Kwasi Gyan-Apenteng
Political analysts and commentators have been unanimous on one thing about the 2012 election; they all say the campaign was fought on “the issues”. Translation: instead of concentrating solely on who is short, who is unwell, who sleeps with whom and who comes from where and speaks which language, the politicians talked about health, education and that sort of thing. That verdict is both true and false. While it is true that the media focused to a greater extent than usual on the “issues”, details were lacking and political promises focused commonly on infrastructure at the expense of real policy prescriptions. This may be due to the fact that citizens mostly express their expectations in terms of number of schools and hospitals instead of quality issues, but that is no reason why political parties must do the same.
In Ghana, party
manifestos usually are works of creative fantasy layered with a thin crust of
fact, which is why on assuming office parties tend to dump the more encouraging
promises and stick to the same old habits to which they are accustomed. Instead
of coming up with new ideas for tackling old and new problems governments like
to talk about infrastructure, which is a safe haven because it can create
countable units of things – buildings, bridges, and roads – to which the man
and woman in the street can relate as the main measure of progress and success.
Currently the media and
public have focused their attention of appointments the President has made with
a measure of fascination and some confusion due to some novel ideas. For
example, President Mahama has appointed a number of his party members, some
with previous ministerial experience to superintend different aspects of his
government’s work, including the construction of various infrastructural
projects during the current presidential term. It was the appointment of Albin
Bagbin, Cletus Avoka and E.T. Mensah, collectively dubbed the “Three Wise Men”
to oversee the establishment of 200 Senior High Schools, 10 Training Colleges,
a University in the Eastern Region, and construction of international and
Regional airports that a howl of protest. The critics are either against the
principle of appointing such “extracurricular” ministers or appointing other
people to do work that should be routine for ministries and agencies already
existing and budgeted for in the current expenditure plan.
I have a lot of
sympathy for the President; he should be able to create new positions that
emphasise areas that are priority for his administration. This is common to all
governments around the world, and in that sense one can understand the
political and psychological signaling the President has sought to create with
the appointment of several Castle Ministers in the government. However, while
these appointments may help the President to achieve his aims, they represent a
risk due to the possibility of infighting and conflicts between ministers
heading REAL ministries and the new breed of “Castle ministers” responsible for
bits and pieces of matters that are traditionally within the domain of regular
ministers.
So, although the
principle of assigning ministerial or special assistant status to trusted people
in government is well established such appointments are usually allocated to
areas that require innovation and coordination across several government
departments and agencies. In some cases these special focuses are meant to
respond to new and emerging trends to old and new problems. In Ghana today, one
would expect that such treatment would be given to some of the most intractable
cross-cutting challenges in our nation and for which no specific ministries are
traditionally assigned.
Let me give one example
beginning with a question: if you were to ask Ghanaians which issue bothers
them most in their daily lives I have no doubt that the word “discipline” would
feature close to the very top. And yet the last time a diffident effort was
undertaken to make discipline an official issue was in the early months of the
Kufuor administration when the late Alhaji Aliu Mahama made the issue something
of a personal crusade. It did not persist for long, I suspect because the
administration had not mechanism to handle such a broad issue which had neither
a specific agency nor budget to support it. What about a minister of state
responsible for coordinating government efforts at instilling discipline in the
country. That office would be responsible for coordinating work across several
departments and initiatives which cannot be dealt with by one department.
Furthermore, since the outcome of the work of such an office cannot be
quantified by counting roads and buildings it would call for more fine-tuning
of government work to include important benchmarks that may be missing in the
ordinary scheme of things.
Another example is
technology. There is a Ministry of Science and Technology but technology is so
wide and all-encompassing that to clasp it in the embrace of one ministry is
possibly the surest disservice to this most vital sector. Technology and
innovation are required across government and society in the most profound way;
it is required in finance and economy, communication, security, education,
health, the environment, agriculture, labour, social welfare…; it is a long
list. Without technology no country or society can survive in the world at any
stage, but the challenge is greater now than at any point in our history
because of the almost total dependence on technology for almost whatever we do.
The President is within
his right to appoint these extra-curricular ministers since the case for such
an innovative approach has been established but the strategy has to be limited
to truly cross-cutting issues to avoid duplication in the work of the
government. The truth is there can be no change without innovating in the way
government work is carried out. Thus creating new special offices might result
in freeing a lot of the work from the sheer inertia of civil service
procedures. Another reason might be to keep the President briefed constantly on
the details of his pet projects or the areas reserved for special supervision
by the battery of powerful advisers. Whether this high stakes gamble will pay
off will only be known in the future.
SHELF
LIFE
For reasons that do not
need to be stated my book for this week has been the excellent compilation of
football history, "The Complete History of Ghana Football League:
1958-2012" written by veteran sportswriter Ken Bediako, former Sports
Editor of the Daily Graphic. The book is a joy to have around while watching
the contemporary Ghanaian kickers of the leathery globe strutting their stuff
and making us proud (so far) in South Africa.
If you love sports, not
just football, you will love this book which was launched last October and now
available at Silverbird Bookstore at Accra Mall and other leading bookstores in
the country.
As one reviewer wrote,
“the book chronicles the careers of Ghana’s footballers and clubs and highlights
some funny bits of history too. A veteran sports journalist, Ken Bediako is one
of those men who can be described as being "around forever…” The Minister
of Information Fritz Baffour praised the author at the launch saying, “documentation
such as this provides a written account of activities as they happened. Books
like Ken Bediako's are places to go when time has passed and memory fails even
the best of current journalists. Ken Bediako's book is a concise, yet
comprehensive compilation of the body of knowledge that's been left unkempt by
all of us.
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