|
Economic Surge, But Inequality
On The Rise
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
On the streets of Ghana’s top cities, Kumasi and Accra,
it is easy to observe increases in the perennial beggars
– from the physically disabled to healthy men and women
of all ages. “Please could you spare some change,” is a
constant irritating tune. Aside from the beggars, more
Ghanaians are falling below the poverty line of US$2.00
a day. No doubt, labour strikes have become daily
occurrence.
Inequalities are responsible for these distresses.
Inequalities’ painful scenes on Ghanaian streets and
homes are captured by the celebrated Indian economist
Amartya Sen in a foreword to “From Poverty to Power.”
“…lives are battered, happiness stifled, creativity
destroyed, freedoms eradicated by misfortunes of
poverty.”
Against this backdrop are rows between the Ghana
Statistical Service (GSS) and the main opposition
National Patriotic Party (NPP) over the true nature of
inflation figures released by the GSS and their impact
on the average Ghanaian. The GSS says there are downward
trend in the prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages
group, but the NPP counter that the prices are rather
going up. Sandwiched between the rows are the
bread-and-butter inequalities of majority of Ghanaians.
The dawn of democracy has come with it not only some
freedoms but also some economic growth. A recent study
by Nake M. Kamrany, an economist at the University of
Southern California, and Martin Park, of the Research
Group for Global Convergence of Per Capita Income in Los
Angeles, says, “Ghana's economic turnaround from 1965 to
2009 has allowed greater political accountability and
improved fiscal responsibility. Between 2000 and 2009,
Ghana's average annual growth rate in terms of GDP
per-capita stands at 17.6% as compared to the rich
countries' 3.05%.”
Sound structural reforms and economic policies with the
assistance of the World Bank and IMF aside, part of the
reason for Ghana’s economic growth is due to significant
investment by China, argued Kamrany and Park, for its
strategic African calculations. China has poured over
US$10.4 billion concessionary-loan program into
infrastructure projects. Most of this goes to funding
the development of new found oilfields, which may
contain over 3 billion barrels of light oil.
But Ghana is also one of the world’s most unequal
countries. In the real world, the inequality is
worsening. The 2012 Presidential Candidate of the main
opposition New Patriotic Party, Nana Akufo-Addo, citing
polls from Gallop, revealed that since 2008, 12.7
million Ghanaians, who represent 53 percent of the 24
million population, “cannot afford the cost of food
…Those who admit to living comfortably have dropped from
20% in 2007 to 4% of the population in 2010. In 2007, 11
percent of Ghanaians said they were suffering under
severe economic hardships.”
The economic hardship come with it increases in
inequality – a dangerous phenomena. More than 100 years
ago, the English writer George Benard Shaw revealed
that, “The greatest of evils and the worst crime is
poverty.” The former head of the International Monetary
Fund, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, echoing this, has argued
that inequality distribution of wealth could “wear down
the social fabric ... More unequal countries have worse
social indicators, a poorer human development record,
and higher degrees of economic insecurity and anxiety.”
…..
Inequities are seen more in global development
indicators across countries. Ghana’s Gini coefficient –
a measure of income distribution in which zero indicates
perfect equality and 1 corresponds with perfect
inequality – is 0.41. Added to the perfect inequality is
the fact the Gross Domestic Product growth of 6.6
percent compared to the sub-Saharan Africa growth of 2.0
percent aren’t felt by majority of Ghanaians.
Under Ghana’s new status as a Middle Level Income
Country is the fact that most of the benefits of the
economic growth over the years have gone to a fairly
small elites that live in places like East Legon and
Airport Residential Area, with ritzy surroundings inside
walled enclaves. It is easy to see the latest expensive
cars roaming around and the floating of the famed
African bling, bling.
Overnight, it is easy to see the effects of the rapidly
growing rural-urban migrations. As joblessness,
hopelessness and homelessness increases more people are
migrating to the already choked cities.
There are immense pressure
on inadequate socio-economic infrastructure. The number
of people sleeping on the streets in Kumasi and Accra
are growing. Armed robbery is recurring menace.
