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Ahafo Community Bank pushes to meet minimum capital… …as it battles with over GH¢500,000 deficit

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Pobi Antwi Donkor, General Manager, Ahafo Community Bank

 

Ahafo Community Bank at Kukuom in the Asunafo South district of the Brong Ahafo Region has outlined strategies to increase owners’ equity significantly to meet the minimum capital requirement by end of first quarter this year.

All Rural and Community Banks (RCBs) were required by the Bank of Ghana (BoG) to raise a stated capital of GH¢1million by the end of December 2017. As at December 31, 2017, Ahafo Community Bank had managed to mobilise just GH¢436,208, with a deficit of over GH¢500,000.

Interacting with the B&FT, Mr. Pobi Antwi Donkor-General Manager of the Bank, revealed that pending BoG’s approval, the Board of Directors have agreed on a strategic injection to the tune of GH¢700,000 by three separate firms – at latest by March-ending this year.

The bank has also rolled out shares promotions – enticing the public with items such as smartphones, wax-prints and machetes, he added.

All things being equal, Ahafo Community Bank will be eligible to pay dividends to shareholders, starting from end of the 2018 financial year.

To this end, the bank has decided to adopt a plough-back ratio to ensure year-on-year increase of its stated capital to withstand the shock of future upward adjustments by the regulator.

Touching on other operational projections, Mr. Donkor said the bank in 2017 mobilised GH¢9.80million deposits, setting an increased target of approximately GH¢12.75million for 2018.

The bank is banking its hopes on a vigorous marketing drive within its cocoa-driven local economy to achieve the target.

Mr. Donkor indicated that the bank has budgeted giving out a little over GH¢4.54million as loans and advances, representing a 10% increase over the 2017 portfolio of GH¢4.13million.

About 45% of the allocation will go to monthly salary earning workers, 25% to micro traders and 20% to farmers, whereas cottage and transport operators will take 10%.

In 2018 the bank will increase its investments marginally, from GH¢5.29million to GH¢5.53million. The total income target for the year is around GH¢3.34million as against the 2017 achievement of GH¢2.76million.

The General Manager noted that the bank intends to install two ATMs at its Kukuom headquarters and the Goaso branch before the end of June, and roll out the U-Connect platform in the first quarter as well as opening new branches at Abuakwa in Kumasi and Dadiesoaba.

The bank expects these strategies to boost its profit margin, targetting GH¢688,949. In the previous year it achieved GH¢532,996.

A brief history of decision-making (2)

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Last week we started with the history of decision-making, and this is the concluding part of the history. It has become very important to clearly establish some fundamentals of the subject matter before we delve into details.  History always has something to tell, as was put forth by Kofi Arhin – “Yesterday always has something to tell today”.

Thinking Machines

Computer professionals eulogise Xerox PARC of the 1970s as a technological Eden where some of today’s indispensable tools sprouted – but comparable vitality and progress were evident two decades earlier at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh. There, a group of distinguished researchers laid the conceptual—and in some cases the programming—foundation for computer-supported decision-making.

 

Future Nobel laureate Herbert Simon, Allen Newell, Harold Guetzkow, Richard M. Cyert, and James March were among the CIT scholars who shared a fascination with organizational behaviour and the workings of the human brain. The philosopher’s stone that alchemised their ideas was electronic computing.

By the mid-1950s, transistors had been around less than a decade, and IBM would not launch its groundbreaking 360 mainframe until 1965. But already scientists were envisioning how the new tools might improve human decision-making. The collaborations of these and other Carnegie scientists, together with research by Marvin Minsky at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and John McCarthy of Stanford, produced early computer models of human cognition—the embryo of artificial intelligence.

AI was intended both to help researchers understand how the brain makes decisions and to augment the decision-making process for real people in real organisations. Decision support systems, which began appearing in large companies toward the end of the 1960s, served the latter goal – specifically targetting the practical needs of managers.

In a very early experiment with the technology, managers used computers to coordinate production planning for laundry equipment, relates Daniel Power – editor of the Web site DSSResources.com. Over the next decades, managers in many industries applied the technology to decisions about investments, pricing, advertising and logistics, among other functions.

