African nations need political awakening to tackle the debt issue


Adebayo Olukoshi, a professor of governance at the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa, has challenged African leaders to respond to the call for a strong political will to lift their countries out of the cyclical debt situation.

According to a 2023 report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), more than half of Sub-Saharan Africa’s low-income countries are at high risk or already in debt distress.

The report also revealed that the debt ratios of most Sub-Saharan African countries had increased from an average of 30 per cent in 2013 to nearly 60 per cent in 2022.

Currently, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, Nigeria, Zambia, and other African countries are implementing various loan-support programmes with the IMF and going through a debt restructuring process.

However, Prof Olukoshi emphasised that Africa would require a local political awakening to overcome the debt problem and put the continent on the path of debt sustainability and economic stability.

He made the remarks during a media interview on the
sidelines of a three-day conference in Accra on Africa’s debt crisis and international financial architecture reform on Wednesday.

The International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs) is organising the conference in collaboration with the African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD) and the Ghanaian government.

‘It’s important that we break this cycle, and the starting point is political awakening; an awakening that provides a framework in which leadership vision can then be developed,’ he said.

Prof Olukoshi stated that Africa, as the world’s most endowed continent in terms of human and natural resources, should stop ‘going around with a begging bowl from one generation to the other.’

‘If we [Africa] wake up to the realisation that enough is enough, and that we cannot continue with this cycle, then we can begin to take the necessary measures to break the structures of dependence,’ he said.

According to Prof. Olukoshi, median exports from Africa to the rest of the world amounted to m
ore than US$60 billion, including nurses and doctors, while others cross the Sahel and Mediterranean ‘only to go and pick fruits in foreign countries.’

 ‘Why do you continue to produce raw materials which you don’t process, export more capital from Africa to the rest of the world and go begging? he quizzed.

He underscored the need for the continent to increase productivity and regulate its export of human resources and raw materials to the rest of the world.

Mr Charles Abugre, Executive Director of IDEAs, noted that it had only been 20 years since the Multilateral Debt Relief initiative ended, and many African countries are now facing debt crises.

The solution to the challenges, he said, was largely dependent on good political and bureaucratic leadership, which the three-day conference would emphasise.

The conference would, therefore, provide a platform to learn from the past, determine how best to restructure debt to prevent insolvency and develop alternatives to external loan support programmes on debt
sustainability.

This would be done through panel and roundtable discussions among political scientists, academics, economists, policymakers, and civil society organizations (CSOs).

Source: Ghana News Agency

Upper West Region records 19 maternal deaths in 2023


Dr Damien Punguyire, the Upper West Regional Director of Health Service, has said the region recorded 19 maternal deaths in 2023 as against 16 in 2022.

The proportion of deliveries supervised by qualified health workers also declined from 73 per cent in 2022 to 71 per cent in 2023.

Dr Punguyire announced this in Wa at the opening of the 2023 Annual Regional Health Sector Performance Review Meeting of the Ghana Health Service (GHS) on the theme: ‘Embracing the Networks of Practice Approach to improve health outcomes in the Upper West Region’.

Members of the Regional Health Committee, development partners, Municipal and District Chief Executives, Directors of Health, Principals of Health Training Institutions and traditional leaders among others attended.

Mr Punguyire explained that institutional neonatal mortality in the region dropped from about six per 1000 live births in 2022 to five per1000 live births in 2023, while still birth rate declined from 11 per 1000 births in 2022 to about seven per 1000 birt
hs in 2023.

Anemia among pregnant women at 36 weeks remained a big challenge for the region as it increased from 39.8 per cent in 2022 to 44.2 per cent in 2023.

The proportion of Out-Patients Department (OPD) cases attributable to malaria reduced from 29.4 per cent in 2022 to 27.5 per cent in 2023.

Malaria admissions also reduced from about 7,900 cases in 2022 to 6,800 in 2023, and deaths due to malaria significantly reduced from 18 in 2022 to six in 2023.

509 Tuberculosis (TB) cases were detected in the region in 2023 compared to 479 in 2022, with 79 and 69 percentage proportions of the cases, respectively, cured in those years.

He said the country’s vision of achieving the Universal Health Coverage (UHC) of ensuring access to high-quality health services, irrespective of one’s ability to pay at the point of use, was anchored on building a resilient health system at all levels.

That was more critical at the sub-district level, which was the focal point of the implementation of many health interventions
and policies.