Prostitution is on the increase. The Sub Metro Director
of Okaikoi South, an Accra subburb, Nathaniel Adzotor,
says “about one-third of residents in Accra live in
slums and as a result do not enjoy adequate social
services.” The 60-year-old National Malaria Control
Programme is yet to fully control the devastation
malaria that weakens and kills most Ghanaians.
Only 13 percent of Ghanaians have access to toilets. In
Accra, the capital, 90 percent of its population have no
access to toilets. The Accra Metropolitan Assembly has
ordered landlords to construct appropriate toilet
facilities in their houses. In the absence of toilets,
people defecate at unapproved places and these are
increasing the rate of cholera outbreak. Most Ghanaians
die from cholera-related diseases.
Under its “Better Agenda” policy, the governing National
Democratic Congress says all the rights things about
improving public service. It promises “toilet for all,”
“water for all,” “better life for all,” and pledged to
build thousands of houses but Ghanaians have not really
felt all these promises. Even if built at all, most
Ghanaians cannot afford the houses but the rich. Until
more hydro-dams and other energy resources are built,
power supply from the Akosombo Dam, built in 1965, is
increasingly becoming erratic and has serious
implications for businesses and investments. The tourism
sector, for instance.
Inequality among Ghanaians is seen more at the country
being at the 130th position of the 2010 UN Human
Development Index ranked among 169 countries for their
wellbeing. Though Ghana is at the medium human
development, issues of life expectancy, literacy,
education, child welfare, healthcare, energy, access to
water, toilets/sanitation and general standards of
living aren’t equally distributed.
As of 2009, life expectancy at birth is about 59 years
for males and 60 years for females with infant mortality
at 51 per 1000 live births. In a country of 24 million,
there are only about 15 physicians and 93 nurses per
100,000 persons. In 2003, 4.5 percent of the country’s
Gross Domestic Product was spent on health. This affects
equity as a development issue.
The human wellbeing inadequacies do not affect the rich
who can easily afford the basic necessities in life and
can easily send members of their families abroad for
better services. That makes Ghanaians unequal.
The latest government budget statement, entitled
“Stimulating Growth for Development and Job Creation,”
isn’t only to minimise inequalities but deliver on its
promise. Eleven percent of Ghanaians are unemployed.
Substantial underemployment is a fact. Aid agencies are
still the best card for ordinary Ghanaians. In East
Gonja, a town in the Northern Region, parents refuse to
send their children to school despite the popular school
feeding programme. They prefer they help them in their
farms.
Certain sectors of the Ghanaian development process
still lacks skilled personnel. Press reports say there
are only four psychiatrists in a country of 24 million.
In most rural areas, there are no medical doctors and
medical facilities aren’t there. Red tape in the civil
service is a monumental problem. The bureaucracy isn’t
as efficient as expected. The private sector still
suffers from the inadequacies of the public sector.
While it takes 11 steps to set up business, much better
than most Africa countries, the steps could be shortened
for greater efficiency.
The overall skilled labour picture is good among African
countries, yet governments over the years still depends
on foreign countries to undertake strategic
infrastructural projects, including the very basic
projects like house building. These firms in turn
sub-contract to local Ghanaian firms at a small fraction
of the budget, resulting always in a net drain of
Ghana’s wealth to the said countries. The award of a
US$1.5 billion housing contract to South Korea’s STX is
typical case.
Big projects are gateway to corruption. Patronage system
is still active, 32 years after the bloody revolution
that had aimed to stop the destructive practices. In the
ranking of perceptions of corruption published by
Transparency International, a Berlin, Germany-based
corruption watchdog, Ghana was ranked 62nd on the list
of 178 countries in 2010 compared with 69th in 2009.
Some improvement. Yet, most Ghanaians have strong
perception that public servants and politicians are
corrupt. Contract padding is still a major problem.
Ghanaians point to politicians building houses which
cost far exceed their incomes.
