s defence of “useless” degrees
2 hours -
When mentorship becomes bullying: The hidden abuse of power in academia
2 hours -
Mahama pledges to make Upper West a hub for academic excellence in Northern Ghana
2 hours -
Mr Oduro releases ‘Gishiri’ to raise awareness about excessive salt consumption
2 hours -
CSA warns of rise in online hookup blackmail, urges public to report cyber extortion
2 hours