President John Agyekum Kufuor will deliver his first Sessional Address to Parliament tomorrow, (Thursday, February 15) and there are high expectations, since the address is expected to give a hint of the government's programme for the year, reports the Dispatch.
He may also give a hint of the 2001 Budget, expected within the next two weeks. Many Ghanaians will want to know how the New Patriotic Party will create 100,000 jobs by the end of the year, as promised in their Manifesto.
Sources close to the Presidency have hinted that the Address is likely to be a brief overview of the NPP's Manifesto 2000, dubbed agenda for Positive Change. The address is also expected to have inputs from the just-ended Akosombo Workshop on the economy.
The President is expected to let Ghanaians know how his government will solve what have been identified as the major economic problems; the declining value of the cedis; excessive government debt and fiscal deficit; slow economic growth; rising rural and urban poverty; high unemployment, inflation and interest.
President Kufuor will explain how to strengthen an independent machinery of "justice, which is free of political interference, rule of law in its fullness and the enforceability of contracts under conditions of fair dealing and equity."
"JAK," as he is affectionately known, is expected to re-assure Ghanaians, how his government will curb " the progressively alarming crime rate and make the streets safe for our mothers, sisters and children."
One of the greatest expectations of the average Ghanaian is the President's promise of creating more jobs. The NPP's Manifesto promises the "establishment of a National Youth Corps to create at least 100,000 jobs by the end of its first year and even more in subsequent years.