‘However, the sub-district health system (health centres) has been found to be the weakest link in the overall health system in Ghana, with strong CHPS (Community-based Health Planning and Services) at the base,’ Mr Punguyire.

To address this weakness, the Ghana Health Service and the Ministry of Health had proposed to develop networks of practice among sub-district health facilities to improve service delivery and in the process, upgrade health centres into model ones, he said.

Mr Eric Boateng Frimpong, the Director of Internal Audit, who read a speech on behalf of the Director General of the GHS, said Primary Health Care (PHC) remained core to the Service’s agenda of providing comprehensive healthcare to the public.

The country could achieve UHC if it had a good PHC system, hence improving the PHC system was an important venture to the Service, he said.

Mr Frimpong observed that the GHS had achieved a reduction in still birth and institutional neonatal mortality rates over the past five y
ears.

There was a downward trend in still birth rates per 1000 live births, decreasing from 12.6 in 2019 to 10.2 in 2023.

Similarly, there was a reduction in institutional neonatal mortality rate per 100,000 live births from 7.8 in 2019 to 5.1 in 2023.

Prof. Juventus Ziem, the founding Dean of the School of Medical Sciences, CK Tedam University, who chaired the event, said the review meeting was an opportunity for actors to assess the sectors to improve service delivery.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Dr. Nyaho-Tamakloe, Odotei retained on new Hearts board, new members announced


Dr. Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe and Mr. Vicent Sowah Odotei have been named to the newly constituted Hearts of Oak board, having served on the previous board.

The Ghana Premier League giants announced on Wednesday, March 27, 2024, their new board members following the dissolution of the old board back in February 2024.

Among the new board members are Mr. Delali Anku-Adiamah, who was recently appointed Managing Director, and Togbe Afede XIV, who assumes the role of Executive Chairman of the board.

Other new members of the board are the CEO of the Ghana Tourism Authority, Akwasi Agyeman, Dr. Kenneth Ashigbey, Mrs. Ivy Heward-Mills, Professor Agyemang Badu Akosa, and Mr. Samuel Wilfred Yaw Inkoom.

The new board are expected to be sworn into their new role at the upcoming Annual General Meeting (AGM). The new board will be expected to steer the affairs of the club for the next four years as they seek to propel the Phobian club to greater heights amid recent lows.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Empowering women in business will unlock potential for economic growth?-?McDan


Dr Daniel MacKorley, the Founder and Chairman of the McDan Group of Companies, Wednesday said putting women at the top management of his companies is not just for equity purposes.

Dr MacKorley said he cherished women and put them in managerial positions because they had more potential for business development.

‘Empowering women to lead in business isn’t just about equality, it’s about unlocking the full potential for the growth of our economy and society,’ he said.

Speaking at the Women Business Dialogue, he said, he had been strong and hardly bowed to failure because of the training and the courage planted in him by his late mother and that courage had lived in him till today.

The economy could not achieve any meaningful growth when women, who constituted over 50.7 per cent of the country’s population, were not empowered in the business world, indicating that no country globally could make it when half of its population was left on the sidelines.

‘Our economy cannot thrive when women are not given a sea
t at the table. I’m sure that in looking at how to promote entrepreneurship and drive exclusive economic growth and jobs, there is no better place to start than with women,’ he added.

He acknowledged females as the next global key drivers of entrepreneurship, adding that there were more women entrepreneurs in Ghana than men.

Dr MacKorley explained that ‘the woman selling ‘Kaklo’ on the street, who has 10 or five children, feeding them together with her husband, is more of an entrepreneur than a banker sitting at a desk.’

He said about 90 per cent of the 1,200 women in Ada paid back an interest-free loan of GHs3 million he gave out, a gesture, which showed how honest they were at their businesses.

In a Harvard Business Review article, it was revealed that women-owned firms in the private sector represented approximately 37 per cent of global enterprises.

He said the percentage was rising, and those firms spanned new fashion houses to visionary high-tech businesses.

To encourage more women to embark on th
e entrepreneurial journey, Ghana must focus on improving their financial literacy skills by empowering them with the knowledge and understanding of financial management, accessing start-up funding, and making informed financial decisions, he said.

Dr MacKorley encouraged women not to shy away from taking on risks in business, such as accessing funding opportunities, as start-up funds played a vital role in fueling work growth, so women should step out of their comfort zones and seize opportunities that may require taking calculated risks.