But while technology was improving operational decisions, it was still largely a carthorse for hauling rather than a stallion for riding into battle. Then in 1979 John Rockart published the HBR article ‘Chief Executives Define Their Own Data Needs’, proposing that systems used by corporate leaders ought to give them data about key jobs the company must do well to succeed.

That article helped launch ‘executive information systems’, a breed of technology specifically geared toward improving strategic decision-making at the top. In the late 1980s, a Gartner Group consultant coined the term ‘business intelligence’ to describe systems that help decision-makers throughout the organisation understand the state of their company’s world. At the same time, a growing concern with risk led more companies to adopt complex simulation tools to assess vulnerabilities and opportunities.

In the 1990s, technology-aided decision-making found a new customer: customers themselves. The Internet, which companies hoped would give them more power to sell, instead gave consumers more power to choose from whom to buy. In February 2005, the shopping search service BizRate reports, 59% of online shoppers visited aggregator sites to compare prices and features from multiple vendors before making a purchase; and 87% used the Web to size-up the merits of online retailers, catalogue merchants, and traditional retailers.

Unlike executives making strategic decisions, consumers don’t have to factor what Herbert Simon called “zillions of calculations” into their choices. Still, their newfound ability to make the best possible buying decisions may amount to technology’s most significant impact to date on corporate success—or failure.

The Romance of the Gut

“Gut”, according to the first definition in Merriam-Webster’s latest edition, means “bowels”. But when Jack Welch describes his “straight from the gut” leadership style, he’s not talking about the alimentary canal. Rather, Welch treats the word as a conflation of two slang terms: “gut” (meaning emotional response) and “guts” (meaning fortitude, nerve).

That semantic shift—from human’s stomach to lion’s heart—helps explain the current fascination with gut decision-making. From our admiration for entrepreneurs and firefighters, to the popularity of books by Malcolm Gladwell and Gary Klein, to the outcomes of the last two U.S. presidential elections, instinct appears ascendant. Pragmatists act on evidence. Heroes act on guts. As Alden Hayashi writes in ‘When to Trust Your Gut’ (HBR February 2001): “Intuition is one of the X factors separating the men from the boys”.

We don’t admire gut decision-makers for the quality of their decisions so much as for their courage in making them. Gut-decisions testify to the confidence of the decision-maker, an invaluable trait in a leader. Gut-decisions are made in moments of crisis when there is no time to weigh arguments and calculate the probability of every outcome. They are made in situations where there is no precedent and consequently little evidence.

Sometimes they are made in defiance of the evidence, as when Howard Schultz bucked conventional wisdom about Americans’ thirst for a US$3 cup of coffee and Robert Lutz let his emotions guide Chrysler’s US$80million investment in a US$50,000 muscle-car. Financier George Soros claims that back pains have alerted him to discontinuities in the stock market that has made him fortunes. Such decisions are the stuff of business legend.

Decision-makers have good reasons to prefer instinct. In a survey of executives that Jagdish Parikh conducted when he was a student at Harvard Business School, respondents said they used their intuitive skills as much as they used their analytical abilities – but they credited 80% of their successes to instinct.

Henry Mintzberg explains that strategic thinking cries out for creativity and synthesis, and thus is better-suited to intuition than to analysis. And a gut is a personal, nontransferable attribute, which increases the value of a good one. Readers can parse every word that Welch and Lutz and Rudolph Giuliani wrote. But they cannot replicate the experiences, thought patterns, and personality traits that inform those leaders’ distinctive choices.

 

A gut is a personal, nontransferable attribute, which increases the value of a good one.

Although few dismiss outright the power of instinct, there are caveats aplenty. Behavioural economists such as Daniel Kahneman, Robert Shiller, and Richard Thaler have described the thousand natural mistakes our brains are heir to. And business examples are at least as persuasive as behavioural studies. Michael Eisner (Euro Disney), Fred Smith (ZapMail), and Soros (Russian securities) are among the many good businesspeople who have made bad guesses – as Eric Bonabeau points out in his article ‘Don’t Trust Your Gut’ (HBR May 2003).

Of course, the gut/brain dichotomy is largely false. Few decision-makers ignore good information when they can get it. And most accept that there will be times they can’t get it, and so will have to rely on instinct. Fortunately, the intellect informs both intuition and analysis, and research shows that people’s instincts are often quite good. Guts may even be trainable, suggest John Hammond, Ralph Keeney, Howard Raiffa, and Max Bazerman, among others.

