Finally, Some Sense in National Planning
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
The proposition by the chair of Ghana’s National
Development Planning Commission, P. V. Obeng, that
stakeholders in the financial sector should factor in
the informal, traditional sector not only go with the
current enlightenment thinking but it also reveals the
ongoing attempts by Ghanaian policy-makers to think hard
from within their traditional values for progress.
The reason for such thinking today, as
build-up on various attempts in this regard some 50
years ago, is that the informal, traditional sector has
for the past 50 years been neglected and not grounded in
national policy planning.
Obeng’s thinking is encouraging. It debunks the notion
that the African find it difficult to think from within
his/her values in national planning. For almost 20 years
when he was the de facto Prime Minister under Jerry
Rawlings’s military juntas, he and his military regime
had all the power to radically undertake a national
project that should have been massively rooted in
Ghanaian/African traditional values. The Southeast
Asians success story is partly as result of this. This
would have help correct many a psychological and
historical errors, and propel the Ghanaian for better
progress.
Now, haven’t reflected and come to his damn senses,
Obeng, with his ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC),
has all the means to hatch a new national development
planning that should heavily involve the traditional,
informal sector, where much of Ghana’s wealth is
located. Entrapped, the wealth is not being appropriated
for national progress. And there is this erroneous sense
that Ghanaians are poor. They aren’t.
Majority of Ghanaians do not use the formal financial
institutions. Part of the reason is trust; another is
illiteracy and its associated ignorance. Like other
inhibitions within the Ghanaian traditional values, a
deliberate appropriation of the traditional, informal
economy, as a national policy development work, will
help refine the inhibitions that have been stifling
economic progress.
And this, in the larger scheme of creating prosperity,
greatly affects savings and investment, and therefore
national progress. A nation cannot progress when
majority of its people who control its wealth aren’t
considered in national planning, aren’t regarded and
enabled. It tells that the nation’s national planners as
ignorant and senseless. The planners do not know what
they are planning about. It makes the planning more
abstract than practical, the very people to be planned
for left out in the larger planning equation.
And to the tough, formal education of Obeng, the
informal sector may not be the “poor and deprived” and
in need of “empowerment.” What need “empowerment” may be
Obeng himself and his practically convoluted National
Development Planning Commission, especially in its
thinking and research, in order to appropriate and open
up the traditional, informal sector for greater
progress.
This will correct the erroneous fact that Ghana/Africa
is the only region in the world where its progress is
dominated by foreign development paradigms to the
detriment of its tried-and-tested traditional values.
And it is as result of these situations, as Obeng
himself has come to recognize, that the “moribund state
of the informal sector had” had “very serious
repercussions for the general economy, especially the
formal sector.”
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada,
October 7, 2010
|