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Bawumia presents Ghana’s new look in London

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Vice-President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia yesterday had an auspicious opportunity to dangle the new face of Ghana when he delivered a keynote address during the Financial Times Africa Summit in London.

He lavishly showcased the digitization project of Akufo-Addo’s government novelty which he said had transformed the age-old methods of doing the assortment of government business from registering businesses to the keeping a database of registered land and reliable records of residential addresses.

He told his attentive audience that the Akufo-Addo government was focused on how to build a robust micro-foundation of good economic governance alongside “ensuring the right policy mix, that is, the right mix of fiscal, monetary and external policies.”

Without these fundamental pillars, he said “we will not be successful,” adding “we will continue to spin in the rut of the weak policy environments.”

Technology

He said government had always leveraged on technology wherever possible to “innovate public administration, increase access to and delivery of public services and eliminate the opportunities for bribery and corruption.”

New Mantra

Dr. Bawumia said that digital innovations towards the improvement of public administration systems are the new mantra of the government.

The digitization of systems since 2017, according to him, has been done with the sole aim of improving administrative systems and increasing transparency.

He added that the introduction of the National ID Cards, which he described as a game-changer, would form the basis of an integrated database with Passports, Tax Identification Numbers and Drivers’ Licences.

With a touch of humour, he said as regards the secure systems ‘No one can hide!’

Digital Addressing

On the recent Digital Property Addressing introduced, the Vice-President said it had provided every location with an address leveraging on GPS.

“The process of tagging all 4 million houses with digital addresses is ongoing and should be completed by the first quarter of next year. Biometric national identity and a digital address uniquely establish personal and immovable property identity,” he said.

The registration of businesses, acquisition of passports and even the renewal of National Health Insurance Scheme membership have all been impacted positively by the digitization process and the reduction of the human factor.

Medical Drones

He said Ghana had joined Rwanda in using drones for important medical deliveries to remote parts of the country, a game-changer which is saving lives.

African Challenges

African economies have remained stagnant over the years because of the absence of the kind of innovations being introduced into Ghana, the Vice-President observed.

“Not surprising, our economies fundamentally remain unchanged, untransformed, difficult to tax, difficult to target the delivery of public services to those who need them most,” he said.

 

Source: dailyguidenetwork.com

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