In ‘The Fifth Discipline’, Peter Senge elegantly sums up the holistic approach: “People with high levels of personal mastery…cannot afford to choose between reason and intuition, or head and heart, any more than they would choose to walk on one leg or see with one eye”. A blink, after all, is easier when you use both eyes. And so is a long, penetrating stare. This was culled from the HBR (2006) written by Leigh Buchanan and Andrew O’Connell.

Kenyan interest rate cap holding back growth: central bank head

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Kenya’s central bank governor said on Tuesday the country’s interest rate cap was holding back the economy, but still forecast that growth would speed up to 6.2 per cent in 2018.

Patrick Njoroge told reporters in Nairobi that the forecast could go higher in the event of a supportive fiscal policy.

The government adopted the cap in September 2016, setting it at 4 percent above the central bank’s benchmark rate, to limit the cost of borrowing from commercial banks, saying they had failed to pass on the benefits of growth in the industry to consumers.

The central bank had previously questioned the measure, saying in September it had made predicting the impact of monetary policy difficult.

“The interest rate cap has been acting as a brake to the economy,” Njoroge said on Tuesday.

A prolonged election cycle last year cut growth by nearly 1 percent from the initial forecast, trimming it to 5 percent.

Njoroge said the performance of the agriculture sector was a drag on the economy last year. It accounts for 30 percent of output.

Egypt’s economic growth seen at 4.2 percent, below government forecasts

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Egypt’s economy will grow 4.2 percent in the fiscal year that began in July, well below government projections of 5.3-5.5 percent, economists said in a Reuters poll published on Tuesday.

The economy has struggled since the 2011 uprising against Hosni Mubarak drove tourists and foreign investors away, but sweeping reforms as part of an International Monetary Fund loan agreed last year are expected to boost growth.

The poll of 12 economists put growth at 4.2 percent for the 2017/18 fiscal year and 4.5 percent for the following year. Growth was seen rising 4.6 percent in the 2019/20 fiscal year.

“Economic growth prospects have improved as reform efforts bear fruit. The main drivers include strong growth in real exports as competitiveness improves, and continued investment in Egypt,” said Nadene Johnson, an economist at NKC African Economics.

Egypt’s planning minister said earlier this month she expected the economy to grow by up to 5.3-5.5 percent this year. She put growth at 6 percent for the following fiscal year.

The latest Reuters consensus for urban consumer inflation was 25.4 percent for the current fiscal year, up from a previous forecast of 23.3 percent. Economists polled expected the rate to drop to 15.8 percent in the 2018/19 fiscal year and 12.6 percent the year after.

Egypt’s annual inflation rates dropped in December to their lowest levels since the country floated its pound currency in November 2016, after which prices shot up.

Annual urban consumer price inflation eased to 21.9 percent in December from 26 percent in November and core inflation, which strips out volatile items such as food, fell to 19.86 percent in December from 25.54 percent the previous month.

Egypt’s central bank has raised key interest rates by 700 basis points since the flotation of the pound to battle soaring inflation. Economists see it cutting rates as soon as next month.

“We think that the MPC (monetary policy committee) will embark on an easing cycle when it next meets in mid-February,” said Jason Tuvey, Middle East economist at London-based Capital Economics.

“We expect inflation to fall close to single digits by the end of this year, which should pave the way for interest rates to be cut further to 13.75 percent,” Tuvey said. He expected rates to fall by 100 basis points in February.

Since the flotation, Egypt has removed limits on foreign currency transfers, lifted hard currency restrictions for importers, cut subsidies for domestic fuel and raised value-added tax.

The reforms have helped Egypt attract foreign investors after years of political turmoil.

Foreign holdings of Treasury bills hit a record high in December, foreign inflows into the stock market last year were the highest since 2010 and direct investment by foreign firms and private equity funds is on the rise again.

(For other stories from the Reuters global long-term economic outlook polls package see)

US, UNFPA and Ghana Police Service train officers on policing domestic, sexual and gender-based violence

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Thirty-two Ghana Police Service (GPS) crime officers have completed a two-day training course on policing domestic violence and sexual and gender based violence (SGBV).