The logic behind the kleptocracy could be cultural, but
the complexity goes beyond that and was seen more in the
almost 20-year rule of Jerry Rawlings regimes. While the
bloody June 4, 1979 coup that saw the killing of some
Ghanaians was to restore accountability and social
justice, contradictorily, Rawlings and his associates
didn’t submit themselves to public accountability when
allegations of corruption and abuse of office were made
against them. They are today some of the richest men and
women with property scattered in Ghana and around the
world.
The long military systems that was supposed to minimize
inequality also favoured public, tribes-men and -women
over private sector and foreign competition.
Protectionist practices had been the order of the day.
Today, there are still trade barriers. There are still
rent-seeking minions.
Already one of the rapidly emerging democracies in
Africa, Ghana is yet to fully implement a
decentrailization system driven by its democratic tenets
as a way of closing the gaps in socio-economic
inequities. Centralized politics and a grasping state
are still existing. The system still has remnants of
military/one-party dictatorship practices. This is seen
in the on-going decentralizations exercises that was set
up under Jerry Rawlings dictatorial mind-set. The
decentralization system, as a way of deeply involving
Ghanaians in their governance and further growing
freedom, could bridge the inequality gaps through
accountability, transparency, better redistribution of
power and national services and goods.
But the power to appoint executives and other members
for district assemblies, the key forum of the
decentralization programme, still rest with the
President of Ghana. That makes the decentralization
exercises unrealistic in the face of Ghanaians
determining their competiting priorities. That’s
undemocratic and the government has been asked to get
off the back of Ghanaians. The central government still
controls all the budgets for district assemblies. This
undermines the very ideals of the programme. In “From
Poverty to Power,” Duncan Green makes the case that the
erasing of inequalities reguire “a radical
redistribution of power, opportunities, and assets to
break the cycle of poverty and inequality and give poor
people power over their own destinies …”
Yet, such challenges wont dim Ghana’s economic future.
More oil and gas are being found. The oil is expected to
account for 6 percent of the revenue for 2011. On June
7, the New York-based Hess Corp announced that it has
hit oil and gas deposits off the coast of Ghana.
Earlier, Texas-based Kosmos Energy had discovered more
oil and gas at Cape Three Points. The expanding oil and
gas finds are gradually positioning Ghana as major oil
and gas producer.
But how majority of Ghanaians will benefit from the oil
and gas find depend on the degree of democratic growth.
Accountability and transparency are the key issues. In
the events leading to the formal exploitation of the new
oilfields, democracy had driven the lively debates about
how revenues from the oil and gas should be used. The
idea is to avoid the dreaded oil curse.
The European Union Delegation in Ghana has stated that
if Ghana’s oil finds are well developed, the country
would be able to free itself from its addiction to
foreign donor funding by 2020. Nevertheless, that will
depend on how the current political and economic
stability is preserved. It is from such democratic
practices that Ghana could develop and become a focus
for more investment. As the Chinese have shown. This
will help narrow the increasing inequality gap and avoid
the wearing down of the social fabric.
Either in health, water, sanitation, primary healthcare,
waste management or electricity, inequalities have more
to do with privatization and commercialization of the
development indicators, especially where corruption and
tribalism negatively drives the distribution of goods
and services. The on-going heated row over the
management of water by Aqua Vitens Rand Limited, a South
African based company that acts for and on behalf of
Ghana Water Company, is a case in point.
Is there a solution to this perennial development
inequities? Yes, says the Municipal Service Project (MSP),
a non-government outfit based simultaneously in Queen’s
University, Kingston, Canada and Rhodes University,
Grahamstown, South Africa.
The MSP attempts to taxonomically explore alternatives
to the privatization and commercialization of service
provision in the health, water, sanitation and
electricity sectors, among others, in Africa and other
developing countries. “We evaluate service delivery
models deemed to be successful alternatives to
commercialization in an effort to understand the
conditions required for their sustainability and
reproducibility,” MSP says.
The MSP’s key mission of alternate approaches in
addressing inequalities would impact on equity and
development countries like Ghana. How about this idea in
addressing Ghana’s development inequality issues?
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Academic/Writer, Canada, June 18, 2011
|