INDUSTRY leaders in the country have said it is refreshing to have heard President Kufuor acknowledge the need to move from macro-economic stability in the economy to growth at his last State of the Nation Address delivered on Thursday. Reports Boahene Asamoah.
According to them, while macro-economic stability was a necessary condition for economic growth, it was not sufficient.
Speaking in two separate interviews, the presidents of the Ghana National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GNCCI), the umbrella organisation of trade and industry, Mr Wilson Atta Krofah, and the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI), Mr Tony Oteng-Gyasi, stressed the need for the necessary policies to be pursued to ensure growth in the economy.
According to Mr Oteng-Gyasi, “sustained economic growth is the surest way to go to ensure employment generation and economic development”.
He, however, said the process of ensuring economic take-off should not be left to the next government to pursue, saying that the present government ought to start the process of ensuring economic growth.
Mr Oteng-Gyasi mentioned the need to look at the micro level to address constraints that affected the different micro sectors of the economy, adding that such a policy would help to address the shortfalls in the various sectors and fashion out a strategy to address the constraints in each sector.
He also mentioned the need for a second look to be taken at the Labour Law, stressing that a “one-size” labour policy for all sectors was not appropriate.
The President of the AGI stated that the Labour Law, as it existed now, did not address the concerns of all the sectors of the economy, adding that “there should be specific labour laws for different sectors”.
On the interest charges by banks, Mr Oteng-Gyasi said the central bank had to play a more facilitating role by ensuring that banks reduced interest rates.
“These are the kind of policies that will help to anchor industrial take-off,” he stated.
For his part, Mr Krofah stated that while there had been some achievement in maintaining macro-economic stability, a lot still needed to be done.
He said the issue of mechanised agriculture needed to be given priority attention, since that would lead to industrialisation of the economy and propel economic growth and development.
He said there was the need for the government to pursue that agenda more vigorously to attract investments into the agricultural sector as part of its policy to modernise agriculture.
Mr Krofah noted that agricultural mechanisation had the potential to break the back of unemployment in the country and also accelerate the country’s pace of development.
On the oil find in the country, Mr Krofah said the government must ensure that the country benefited from the find, adding that “the country must be able to negotiate for about 30 per cent of the deal instead of the current 10 per cent being speculated”.
Again, he said Ghanaian entrepreneurs must be encouraged to take advantage of downstream businesses associated with the oil industry, stressing that “Ghanaian entrepreneurs must take centre stage in this business”.
The President of the GNCCI welcomed President’s Kufuor’s decision to set up a committee that would manage the resources from the oil find to yield greater benefits for all Ghanaians.
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