Audio By Carbonatix
Political Scientist, Professor Ransford Gyampo, says President Akufo-Addo’s refusal to reshuffle his Ministers is an unnecessary dissipation of the limited human resources the country possesses that can be brought on board to help solve the economic crisis the country is reeling from.
According to him, the President’s strong opposition to the idea of a reshuffle, the downsizing of his government, and the sacking of his Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, seems to suggest the President’s boast of having ‘the men’ was mere rhetoric and not factual.
He stated that taking into consideration the dire situation the country finds itself in, it was about time the President brought on board fresh minds with new outlooks to help solve the economic situation while reducing the size of his government to save resources.
Prof. Gyampo said, the President’s reluctance to heed the call of citizens seems to suggest the administration might be keeping those Ministers at post to keep far worse facts about the country’s situation under wraps.
Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile on Saturday, he said, “You cannot tell me Mr. Ofori-Atta is the best Finance Minister that Ghana would ever produce or that within Ghana at the moment there’s nobody in the NPP who can run our Finances better than him.”
He further stated that noting the crisis the President’s opposition to public counsel is fuelling, someone should test suing the President for causing financial loss to the state over his failure to tap into the bright minds the country has to offer.
“There are brains, there are talents that are going waste and I’m saying that tomorrow or someday to come somebody should be able to test this at the court, suing the President for causing financial loss to the state for not bringing on board the brains and the talents that could have been brought on board to help steer us, navigate us through the crisis we find ourselves. Why are we wasting them?
“…And I’m saying that failure to reshuffle is tantamount to the dissipation of the limited human resource that we have that can be brought on board to help us navigate our way out of the quagmires of economic miserections which we find ourselves,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
Failure is part of Success — Peter Debrah encourages resilience among Students
1 hour -
Is the IMF Complicit in Bank of Ghana’s Massive 2025 Losses? – IERPP
3 hours -
Scaling Together: Prudential Bank MD’s advice on fintech‑bank partnerships in Africa
3 hours -
Joe Mettle inspires hope with new song ‘This Year’
4 hours -
Antisemitism ‘allowed to come into the open’ says Bondi victim’s daughter
4 hours -
What Is Wrong with Us? Why do we Reject Colonialism yet Cling to its Titles?
4 hours -
World Bank pushes regional health strategy to close financing gaps in West and Central Africa
5 hours -
Britney Spears pleads guilty to reckless driving after arrest
5 hours -
Parentage, not paternity: Ghana’s proposed compulsory paternity testing bill sparks fears of discrimination against mothers
5 hours -
Samsung family pays off record $8bn inheritance tax bill
5 hours -
Spain seizes record amount of cocaine in Atlantic Ocean, authorities say
5 hours -
Two killed and many injured after car driven into crowd in German city of Leipzig
5 hours -
KiDi drops ‘Signature’ with Lasmid ahead of album release
5 hours -
UAE accuses Iran of renewed drone and missile attacks
5 hours -
Giuliani recovering from pneumonia and ‘now breathing on his own’
5 hours