Ladies and Gentlemen, it is time for us to move beyond Ropab and tackle the real problems facing our dear nation We will all survive Ropab with either bloated egos or slightly bruised egos.The so called revolutionaries will always believe only revolution will save the Republic. They had their chance for a greater part of our political sojourn and failed miserably. We need to debate the economic, social and political future of our country. Ghana like most African countries is at the crossroads. We are the last frontier for political and economic experiment. It is my humble opinion that two of the key national challenges are Productivity and corruption.It is very simple. When a society does not produce much but few priveleged or opportunistic few steal the little produced the result is disaster.
Some of us are nostalgic about Nkrumah era. The plain truth is that this was the beginning of the erosion of our strong work ethic as a nation. Our attempt at Sate capitalism and collectivized farming was a failure. Do you remember the Workers Brigade and Work and happiness. I do. The workers did not produce much, stole the little they produced, the tractors were broken and never serviced and our dream of happiness was never realized. Does this sound familiar? The results were massive debts which has taken a painful HIPC and debt forgiveness to get rid off and legacy of laziness and corruption.
Our way forward is for the government to divest itself rapidly from most its state holdings. The government only needs to be involved in strategic assets. Our cumulative productivity is low because of the public sector. Our private sector is responding very well. The government should be preoccupied with public policy. The government should not be in the business of creating jobs. It should provide the infrastructure for the private sector to create jobs.We need this balance to able to create a climate of sustained growth and development.
Reform our civil service to be as efficient as our private sector.Set achievable goals and hold managers responsible. Institute measurable merit system into our civil institutions. Reward successful managers and employees.
Reduce our bloated civil institution payroll. Create a seamless private sector to public sector and vice versa enviroroment for workers and managers.
President Kuffour and former President Rawlings should lead this effort and stop politicizing it. Rawlings populist government was anti corruption however in the end the pure revolutionaries were even stealing from the thieves.Why do Ghanaians from the messenger to the Minister collect bribes and steal from our National purse? That is million dollar question.Is it greed? Yes. Is it the extended family system and its attendant responsibilities? May be. Is it the extra money needed to keep extra girlfriends and wives? Sometimes. Is it seen as the only way to keep up with the Joneses? True in some cases. Whatever the myriad reasons are, we have a problem we need to control. Political grandstanding is not going to solve the problem.
I live in a city where civil servants are being hauled to jail almost every month. It is not Ghana but the US. Yes, the very people who tell us our biggest obstacle to our development is corruption. The difference is they are going to jail whiles our thieves are buying stools with their ill gotten wealth to become chiefs and paying expensive tuition and boarding to send their children to foreign institutions. We need to create an independent and strong law enforcement and judiciary. We are moving in the right direction but slowly.
If we are able to clean up our civil institutions to a point where corruption is not the norm but an exception, we will then be able to curb political corruption. That is where we have a clean clerk who is angry at the Minister for stealing not because he is stealing more than him or her.