Ghana: An Odyssey through 50 Years of Nationhood

Published on 13th February 2007

Retrospection

Five decades ago, my country, Ghana, a small West African nation got out of the shackles of colonialism but reverted to a quasi pre-historic system of human organisation in the years immediately after independence. The very leaders who had promised paradise during the struggle for independence with chants of "we prefer self-government in danger to servitude in tranquillity" decided to throw overboard an all-inclusive approach to managing our resources.

The spontaneous process that should harness the 'local' knowledge of the creative, diligent, and thrifty Ghanaian to freely create wealth was dismissed as vestiges of Western colonialism. Instead, our leaders introduced an ‘African way of social organisation,’ a uniquely authoritarian top-down command politics unknown to pre-colonial traditional African governance that was matched with massive investments in state-run industry. The result: unproductive and stunted political and economic growth, tight control on economic activity and death to individual entrepreneurship. State dependency, poverty, squalor, corruption, ignorance, abuse of property rights and suppression of differing opinion became our lot.

When it became clear that their policies had failed, our leaders turned the blame on colonialism. Civilian murmurings and revolts catapulted the military into action. They seized power, hoping to apply their military skills to fixing the economy. They were worse.

We did not live through many of these events, but their ripples were felt as late as the 1990's in my country, Ghana. We remember our parents joining long and winding queues to buy bread and other edibles to last for God-knows-when. We saw severely malnourished children live on palm kernel nuts and cassava farrine. Agriculture had failed. Hospitals were in complete disarray due to a shortage of medicine and health personnel. Education was in shambles. Our external debts were soaring. The economy was, in one word, 'stupid'.

Thankfully, we did not go the way our neighbours went--civil war. Reform programs from the citadel of Harvard via the Bretton Woods Institutions (IMF and the World Bank) were flung in our faces. From Structural Adjustment Programmes, Programmes of Action to Mitigate the Social Cost of Adjustment, Heavily Indebted Poor Country Initiatives to a host of poverty alleviation garb made rounds in our economics books. These reform programmes achieved little by themselves, as the aid attached to them was mere government-to-government transfer, ending up in the pockets of politicians.

Rewards  

However, these reforms helped open our economy to the rest of the world, since the condition for receiving foreign aid was to democratise and liberalise. After all, democracy has been said to be a marketplace of ideas. After our humble steps to liberalise fifteen years ago, the result has been relatively respectable. The government understands that the knowledge required to build the assets of the poor is dispersed and can only be communicated effectively by a free and empowered citizenry. Many state-owned enterprises have been de-nationalised and sold to individuals with capital.

Many individuals now own small businesses, albeit informal, from which they eke out a living. There is relative leverage to enforce the basic rules of contract, as our judicial system tire to rid itself of corrupt judges and replaces longhand reporting to computerised reporting since as a friend puts it, "prosperity ships away when the rules of just conduct break down, because people lack the predictability needed to make long-term plans and investments."

Ghanaians now know their land can't be taken away by the state without adequate compensation. There are over 15 private radio stations in Accra alone. There are private television stations with lively debates about the economy and social issues. Many Ghanaians have since abandoned their black and white TV sets for coloured ones.

Instructively, Ghanaians now know that there are civilised ways of channelling grievances, rather than through the barrel of the gun. Cudjoe’s mother, a fish trader, who was unable to raise a loan of $150 from a moneylender as start-up capital fifteen years ago, could potentially do so now because micro-credit schemes are no longer cowed into oblivion or rendered dysfunctional.

Ghana's liberalisation efforts, although in fits and starts, have been boosted by information technology. Through the use of IT, we could improve our economy's mainstay-agriculture. Should excessive tax compliance rules be relaxed, the importation of advanced and superior agricultural technology could boost buffer stocks in maize and rice. Technology is being employed to compile a database of land to establish true ownership. It is helping to computerise our courts to dispense over 60,000 land cases which all stand in the way of development.

