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Any justification for National Development Bank in Ghana? (Part 2)

• President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo
launching the Bank in Accra last month

In Part 1 of this article, an attempt was made to find out whether there is actually any need for a National Development Bank. In line with this, it was pointed out that generally, development banks serve as important instruments to promote economic growth. It was also explained that they usually do this by providing credit and a wide range of advisory as well as capacity building programmes to stakeholders.

A National Development Bank, therefore, comes in as a specialist bank to provide medium and long-term lending facilities for both the private and public sectors. The objective of a development bank is to serve public interest rather than earning profits. This means that a development bank provides financial assistance to both private and public sector institutions.

CRUCIAL ROLE IN RURAL CAPITAL FORMATION

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It is also the aim of a national development bank to play a crucial role in rural capital formation. Indeed, development banks are able in this case to bring in dispersed savings of rural people through different deposit schemes after which loans, based on the savings are distributed to rural people to begin productive ventures in line with their self-sufficient economic activities.

It is for the purpose of all these that the Ministry of Finance and the European Investment Bank have signed an agreement for the provision of a €170 million facility. The purpose of the facility, as pointed out already, is meant for the establishment of a new national bank to be known as the Development Bank Ghana (DBG).

This bank will apply stringent investment conditions aimed at safeguarding financial sustainability, transparency, environmental and social accountability. The ultimate purpose is to promote job creation, and sustainable economic growth.

ARE OUR BANKS TOO MANY?

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With regards to the argument that many banks already exist so there is no need for any new national bank, the point must be made that a national development bank is a specialised financial institution set up to provide medium-term and long-term lending facilities. Here, medium-term facilities include three to five years programmes while long-term ones last from five to ten years or even more.

It is these medium and long-term facilities that make finances available for institutions to carry out developmental programmes for the ultimate benefits of a country. For this reason, there is justification for such a national bank if Ghana is to operate independently and be able to re-structure its economy in line with Ghana Beyond Aid strategy.

There is no doubt that the establishment of this national bank signifies long-term ambitious financing programme that seeks to gather finances for numerous sectors in the economy. The sectors include manufacturing, agriculture, agro-processing, housing sub-sectors, mortgages and ICT, among others. Positive developments in these sectors are meant to generate ambitious initiatives to unlock funds in these sectors and improve domestic revenue mobilisation.

ECONOMIC GROWTH AND TRANSFORMATION

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It is such initiatives that will propel growth and transformation in various sectors of the economy. Without such transformation, the country will remain producer of raw materials for other countries and receiver of tiny incomes from the developed countries, thereby perpetuating the status quo since independence in line with the negative ambitious objectives of the colonial master.

It is not easy to break away from this cycle of poverty, but it calls for determination and realistic programmes of development based on a transformational agenda to extricate a developing country like Ghana from the shackles of control emanating from our master-servant colonial experience. Unpleasant as it is, this fight for economic independence should have come earlier than today but none of our past leaders was able to put up this economic fight since, even if they had come to this realisation earlier on, it would not be easy to overcome these economic challenges.

OVERCOMING STRUCTURAL ECONOMIC PROBLEMS

Over the years, many Ghanaian scholars and politicians have been able to rightly point out the economic disparities between Ghana and other colonised countries, on one hand, and their previous colonial masters, on the other. It is a fight that is on-going and is, therefore, never too late for the right things to be done and to correct all wrongdoings in the past.

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If, therefore, President Akufo-Addo’s government has come to this realisation and taken up steps aimed at righting all the economic wrongs, then this positive agenda ought to be supported by all the political parties, especially those who claimed to be social democrats and are also seeking independence of all colonial appendages.

RIGHT-WING PARTY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

A right-wing party like the New Patriotic Party (NPP), led by President Akufo-Addo has put in the right measures to salvage the country from its long-standing colonial appendages and make it truly independent. If this is the case, then there is no time to waste on the part of any political party but to move in quickly to support this positive agenda of transforming the national economy and making it truly independent.

At the time of independence, Nkrumah rightly declared that our independence will not have any meaning unless it is linked up with the whole of the African continent. While this is true to some extent, we should know that political independence is what was achieved and that the second phase of the battle is to struggle for our economic independence in line with Ghana Beyond Aid strategy.

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If Ghana’s independence is to become realistically meaningful, then her economic independence cannot be compromised on any grounds for which reason the national development bank, with its positive agenda, must be implemented in a realistic manner for the attainment of our national aspirations which has been in-dwelling in us in the form of “God bless our homeland Ghana, and make us great and strong.”

By Dr. Kofi Amponsah-Bediako

Contact email/whatsApp
address of author:
Pradmat201@gmail.com
(0553318911)

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