Showing posts with label World Bank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Bank. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 January 2016

SFG SPEAKS; Blames Ghanaian leaders since February 1966


Jerry Tetteh (L) Kwesi Pratt Jnr (M) and George Koomson( R)

By Ekow Mensah
The Socialist Forum of Ghana (SFG) has observed that since February 1966 “our leaders confidence in our ability to solve our problems has collapsed and the management of our affairs  has been ceded to the IMF and the World Bank”.

At a press conference to announce the programme for this year’s “Day of shame “ the SFG noted that “ instead of leading the country to sacrifice and invest in our future , our leaders have for decades taken perverse pride in how much they are able to borrow to fund elites unsustainable consumption of foreign goods and services.

 It said “our once independent and principled voice in international affairs has been all but silenced, and since 1966, Ghana has increasingly been a docile agent of the US and its allies with only lame and irrelevant platitudes to offer on the major challenges facing the world”.

The SFG said by observing Ghana’s Day of shame “ it seeks to do more than condemn and caution.

 “We have linked the commemoration of the Day of Shame to the far more important event of 6th March.

“We seek to also remind our generation about our history of achievement under the revolutionary leadership of the Osagyefo.

“ More importantly, we commemorate 24th February to remind the public that the vision and method of social organisation that once made Ghana a leader in development and in international peace and justice remains within our reach and that we can regain our path through study, struggle and organization”.

 The SFG said this year’s commemoration will start with seminars  from the 17th to the 23rd of February.

 The theme of the seminars will include “ Trade Unions, Nkrumah and National Development”, “Impact of 1966 Coup on the Empowerment of Women and “Youth”, the politics of Transformation and Nkrumaism”.

The SFG will organize what it calls the grand lecture on the broad theme “Ghana’s Day of shame, 50 years on- Addressing Ghana’s Development Challenges “on February 24.

The lecture is expected to be delivered by Professor Akilagpa  Sawyer, a former Vice Chancellor of the University of Ghana and member of the Council of State.

Editorial
Nkrumaist Agenda
The Nkrumaist agenda is very clear. It is an agenda focused on giving true meaning to Ghana’s independence by way of ensuring that the resources of Ghana are exploited primarily for the benefit of citizens.

Nkrumaism is simply about creating favourable conditions which will make it possible for all capable citizens to obtain education to the highest level possible and for all citizens to have access to health care.

 The agenda is about enforcing the principles of the equality of citizens in law and within the socioeconomic context.

In short the whole idea of Nkrumaism is the creation of a happy people of equal citizens, helping to preserve and expand global civilization.

Achieving these objectives is what the CPP and other so-called Nkrumaist groups ought to be about.

Thursday, 22 October 2015

I DON’T TRUST THE WORLD BANK AND IMF -Kojo Twum Boafo


Kojo Twum Boafo, CEO, Ghana Freezones Board

By Duke Nii Amartey Tagoe
Mr Kojo Twum Boafo, Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Free zones Board has thrown some heavy punches at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

He accuses the Bretton Woods institutions of failing to bring about long term economic stability to developing countries adding that the World Bank does not invest in capital projects that will lead to the structural transformation of developing countries.

“Show me just one country the World Bank and IMF have been able to help out of economic difficulties?” he questioned.

In an angry tone he expressed his mistrust for the United States controlled institutions.“ I don’t trust the World Bank and the IMF because they do not invest in projects that will help create jobs. I am waiting for the day they will invest in roads, factories and other projects that will bring real comfort to our people,” he said.

Mr Boafo explained that the effect of the Structural Adjustment Programme of the World Bank on the economy of debtor states were that their capacity to produce for the domestic market was seriously hampered, small and medium enterprises were pushed into bankruptcy, state enterprises were privatized or closed down and the economy was opened up to an influx of goods from abroad.

According to him the demand for reduction in state expenditure by the World Bank in the early eighties was a means to ensure future loan repayments to the creditors

The World Bank and IMF were founded in 1945 as agencies representing the interest of the world’s financial institutions. The Bank seeks to shape the macro-economic policy in the South through taxation, freeze in public spending and trade.

Kojo Twum Boafo was  speaking on Asempa Fm’s Ekosiisen programme.