The training was designed in collaboration with the GPS Domestic Violence and Victim Support Unit (DOVVSU) and the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) to empower senior police investigators to protect, support, and provide justice to victims of SGBV.

Over the course of the training, officers learned about conducting trauma-sensitive responses to sexual and gender-based violence and how to take measures to hold perpetrators accountable under the law.

Speaking at the opening ceremony, Ambassador Jackson challenged the investigators to prioritize these crimes.

“You are the people victims look to when they need a safe place to escape from violence,” said Ambassador Jackson. “You are the people who are entrusted with holding accountable those who commit sexual and gender-based violence. With your actions, you can make clear to your communities that this behavior will not be tolerated. When you prioritize combatting domestic and gender-based violence, you set the expectation for the officers under your supervision: whether or not they serve in the Domestic Violence and Victim Support Unit, they have a responsibility to respond to domestic and sexual violence — and to support the victims.”

The training took place at the West Africa Regional Training Center in Accra and was conducted by Wynn Consulting, a U.S. organization, in collaboration with Angela Dwamena-Aboagye, executive director of the Ark Foundation, and Adolf Akuku Bekoe, a clinical psychologist and lecturer at Methodist University.

Wynn Consulting has conducted training at police academies around the globe and advised leaders to help guide and shape law and policy on this important issue.

Samsung targets 15% revenue in Africa over the next 5 years

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Sung Yoon – President & CEO, Samsung Elec. Africa (L) and Eugene Nahm, Samsung Ghana CEO (R)

Electronics and home appliances maker – Samsung – has set a target of increasing Africa’s contribution to its total revenue from below 10percent to between 15percent and 20 percent in both mobile phone and television sales over the next five to ten years.

Addressing stakeholders at the Samsung Summit 2018 in Accra, the President and CEO of Samsung Electronics Africa, Sung Yoon, outlined the company’s global and Africa vision, as well as marketing strategies, maintaining that all products designed focus on customer experience through their daily lives.

“Overall, Samsung Africa contribution to Samsung total revenue is very small; it is below ten percent in the last two to three years.

So, what I want to do for next five to ten years is increase it to fifteen or twenty percent, that is our goal” he told the press at the Samsung Summit.

Presently, it has a 45percent market share in the mobile space and 35percent in the television market and is also keen to grow those statistics in the coming years.

Mr Yoon reaffirmed his company’s commitment to Ghana through the supply of quality and affordable devices, saying for this year, the company intends to leverage on partnerships and marketing to contribute to business performance through aggressive campaign for flagship brands.

It also intends to increase its brand awareness [offline and online], as well as extend to the mass market.

On innovation and development in Ghana and other African countries, Mr Yoon disclosed that any major plan or investment on the continent will hinge on a bigger market or opportunities.

In spite of the market for smartphones and other mobile devices, Samsung is facing increasing competition from Chinese rivals. It is expected to launch its newest in the range – the S9 smart phone – sometime this year.

Samsung invested around US$16million in research and development in 2017.

Samsung Electronics is regarded as the jewel in the crown of the Samsung Group conglomerate, which is made up of 60 interlinked companies and is one of South Korea’s massive family-run businesses known as chaebols.

First ‘Watch-and-Dine’ cinema opens at Kumasi City Mall

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Kumasi City Mall, the Ashanti Region’s most coveted destination for affordable one-stop shopping and recreation, has added another powerful attraction to its irresistible menu of entertainment – Ghana’s first ever world class ‘Watch-and-Dine’ Cinema!!

Shoppers, plain revelers and of course, movie and chow freaks in the Ashanti Regional capital, all said a big ‘thank you’ to Kumasi City Mall and W&D Cinema Limited, when four executive state-of-the-art movie theatres, all fitted with deluxe furnishing and superior acoustics and image projection, were unveiled for public use over the week end.

The ‘Watch-and-Dine’ Cinema concept is an outright novelty worldwide and features a delightful fusion of the comfort and coziness of a plush movie theatre, with the pleasures of nourishment derived from a good restaurant or eatery.  All four screens at the cinema are 3D and projections are made with High Definition imaging equipment.

