General News of Sunday, 3 November 2019
Source: classfmonline.com
Former President John Mahama has now turned himself into a beggar for credit together with the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the Minority in Parliament, governing party MP Daniel Okyem Aboagye has said.
“They’ve started begging for credit: ‘We started this, we took a loan for that, we are part of that’. Even the Minority in Parliament has also been begging for credit”, the Bantama lawmaker said on Accra-based UTV.
In his view, just as the flag bearer of the NDC and the Minority are demanding credit for the things achieved under the Akufo-Addo government because they claim they established the foundation for such feats, they must also take full responsibility for the liabilities they left for the current government and stop running away from them.
Mr Okyem Aboagye, who described the former President as a ‘Reviewer-General’ owing to the former’s insistence on reviewing the Free SHS policy should he return to power after the 2020 elections, said if Mr Mahama wants credit for Ghana’s status as one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, “we can offer him some five per cent at most”.
Mr Mahama recently said the Akufo-Addo government did nothing toward making Ghana the fastest-growing economy in the world but only reaping from the previous administration's "hard work".
A current World Bank Report named Ghana among the four fastest-growing economies in Africa. The other African countries include Ethiopia, Rwanda and Cote d’Ivoire.
Ghana and the three others are currently growing at seven per cent.
"Africa still hosts four of the fastest-growing economies in the world. Countries such as Ethiopia, Rwanda, Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire are still growing above seven per cent. These countries are not only the growth champions on the continent but also among the fastest-growing economies in the world", the Chief Economist for Africa at the World Bank, Dr Albert Zeufack, made this known from the World Bank Report in a live video conference streamed from Washington, DC, USA, in early October this year.
He was speaking at the launch of the 20th edition of the Africa Pulse Report, the World Bank's twice-yearly economic update for sub-Saharan African.
"So, overall, we do have 10 economies in Africa that are still growing above six per cent, but it is also important to highlight the three largest economies in Africa — Nigeria, South Africa and Angola — which are still having extreme difficulty recovering from the recession they experienced over the past two years. Excluding these three economies, the rest of Africa is growing around four per cent", he said.
Speaking on the matter at a meeting with party leaders and supporters in the UK, Mr Mahama said the growth achievement which is being "trumpeted" by the Akufo-Addo government, came about as a result of his administration's sterling performance in office before the current government took over.
"Whatever is responsible for the growth, the growth is only in the oil sector", Mr Mahama said, adding: "All that growth, fastest-growing economy in the world, it's the oil sector".
"And where are those revenues coming from?" he asked.
"They are from the TEN field and the Sankofa field that we worked on in our time", he answered.
"And that made me, in 2016, say that Ghana was going to be the fastest-growing economy in the world and that we are going to grow above eight per cent. I predicted it before they came into office", Mr Mahama noted.
"And, so, you [Akufo-Addo government] come into office – we were receiving less than a billion cedis in revenue from oil – and because of TEN and Sankofa, you're receiving almost GHS4 billion in revenue; four times what we got. And then we introduced ESLA and you were so much against ESLA and said when you come, you’ll repeal it; ESLA is bringing GHS3 billion more revenue than what we got.
"And, so, you're seeing growth based on those revenues, you didn’t introduce them, you’re just the beneficiary of the hard work that the previous government did. And yet, that's what they are trumpeting: the fastest-growing economy. It cannot be by accident. Yes, it is not by accident because we worked just to make it happen", the former President told his audience.