2016 ELECTIONS; NO CHANGE WILL COME NO MATTER WHAT


President John Mahama

By Aidan Adongo Avugma
It would not be too long. I mean in about eighteen months time, and Ghanaians would be called upon to perform a ritual. They will be called upon to form long queues to vote. They will elect a new President- John Mahama, Nana Akuffo Addo,  Abu Sakara,  Samia Nkrumah, Ayariga or somebody else, we do not know. What we do know however is that the Ghanaian Presidency embodies the roles of chief executive legislator, head of the state commander-in-chief, and party leader. Beyond this however, and more importantly, the Ghanaian presidential office also embraces two other roles which the media either prefers to maintain a conspiracy of silence on, or is completely ignorant of. The first is as guardian of Ghanaian neo-colonial capitalism ie the role fulfilled by advancing of the wealth and power of giant corporations from Europe, America and Japan, and wealthy investors as well as their Ghanaian front men and women. The second is that of protector of the wider economic system based on individual ownership and the extraction of surplus value.

Opposition Leader, Nana Akufo Addo
So what fundamental difference would Nana Addo’s victory over John Mahama make to the common man on the street or the work places in Ghana? The answer should be simple and to the point. ZILCH. In practice the coming elections in 2016 is little more than a public relations gimmick, when Ghanaians would be given at least a few hours of democracy when they are on the long queues to elect an emissary of the owning class in Ghana and abroad to safeguard; and if possible to expand their class interest in another four years. Whether it is party A,B or C that wins the election or Mr X,Y,Z that becomes the president , their function would be one and only one-pursue policies that stimulates profit regardless of the hardships that this may visit upon the wider  population.

 At the same time they must put up a political garb that gives them the appearance of representing the interest and welfare of the broad masses. This profit imperative that drives them, seem to be a calling from an irresistible force ie the world‘s dominant economic system- capitalism. So any election to government in society as presently constituted must bow to the calling of this irresistible force by the choosing of one of the political parties or presidential candidates that embrace the ideology of capitalism. 

Akua Donkor, Founder of Ghana Freedom Party
Government has a class character. It is not the even handed arbiter between the business man and the ordinary workers as most of us think; but the champion of the owners of the means of production with its boundless constitutional right to exploit ordinary working people. The function of government is to defend the property right of this owning class- investors, giant corporations and front men, to perpetuate their dominance over society, and correspondingly increase the misery of the people and their impoverishment. Adam Smith was blunt about this. He said “this necessity of civil government grows up with the acquisition of valuable property…..Till there be property there can be no government, the very end of which is to secure wealth, and to defend the rich from the poor”

The owning class because of its monopolistic control over society’s means of production and distribution, has overwhelming dominance over ;politics in society; and because of this moulds all institutions customs and social behavior to give expression to its own interest. Under these circumstances the meaning of democracy has metamorphosed from what we understand to be the “rule of the people” to a device that elects “a safe pair of hands” to protect private property and control social and political life of the people. As a result they put up a pretence that government represents workers while actually pursuing an agenda that is anti-worker.

Abu Sakara Foster, Convention Peoples Party (CPP)
In order to maintain this pretence, control of public opinion is essential. The media therefore is used to peddle lies and distortions to blur reality to ensure the docility of workers and make them ineffective,. Their propaganda is awash with praises for the virtues of the free market system designed to perpetuate the falsehood that capitalism and democracy are synonymous. Whether the Ghanaian electorate in 2016 will vote for Mahama , Nana Akuffo Addo or Abu Sakara at this stage is difficult to see through the crystal ball. What is incontestable however is that the outcome will not benefit the Ghanaian wage and salary earning class.

In fact, all the signs are that things will get worse. Whoever takes power in 2016 is going to engage in the further dismantling of the welfare mechanisms for the poorest; and organized labour would be further weakened. The IMF and the World Bank which represents Western business interest will surely certainly demand the elimination of everything that interferes with the ruthless pursuit of profits.

Editorial
Eurobond and All
There is so much noise about the Eurobond for Ghana being oversubscribed that one would be tempted to think that an event of life changing proportions has taken place.
The truth of the matter is that once again Ghana has borrowed one billion Euros from the European Market.

 What is so special about borrowing that our media is awash with positions for and against the so-called Eurobond?

Should a country like Ghana with resources such as gold, diamond, gas, oil, forests, twenty five (25) or more million people, rivers and so on be borrowing all the time?

 Our view is that if national resources are properly harnessed and their theft by the giant corporations of the West prevented, Ghana would not have to borrow.

It is time for the people of Ghana to take their destiny into their own hands and exploit their own resources for their own benefit.
This is the way forward.

Wednesday, 30 September 2015

JOHN MAHAMA : Africa Confidential Predicts He will win 2016 Elections.


President John Dramani Mahama

The London-based influential magazine “Africa Confidential” is predicting that President John Dramani Mahama can win the 2016 elections.