“What we have here at KCM is an uncommon concept even in the advanced countries. It is the best anyone can get of two worlds – a movie theatre and a restaurant – rolled into one. KCM’s ‘Watch and Dine’ happens to be the first of its kind in West Africa and is already ranked as the 13th on the list of highly rated cinemas around the world!”  Osei Agyemang-Duah, Managing Director of W&D Cinema Limited told reporters.

Agyemang-Duah said Kumasi City Mall’s Watch-and-Dine is so classy and up to scratch that it has already been rated among cinema heavyweights like the AMC Dine-In in the United States, the Odeon Lounge in the United Kingdom and the Nu Metro Cinema in South Africa.

The Cinema has four screens and a total of 330 seats, comprising 30 seats in a VVIP theatre, 56 Seats in a VIP and two standard theatres, with seating capacities of 137 and 107 respectively while the restaurant offers a lip-smacking variety of continental and local fast-foods. All four theatres operate seat reservation schedules for customers.

Within just days of its opening, ‘Watch-and-Dine’ is already one of the mall’s busiest locations – an irresistible haven for cinema lovers seeking to enjoy movies outside their homes and get to munch on some excellent gourmet. The cinema has become the talk of the town across Kumasi as a perfect rendezvous enclave and

“We (management of Kumasi City Mall) are extremely delighted about the successful opening of Watch-and-Dine because it brings to our cherished shoppers and patrons another compelling reason to stay on before or after their shopping, to enjoy some quality recreational time here at the mall,” said KCM’s Marketing Manager, John Bedu-Bonsu.

“With this, we (in Kumasi) are now streets ahead and claim full bragging rights for topnotch recreation over any other mall in the country,” said an elated Tony Bediako, a resident of Kumasi, as he stepped out of the theatre after watching a 2018 movie starred by Liam Neeson.

According to Kwabena Obeng, President and CEO of the Steaman Group and W&D Cinema said the facility will be officially commissioned on February 10, 2018.

Paperless regime to cover exports and transit trade

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The Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority (GPHA) has said it plans to extend the ongoing paperless clearance of goods at the country’s ports to cover exports and transit trade, even as it tightens processes at the imports section.

According to the ports operator, it intends to fully explore the paperless regime to improve overall productivity of the country’s seaports, hence the need to spread its coverage.

“We have made some progressive progress with the paperless port regime. We started with imports, but we will be looking at export and transit trade aspects as well.

“The paperless transactions at the port have come to a point of no retreat, because that system of goods clearance has helped boost revenue as well as enhance port efficiency,” Director-General of the GPHA, Paul Asare Ansah, indicated to journalists in Tema.

The paperless clearance regime, which took off at the country’s ports from September 1 last year, has streamlined the inspection of cargo, promoted electronic-based valuation and documentation as well as eliminated numerous borders along the country’s trade corridors.

Shifting business transactions at the country’s two seaports from manual to electronic-based clearance, the system was introduced to tackle the issues of revenue slippages, delays in goods clearance and the high cost of doing business within the port community.

 

Enforcing strict compliance

The GPHA has also come out clearly that it will not relent on ensuring a flawless paperless regime this year, and looks forward to the unwavering cooperation of all stakeholders – with specific mention of clearing agents.

Though the paperless exercise took off amid a number of challenges, the GPHA boss stressed that such a situation was expected as it takes between 6-9 months to run the system flawlessly.

According Mr. Ansah, the authority will take tough action against any clearing agency or individual whose activity seeks to distract/disrupt smooth operation of the paperless regime.

“Any Custom house agent or clearing agency that is caught doing any fraudulent activity in the paperless regime will be driving themselves out of business at the port; no doubt about that.

“So, those who are offering their platform to ‘goro boys’ who are known to engage in fraud should be warned. When they are caught, their licence will be withdrawn. We will not relent in ensuring a flawless paperless regime in 2018,” he noted.

BoG stays policy rate over inflation scare

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The central bank has maintained its policy rate at 20 percent amid growing concerns that inflation could drift further from the 8±2 medium-term target.

Speaking at the press meeting to announce the policy rate yesterday, Governor of the Bank of Ghana Dr. Ernest Addison said although inflation expectations appear to be well-anchored, the Monetary Policy Committee observed some emerging pressures in underlying inflation over the last two months of 2017.

