ADDRESS ON JOB CREATION DELIVERED TO TUC CONGRESS ON TUESDAY, 12th AUGUST, 2008, BY THE NPP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO MP
INTRODUCTION:
Mr Chairman, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, I am honoured to address you this evening. One of the most important figures in my life has been my uncle, Frederick Guggisberg Asante, Fred Asante to the members of this movement, who is now a member of the Council of State and who has been a veteran trade unionist for over four decades. He has always symbolized for me the important place of working people in our society.
Since this is my first opportunity to address you in such a forum, let me use this platform to thank the TUC for the great role that your organisation and its members played in our nation’s struggle for independence and in its subsequent development. The Ghanaian people remain indebted to persons like Anthony Woode, Pobee Biney, Vidal Quist, John Tettegah and others for their outstanding contribution to the liberation of our nation from imperialism. I am confident that this generation of labour leaders will also leave their own indelible marks on the history of our country as it seeks to fulfil the dreams of freedom and prosperity that animated the founders of Ghanaian nationalism.
We know that, Chairperson, this evening, I plan to discuss with you, how together, we can work to create the jobs of tomorrow. Today, the face of labour is quite different from what it was a few decades ago. The era of antagonistic relationships with government and management is passé. Across the globe, in country after country, globalisation and the forces it has unleashed have made it imperative that workers, managements and governments stand shoulder-to-shoulder in working to improve wages, productivity and competitiveness while creating jobs.
Perhaps, nothing speaks more eloquently to the improved relations between government, labour and management than the new Labour Act, passed in 2003 after years of collaboration. This law is rightly hailed as one of the most progressive in the World. The Labour Commission established by this Act is already being tested. In the next few years, the courts will clarify any ambiguities as may exist and set the limits of authority as different players pursue legal remedies in relationship to decisions made by the body.
I support changes that will impose punitive damages on parties that choose to appeal the ruling of the Commission in court and are not sustained. It is my fervent hope that the courts will not take over the development of this Act, much as we want to entrench the rule of law in our society. My party and I hope that the development of this Act will be characterised by the spirit of mediation, conciliation and accommodation that permeates the Act and not by reliance on excessive legalisms.
It is important that the new Labour Commission acquires quickly a national character. To that end, I pledge that my government will work with labour to make this Commission truly national by helping to extend it to the regions. My goal is to work with you to establish a Commission office in each region.
Furthermore, I believe the Tripartite Committee must meet more frequently and work more collaboratively on issues of general concern to all of us. I am informed that there are now more frequent meetings by the Committee and I support this new trend fully. I believe that the Tripartite Committee should have a more significant role in our economic management than merely settling the minimum wage on the eve of budgets. To facilitate this increased role, during my Presidency, the Committee will meet on a quarterly basis so that the Tripartite Committee becomes an important partner for the management of the national economy.
THEME OF CONGRESS
Chairperson, the theme of this very important congress “SOCIAL WELFARE” is very apt. The welfare of our general society, of women, children and the vulnerable should be of concern to all. While my party, the New Patriotic Party, believes passionately in the merits of free markets and competition, we recognize that the demands of social justice require that the vulnerable in society are protected by the state. That is why we have put in place, over the last seven-and-a-half years a comprehensive Social Protection Strategy.
Over the last seven-and-half years, the NPP has compiled a record in social interventions that will serve as a standard for responsible governmental activism for years to come. In education, at the primary level, the NPP introduced the School Feeding Programme and the Capitation Grant and built new schools while repairing old ones. As a result, enrolment in primary school has increased by 30%, representing the largest increase in primary school enrolment for several decades. In healthcare, we introduced the National Health Insurance Scheme in 2003 over the objections of the Opposition and to date; 11.3 million Ghanaians have registered for it .Cash and carry is mercifully being buried in Ghana forever. Furthermore, last July, the President of the Republic, His Excellency John Agyekum Kufuor, secured funds from the British government to fund free care for pregnancy and the post-delivery period for both mothers and their newborn. The NHIS has since July 1st started to implement this laudable initiative which will help reduce drastically our high maternal and infantry mortality rates . Under our Social Protection Strategy, we have introduced the “Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP), which is a grant programme for poor households. These grants, between 8 and 15 Ghana cedis, currently affects 3,200 hundred families and will affect 15,000 families by the end of the year.
As a result of all these and other interventions, coupled with the increasingly rapid growth of our economy, poverty rates have plunged from 39.5% in 2000 to 28.5% today. Chairperson, my party and I believe that we must each be our brother’s keeper and we have been living your theme for the last seven and a half years in government.
Chairperson, ladies and gentlemen, these social intervention programmes have been possible because of our impressive management of the economy. As you know, we have quadrupled the size of our economy, from 3.9 to 15 billion USD while reducing interest rates and inflation. This has been done against a background of significant increases in fuel and food prices that have caused major social upheavals in a lot of developing countries.
It is against this background that many believe with us that with the additional resources from an expanding economy and expanding tax revenues as well as projected substantial revenues from our new oil wealth, retaining my party in government is our country’s best option for realising the goals of your theme.
NPP GOALS
Chairperson, in my address to the KNUST here in Kumasi on energy, to the AGI on our Industrial Policy, at ALISA HOTEL under the auspices of the IEA and at the UDS in Tamale, I have discussed various aspects of the challenges of providing energy, building our industries, modernising agriculture and creating jobs.
As you may recall, when I inaugurated the 2008 NPP Campaign Committee in Accra on March 13th, I indicated that the next NPP government would focus on four central thematic areas:
- first, the consolidation of our democracy
- second, the modernisation of our society
- third, the structural transformation of our economy, and
- fourth, the full engagement of our nation in the process of regional and continental Integration.
- focusing on the production of Value added goods and services rather than primary products
- pursuing a clear policy of Ghanaian Economic Empowerment that will encourage the accumulation and investment of Ghanaian capital, locally and from the Diaspora, and making more Ghanaians winners in the Global economy
- investing a significant percentage of our GDP in Research and Development (R&D)
- making the formal sector more attractive to the majority of local economic operators.
- low wages
- lack of safety on the job
- inadequate benefits and pensions.
- significant investments in irrigation and storage facilities, that combined with the necessary investments in physical and financial infrastructure will make the north, the granary of West Africa and significantly improve farm incomes while lowering the price of food for urban dwellers and workers. This will form the backbone of the Northern Development Authority with a 1 billion USD investment that will transform the North as I outlined in my speech in Tamale on the 24th of July, this year.
- investments in Landing sites and storage facilities in our coastal fishing communities with a goal of making Ghana self-sufficient in fish and related products.
- the training of more Agricultural Extension workers and the provision of higher-yielding seeds and other mass services that individual farmers on their own cannot afford along the cocoa model to increase productivity and incomes.
- encouraging, through tax incentives and Public-Private-Partnerships, the development of agro-processing industries that will add significant value to our agricultural products while generating significant numbers of jobs.
- assisting farmers and processors to find and develop markets at home, in our sub-region and in other parts of the world for their products.
- assisting local areas in developing industries in which they have comparative advantages.
- First support the passage and implementation of the Pensions bill now before Parliament.
- Second, changes will be made to enable working people borrow from their retirement accounts as down-payment for homes. The balance of the cost can be paid with a mortgage to be paid off gradually during the working life of the person.
- Third, there will be a sustained effort to bring into our retirement schemes those in the informal sector, to give a boost to those schemes and to secure the future of our informal workers.
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