?..tell me it ain?t so, Mr. President.
In today?s world where small, lean governments have become very fashionable much like downsizing was during the 80?s in Europe and the United States, Ghana?s parliament is readying itself to vet 53 additional nominees for ministerial appointments.
If the caboodle receives the green light from the bi-partisan vetting committee of Parliament, this would bring the total number of ministers who serve at the pleasure of President John Agyekum Kufuor to 88.
Without doubt this would make the Kufuor administration one of the biggest ?big governments? in Africa, if not the entire world.
By this feat, the administration of President Kufuor has broken a record it set during its first term when the number of ministers stood at 77. Meantime critics are holding the feet of the administration to the fire for ostensibly perpetuating the same sins it criticized its predecessor for when the New Patriotic Party (NPP) was in opposition.
The leading opposition party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the other minority parties have raised strong queries about the rationale behind the appointments and have called on the government to scale back on the number in order to reduce expenditure.
The government?s response to the rising criticism of the number of ministerial appointees has been tenuous at best.
They claim that the 1992 constitution supports the present number of ministerial appointees and that those against it are basically in to cause mischief.
One of the main concerns behind this backlash from the opposition has to do with the distribution of the deputy ministerial nominees. Some of the nominees are being penciled in for ministries that already have one or two deputy Ministers already.
This means that if their vetting goes through some ministries are going to have three or four deputy Ministers. This looks like a recipe for disaster. The Minority in parliament say it is ?job for the boys.? Some brilliant minds that have waded into the issue have questioned the wisdom behind this additional list especially in a time when people are being called upon to tighten their belts.
A lot of people on the list of 53 cannot even hold a light to the face of Kwesi Nduom, Nana Akufo-Addo, John Mahama, Ekwow Spio-Garbrah etc.
While I would not allow myself to be drawn into mentioning names, I know for a fact that one person on the list managed to get there because of his father?s position on the National Executive Committee of the NPP.
I worked with this individual at the Ghanaian Chronicle some years back. That is all the hint I will proffer at this point.
Among the surfeit of reasons behind the unprecedented surge of the United States economy in the late 1990?s was due in part to the close collaboration between the Clinton administration and the Republican controlled Congress to get rid of the budget deficit which stood at several billions of dollars. As in the case of other nations, the bi-partisan effort made reducing big government one of its prized targets. History has shown that they were dead on target.
Spurred on by a swell amount of goodwill and support from both sides, it identified several programs that needed to be cut from the system to make the system, prudent, self-sustaining and self-sufficient.
Our economy has been stretched to its very elastic limits and to further burden it by shoring up the ranks of the executive arm of government is as absurd as it can get.
This is not cool, Mr. President.