The prediction was in an article headed “A Helping Hand from the Washington Twins” published in the magazine’s September 10, 2015 edition.

The relevant portion of the article reads “….Mahama’s prospects of victory in next year’s elections are higher after this annus horribilis, thanks both to local political machination   and help from the  International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Washington.”
The article dwells  at some length on the internal battles in the opposition New Patrotic Party (NPP) and the allegations of corruption in the party.
The full text of the article is published below:

Cash And Lobbying From The IMF And World Bank Boost The Government A Year Before Elections

Smiling broadly and sporting his trademark northern smock, on 7 September John Mahama submitted his application in Accra to stand again as the governing party's presidential candidate in next year's election. Having sidelined most of the National Democratic Congress dissidents, Mahama is likely to sail through the NDC party primaries. 

After the party formalities, Mahama received Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari for discussions on regional security cooperation. Buhari's victory in March against an incumbent president has fired up opposition hopes in Ghana. Mahama then flew off to Germany to address the Fifteenth International Economic Forum on Africa in Berlin on 8-9 September, where Ghana was again held up as one of Africa's brighter prospects amid concern at China's slow down and the international commodity price crash.

One reason for Mahama's good humour is that his government has managed to steer its way through one of worst years of economic travails since the 1980s: worsening power cuts, devastating floods, inflation soaring to 17% in June, ballooning foreign debt, and opposition claims of unprecedented political and business corruption. Bizarrely, Mahama's prospects of victory in next year's elections are higher after this annus horribilis, thanks both to local political machinations and help from the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Washington.

Firstly, the opposition New Patriotic Party is undercutting itself by a succession of internal disputes in which rivals have enthusiastically destroyed each other's reputations live on Accra's radio stations (AC Vol 55 No 15, Letting a crisis go to waste). The NPP's General Secretary, Kwabena Agyepong, is lambasting the presidential candidate, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. Meanwhile, police are investigating complaints that some senior officials have misused party funds.

Venality and mismanagement
All this has crowded out the campaign about the government's venality and mismanagement by Akufo-Addo and his able running mate, Mahamudu Bawumia, a former Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana. Although Mahama boasts of success in fighting corruption, the government agency for this, the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) has been almost paralysed by administrative disputes and a chronic lack of resources. Accusations of grand corruption in the award of oil blocks and the much-delayed gas processing plant at Atuabo (AC Vol 55 No 18, Popping the gas balloon) go uninvestigated, as do claims about horrific labour abuses in the mining sector and complicity in drug smuggling by some security officers.

For now, the opposition parties' biggest battle is their campaign to get a new electoral register. They reckon the existing one is inflated by over a million names: the population is about 26 million and the median age is 18, meaning that if every eligible Ghanaian registered, there would be about 13 mn. names. The governing NDC, which has a formidable electioneering apparatus, especially when in power, dismisses the arguments saying it is too late and too costly to draw up a new register.

Christine Osei, appointed to chair the Electoral Commission in June, says the register's accuracy will be assessed. Civil activists, such as Emmanuel Akwetey of the Institute of Democratic Governance, who was at one stage tipped for the EC job, argue that the register should be reviewed by an independent task force, drawing on academics and civil society.

A new alliance known as 'Let my vote count' is organising protests in Accra and Kumasi adding to the pressure for a new register. It also wants to see the EC adopt the reforms proposed by the special judicial panel on the 2012 elections, which spent eight months assessing opposition claims of massive fraud in the presidential vote won by Mahama. But by a majority vote, the panel of judges upheld Mahama's election.

This time political tempers are even hotter and the economic situation is much tougher. That second factor has given the IMF and World Bank a key role in Ghana which has been following economic reform programmes for the past three decades.

At the height of the current problems, the IMF has agreed a US$900 million credit to bolster state finances and, more spectacularly, the World Bank is offering a $700 mn. guarantee which it hopes will generate the $7.9 billion that Ghana needs to build the Sankofa gas project. Using local gas, the plant will generate some 1,000 megawatts of electricity and cut costly fuel imports and reduce carbon emissions.

Paradoxically, the companies to benefit from the Bank's guarantee will be Italy's ENI and the Swiss-based oil trader Vitol; but both companies have been plagued by a succession of accusations of malfeasance and trade mispricing operations, especially in Africa.

Finance Minister Seth Terkper presents this combined package as a tremendous vote of confidence in Ghana. He will need every ounce of confidence this month in his campaign to float another eurobond. This time he's looking for $1.5 bn., just as a stronger United States dollar and prospects of a US interest rate rise are drawing money away from emerging markets.

