Audio By Carbonatix
The Vice President and presidential candidate of the NPP, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, has reiterated his commitment to building a modern and inclusive country anchored by systems and data.
In an interaction with members of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) in Accra last night, Dr. Bawumia assured them of his quest, as President, to ensure good governance, transparency, and inclusiveness.
"I want to build a country of inclusiveness with good governance and transparency that all of you care about," Dr. Bawumia said.
Dr. Bawumia added that to build a modern country that ensures inclusion, transparency, and good governance, there is the need to put in place systems for a seamless transition, hence his focus on putting in place some structures over the past years.
"When we came into office, I started focusing on building the systems that will ensure transparency," Dr. Bawumia said, explaining that in a 2010 book, he had recommended the building of these systems; digital identity, property address system, and financial inclusion, as the key systems which developing countries must build for economic transformation.
"This is why when I had the opportunity as Vice President, I focused on getting these systems in place as an anchor of our digitalisation drive, which would eventually impact our economic transformation."
Dr. Bawumia explained that with the issuance of the Ghana Card addressing the issue of lack of identity, the digital address system addressing lack of proper address, and mobile money interoperability resolving financial inclusion, Ghana had built a strong digital system, which made it possible for the digitalisation of public services.
Moving forward, under his Presidency, hopefully, Dr. Bawumia told the CSOs how he intends to build on these systems to especially ensure greater inclusion, transparency, and deal with corruption in his quest for economic transformation.
"Digitalisation ensures greater inclusion, as we have seen with mobile money interoperability and the removal of human contacts in so many things."
"It also ensures transparency and I want to have a very transparent government. I want every government transaction to be traceable and cannot be erased."
"This is why I believe we have to implement a blockchain e-government system. The UAE, for instance, is using blockchain, and I want Ghana to be the first country in Africa to introduce blockchain. This will make it possible for greater transparency in our governance system."
"I'm a problem solver by nature, and I like dealing with problems. I believe that what the advanced countries have done, we can do even better."
Latest Stories
-
Six Ghanaian students at Loughborough University protest unpaid government scholarship funding
10 seconds -
Agotime-Ziope traditional leaders honour health minister for advancing healthcare delivery
24 seconds -
COCOBOD CEO calls for greater trust, unity in Ghana–Côte d’Ivoire cocoa partnership
10 minutes -
Mahama expected in Abidjan for high-level cocoa summit with Côte d’Ivoire
25 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Tuesday, June 16, 2026
44 minutes -
Africa has right policies for Agri-Food Systems transformation but lacks capacity to implement them
54 minutes -
Fuel prices fall as some OMCs cuts petrol to GH¢13.87 per litre
1 hour -
Japan raises interest rate to highest since 1995
1 hour -
€106m water project moves closer as GWCL begins stakeholder consultations in Savannah Region
2 hours -
India blocks Telegram messaging app until June 22, government says
2 hours -
Cocoa farmers spared another blow as gov’t rejects price cut despite global slump – COCOBOD
2 hours -
While Côte d’Ivoire cuts cocoa prices, Ghana holds the line to protect farmers – COCOBOD
3 hours -
‘We had to save the sector’ – COCOBOD defends unprecedented cocoa price intervention
3 hours -
Sophia Akuffo didn’t resign over Torkornoo’s removal – Kwakye Ofosu
3 hours -
Government ends diesel fuel relief ahead of June pricing window
3 hours