He called for mentorship and networking programmes for women, both formal and informal, to connect experienced businesswomen with aspiring entrepreneurs, to create a strong support system as guidance and solidarity for navigating the challenges they may face in their businesses.

Dr MacKorley urged banks and financial institutions to create dedicated funds or grant programmes to support women entrepreneurs, as the provision of access to capital could be a game-changer to e
nsure that women had the needed financial resources to start and grow their businesses.

He called on the Government to formulate policies that promoted gender equality in business to benefit society and challenged women to break free from self-limiting beliefs and be confident for success.

Empowering women to be at the forefront of the business world was not only essential for their personal and professional growth but also for the country’s economic development.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Calm down! Eastwood Anaba urges


Reverend Eastwood Anaba, Senior Pastor at Desert Pastures, a branch church of Fountain Gate Chapel in Bolgatanga, Upper East Region, has emphasized the need for people not to let anger override them, but to calm down.

He said lots of acts among members of the public were due to anger, noting that anger, if not controlled, could lead to killings, stealing, riots and ungodly acts.

‘People’s anger must calm down,’ Reverend Anaba, who is the President of the Eastwood Anaba Ministries (EAM), told his members prior to delivering a sermon at a joint church service in Bolgatanga on Sunday.

The sermon was titled: ‘Broken and Blessed in the House of the Lord.’

He led the congregation to pray for people’s anger to calm down, saying, ‘We pray that our anger will calm down. Let people’s anger calm down in our families, our places of work, our churches, and our businesses.’

Reverend Anaba further expressed concern about rampant deaths in the country and said deaths were not as rampant in the past as they are today.

H
e noted: ‘These days, somebody can just kill you, even when you have done nothing to the person.

‘Years ago, there were things we were not doing. We were not killing and destroying people just anyhow like these days. Paul in the Bible said, that people will become worse.’

Reverend Anaba recalled that in the past, only soldiers had guns, but today, even children have guns.

He declared: ‘I want us to pray for peace, not only in the Upper East Region but the whole of Ghana and the world.

‘Jesus Christ died for us so that we will have peace. We cannot continue to be in trouble. For the benefit of Easter, He became sin for us, that we might be the righteousness of God in Christ. The chastisement of our peace was upon Him.’

The renowned preacher told his congregation to pray that human life would be valuable, adding that, ‘You cannot have peace in your house if there is no peace in the Upper East Region.’

Reverend Anaba announced the Church’s annual week-long programme, dubbed ‘Bethesda.’

He would be the mai
n Speaker at the programme.

Other Pastors would be Pastor Dr Mensa Otabil, the Founder and General Overseer of the International Central Gospel Church; Reverend Daniel Asiedu, the Chairman of Fountain Gate Chapel and Reverend Mrs Rosemond Anaba, the Vice President of EAM.

Reverend Anaba said Pastor Dr Otabil as part of the programme, would dedicate the first phase of the ‘Gibeath Har Elohim,’ a magnificent architectural piece of infrastructure at Damolg-Tindongo in the Nabdam District, made of a 1000-seater-air-conditioned hall, to God.

He said the hall would serve as a community centre and would be used by the Chiefs in the area, officials of the District Assembly and other stakeholders.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Harvest Praise 2024 to feature Phil Thompson and Alvin Slaughter


The Harvest Praise 2024, dubbed ‘Anapuao Edition,’ will feature international artists, Phil Thompson and Alvin Slaughter, the organisers have announced.

Harvest Praise is an initiative of the Harvest International Ministries (HIM), with the event celebrating its silver jubilee last year.

In a press statement copied to the Ghana News Agency (GNA), indicated that the programme would take place on Good Friday, March 29, 2024, at the First Love Centre – Legon.

It said ‘Anapuao’ was the Greek word for rest, indicating that the year’s edition was inspired by Mathew 11: 28, which called on all ‘who are weak and heavy-laden,’ to come to Jesus for rest.

‘It promises to be a time of refreshing and healing for the soul,’ it stated adding that ‘as always there will be life-transforming ministrations by the Harvest Theatre as well as the host choir’.

This year, Harvest Praise, promises a refreshing, soul-healing, holy spirit-inspired atmosphere that would break spiritual chains and lift burdens through song ministrat
ion by the renowned gospel performers Alvin Slaughter and Phil Thompson.

Source: Ghana News Agency