Indeed one banker told us of diminishing commercial interest in Ghana, arguing that IMF, World Bank and African Development Bank would be playing a bigger role. Peter Enti of Nubuke Investments suggests that successful elections in Nigeria and perhaps in Côte d'Ivoire next month, could reduce he value of Ghana's reputation for political stability.

The IMF projects reduced growth in gross domestic product of around 3.5% this year and a persistently large fiscal deficit of over 7% of GDP. Adding to the problems are an interest rate of a hefty 22%, determined by the central bank. This is accompanied by costly local borrowing rates, falling gold prices, government debt to the fuel and power sectors, and lower cocoa production this year.

Although the World Bank's financing help for Sankofa will boost electricity production in the medium term, before that, the power sector needs extensive reform and restructuring, says Franklin Cudjoe of the Accra-based IMANI Centre for Policy and Education. He backs private sector involvement in the state-owned Electricity Company of Ghana, which Mahama is trying to push through in the teeth of trades union opposition.

IMANI has just rated the NDC's delivery record on its 2012 election manifesto at 47% or significantly below average. Conditions for the IMF credit include other policy shifts, such as freezing public sector wages as well as new borrowing at home and overseas. There are also tougher restrictions on the central bank's ability to finance the government deficit.

Renaissance Capital economist Yvonne Mhango says this IMF restriction on Bank of Ghana debt monetisation is critical. Although Ghana might miss the IMF's fiscal deficit reduction targets, an overshoot of 1% or less would still represent progress and not spark major concern over the government's commitment to fiscal tightening. IMF confidence is reflected by its positive assessment in June and its approval of Ghana's planned $1.5 bn. Eurobond, which will be partially guaranteed by the World Bank, she adds. On the downside, Mhango emphasises that the approximately $500 mn. that the government owes to bulk distribution company (BDC) fuel importers needs resolution. 

With about a third of the Eurobond funds used to retire outstanding instalments on Ghana's first Eurobonds, the remaining $900 mn. should provide a boost to state finances. In his address to Parliament on 21 July, Terkper said this year's deficit target would rise to 7.3% from 6.5%, and the growth target would fall from 3.9% to the IMF's predicted 3.5%. Terkper added that developing the Tweneboa, Enyenra and Ntomme (TEN) fields was '57% complete' and would supply oil and gas by the second half of 2016.

Nubuke's Enti, who argues that the 'green shoots' of the IMF-assisted economic recovery have not yet emerged from the trough, predicts that the coming Eurobond's yield will reflect the terms of Ghana's other debt issues, which are above the rates of peer countries such as Côte d'Ivoire. Other analysts predict the interest on the bond could rise above 10%. Copper-dependent Zambia is paying 9.4% on the $1 bn. bond it floated in July.

Enti adds that Ghana should benefit from the US$1.8 billion cocoa facility being arranged with a consortium of local and international banks this month to support Ghana Cocoa Board purchases of cocoa from farmers in the 2015-16 season. The Bank of Ghana has already been able to access some of these incoming proceeds through a financial swap deal.

For Terkper and Mahama, the market's response to the bond issue will be a key test of their recovery plan. Even if the interest rates are no higher than the 8% charged on last year's bond, debt obligations are now approaching 70% of GDP. That's higher than a decade ago, when the previous government negotiated an IMF- and World Bank-backed write-down under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative.

A couple of random factors could yet help Ghana: international economic jitters are likely to push up the price of gold, the country's second biggest export; those same jitters have caused much more economic trouble elsewhere in Africa, in South America and even in Asia, so Ghana's economic woes are no longer exceptional. Much will depend on its politics but it could just be one of the first to emerge from the morass. 
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2015
http://www.africa-confidential.com

Editorial
A credible Voters Register
 There is nothing wrong with the New Patriotic Party (NPP) making a case for the compilation of a new voters’ register.

 That is within the right of all political parties and citizens of Ghana.
Indeed such positions taken by individuals and organizations need to be subjected to rigorous technical test to enable the relevant public institution to come to firm decisions.

Unfortunately, it appears that there are some elements in the NPP who are determined to impose the wishes of the party on the rest of the country.

This is clearly evidenced in their posture and public utterances.

What do these elements mean when they publicly proclaim that their position on the compilation of a new voters register is not negotiable?

And what can be the purpose of organizing a demonstration on the proposal for the compilation of a new voters’ register when the matter is under discussion by all the political parties?

 It is important for all political parties and their associates to realize that they cannot impose their positions on the people of Ghana.

 The way forward as far as the compilation of a credible voters register is concerned,must lie in dialogue with all interested parties and people of Ghana.