Our efforts in the banking industry have been rewarded with a cautious entry of international banks, mostly Nigerian. Ghana has been lauded as one of the best performing economies in Africa.

There are over 300 cyber cafés in Accra alone. Many High Schools and Universities throughout the country have computer resource centres with some connected to the World Wide Web. This is positive, as many students are improving their knowledge through Internet research while searching for scholarships to further their studies. Ghanaians have found the Internet, an alternative means of communicating, a significant departure from the abysmal rate of 80 persons per fixed telephone. A dollar an hour is an incredible sacrifice but it symbolises the dire need to use information.

For those in remote areas, mobile tele-centres periodically bring the beauty of IT to them. Talented drop-outs have found a niche in music recording, producing volumes of what has become known in Ghana as the 'hip-life', a rare mixture of traditional high-life music and Western hip-hop that are not only rhythmically inviting, but lyrically didactic as many tell stories of poverty and how to escape from it. Call it 'cultural imperialism' but it's creating jobs for these young ones who otherwise would have turned to armed robbers and drug pushers.

In the import and export arena, a big confidence factor has been overcome in the safe delivery of goods and in revenue generation, as an automated system is in place to facilitate customs procedures. In the not too distant past, it took a month to clear a container of goods from our ports. Now it takes only four days.

The Opportunity to Learn

As we open our society, we are learning that it is possible to move from an agrarian society to do newer things that were hitherto impossible with fewer resources. The services industry is picking up and will be greatly enhanced through IT. We are realising that a true knowledge-based economy is indeed the cornerstone of economic prosperity. Knowledge of where and how human and natural resources can be harnessed can only be enhanced in a free society, which in turn will lead to greater political freedom. That free entrepreneurial society is not utopian. It is achievable when individuals are allowed to freely make choices, engage in voluntary exchange, compete for resources and innovate, while the government performs its mandated role of protecting their person and lawful property.

A few more battles

However, juxtaposing our current challenges with what exists in the rich West leaves us without any doubt as to which path to follow. We have a per capita GDP of $480 as compared to $34,000 in America, a staggering double-digit inflation rate as compared to single digit inflation, exponentially growing tax rates as against dwindling tax rates, and government as the largest employer compared to millions of privately created jobs in America. Yet, we have the identical resource responsible for the West's rise--the human mind. Its potential can only be unleashed when Ghanaians are allowed to freely think. Qualitative nurturing of the mind is important to achieve this progress. Capitation grants purported to achieve higher enrolment numbers in primary schools defeats this important resource as the cacophonous chaos in classrooms is a sure recipe for mediocre development of the mind of our young ones.

Corruption, which accounts for almost 25 per cent of our annual GDP continentally, needs uprooting. Perhaps the booty from grand corruption could buy a used computer and printer each for our Police Stations to keep records of complaints instead of using cheap log papers that tire under wear and tear. The energy situation surely will get Nkrumah, our first President turning in his grave as we have not been able to add even one mega watt of power to what we already had. Access to quality water remains a dream for many Ghanaians. Diseases of poverty still afflict us. What then are the pillars for a modern economy to take off?

Perhaps comparing ourselves to the United States is unfair. But wouldn’t’ it be laughable to compare ourselves to the very countries we started Independent life with –South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia? Finding answers to ‘no brainer’ questions such as; what affects corruption; how wealth improves health; why illiteracy thrives under high education budgets; why the average Ghanaian was poorer in 2007 than in 1957, will be proof of our desire to imitate the world’s winners instead of the losers.

At age 50, the government should stop pretending to be everybody's keeper and focus on its role of providing protection for privately created wealth while enforcing the rules of just conduct. It should leave wealth and job creation to Ghanaians, and encourage individual efforts at providing superior goods to Ghanaians under very humane tax laws. Above all, the government should translate its theoretical understanding of decentralization into practice and give back economic and political freedom to those who employed it—grassroot people.

By Franklin Cudjoe, Executive Director of IMANI, a think-tank based in Accra and Evans Selorm Branttie, Communications Manager at IMANI.


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