President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has urged the youth to avoid risky migration through the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea to Europe and other parts of the world in search for greener pastures.
He said the government was in the process of creating decent job opportunities in the country and urged the youth to stay home and explore those opportunities to better their living conditions.
The President indicated that never again should a Ghanaian citizen feel the need to join the desperados that crossed the Sahara and drown in the Mediterranean Sea, because their own country held no promise or hope.
“I know there will always be those among us who would want to try and seek their fortunes in foreign lands. We would wish them well, and pray that they are treated with dignity wherever they go; but it should never be because there are no opportunities in Ghana,” he added.
President Akufo-Addo made this known on Monday when he delivered a speech on “Democracy and Development” at the Cambridge Union Society of the University of Cambridge, as part of his three-day visit to the United Kingdom.
Ghana’s infant democracy, the President said, had put the country on the path to sustainable development, which would improve the way the natural and human resources of the country were managed.
“We are on the path to creating wealth and improving the lives of our people. We are determined to do that by transforming the structure of our economy. The neo-colonial economy, based on the production and export of raw materials, cannot form the basis of a new era of prosperity for our people,” he said.
The President continued, “We have to move, and we are moving towards an economy of processed agricultural and engineering goods and services. That is the way to job creation on a mass base, and an improvement in the incomes of ordinary Ghanaians.”
With widespread unemployment prevalent amongst the youth, which, in his view, represents the greatest threat to Ghana’s democracy and stability, President Akufo-Addo noted that only a performing, rapidly expanding economy that generated jobs could provide an urgent solution.
In the short space of 10 months since his government took office, President Akufo-Addo said the country’s macro-economy had been stabilising.
“The fiscal deficit, which stood at 9.5 per cent at the end of 2016, has been reduced to 6.3 per cent. Inflation, within the same period, has declined from 15.4 per cent to 11.6 per cent. Our economy has grown from 3.3 per cent last year, the lowest in 22 years, to 7.9 per cent. Interest rates are declining, and we are now witnessing a more stable cedi, our national currency. We are creating a business-friendly environment that should encourage significant investments in the development of our economy,” he said.
The President indicated also that the determination of Ghanaians to build their democracy is further anchored in their deep-seated belief in the concept of the separation of powers as an active principle for the promotion of freedom and accountable governance, free of corruption.
On the country’s democracy, President Akufo-Addo told the gathering that Ghanaians had agreed on a multi-party constitutional democracy, and a guarantee of individual freedoms under the rule of law, with these past 24 years of the Fourth Republic turning out to be the longest period of stability and economic growth in 60 years of Ghana’s nationhood.
“We are nowhere near where we ought to be, but the arguments have been settled, and, believe me, this has been a critical bridge for us to cross. And for our Ghanaian circumstances, we dare not undermine confidence in our young democracy,” he said.
The President acknowledged that having a democracy would not translate immediately into the resolution of Ghana’s problems, “but I believe we, in Ghana, are in the position to be able to quote the English colossus, Winston Churchill, that ‘It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government, except all those other ones that have been tried from time to time’.”
BY TIMES REPORTER