“Under the circumstances, and to ensure that the inflation target horizon is maintained and the medium-term inflation target of 8±2 percent is achieved this year, the committee decided to maintain the monetary policy rate at 20 percent,” the Governor said.

Inflation for December 2017 climbed to 11.8 percent, drifting further away from the end-year inflation target of 11.4 percent. Inflationary pressures were further heightened when the price of petroleum products inched up marginally.

Despite reducing the policy rate by a total 550 basis points in 2017, maintained at 20 percent, this time, is expected to hold inflation in check and prevent it from moving further from the 9.8 percent target for 2018.

 ‘Fiscal consolidation on track’

Speaking at the news conference in Accra, the central bank governor said government’s fiscal consolidation process is on track and expected to deliver a better-than-programmed budget deficit in 2017, as expenditures were properly aligned to address shortfalls in revenues.

Economic activity, he added, has picked up significantly, while private sector credit growth is recovering.

Credit to the private sector from banks grew steadily – from 6.8 percent in August 2017 to 12.8 percent in December on year-on-year basis, reflecting recovery from the slack in the first half of the year.

The non-oil sector of the economy is also rebounding—after the sluggish performance in the first half of the year—supported by continued improvements in economic fundamentals and improved investor confidence, the Governor said.

Parliament resumes sitting: National ID, ExxonMobil, others to take centre-stage

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As many as eight bills are likely to be considered for ratification as Parliament resumes its fourth meeting today, after almost a month’s break.

Though the itinerary for this sitting is yet to be made known, B&FT has gathered that major business bills will be pushed through in this current meeting of the 275-member legislature.

Among the bills expected to be ratified are: the ExxonMobil agreement; Estate Brokerage and Survey Council bills; National Identification Card Bill; and the Lands Bill.

Parliament is also expected to make amendments to the Rent Act (220), as the country seeks a solution to the growing housing deficit.

There ARE also public interest reports high on the agenda, including the final report of the 5-member Parliamentary Committee set up to probe into allegations of ‘extortion’ of monies from expatriates at the recently held Ghana Expatriate Business Awards (GEBA); the Ameri Power report to be submitted by the Mines and Energy Committee to the House; and the vetting of anti-corruption campaigner Martin Amidu as Ghana’s first Special Prosecutor.

ExxonMobil agreement

Parliament is expected to scrutinise the Ghana-ExxonMobil petroleum agreement for exploration of oil in the Tano Basin.

But before the agreement is presented to the Legislature, government will have to settle on a local partner for the American oil giant, who will control a 5% stake in the enterprise.

According to the Minority Spokesperson on Mines and Energy, Adam Mutawakilu, “We (Parliament) will be looking at how much Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) is taking now, and how much they intend to add in case a discovery is made. Another thing to look at is the royalties; that is how much will the company be paying as royalty in case a discovery is made and production starts”.

He added: “We already have the laws on income tax payments and that will be of concern to us plus a very critical look at any instance of associated gas which our laws have made it clear as to who owns it. If the terms of the agreement are very evident not arguably, within a matter of a month we should be able to get consensus and pass it.

Where information is not forthcoming as we request, it may take more than one month to complete. But we are waiting; anytime cabinet will be ready and come with its work, we are ready to look at it.”

 

National ID

A new legislative instrument (LI) to give the necessary legal backing for the full-scale implementation of the National Identification Programme is expected to be sent to Parliament for deliberation and passage.

“The National ID system has delayed. The law under which the ID system could commence turned out to be outlawed and so a new Legislative Instrument (L. I.), which is ready, will be sent to Parliament when they resume to be passed, then we can quick start the ID programme.

“When the L. I. is submitted to parliament, after the 21 days it can become law and set the stage right for the ID system to take off,” President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo said when he met selected journalists at the Flagstaff House last week.

 

Amendment to Rent Bill

The amendment to the existing Rent Law has become necessary, given the rising cost of house rentals in major cities and towns across the country and growing housing deficit in the country.

Among many of the reforms proposed in the Act is monthly rental payments by tenants instead of the current 6-month rent advance stipulated under the law.

The reforms, when accepted and approved by Parliament, will also shift power from Landlords to the Rent Control Department of the Works and Housing Ministry.

Minister for Works and Housing, Samuel Atta Akyea, noted that: “It is our determination to ensure that a new Rent Bill will be validated and all anomalies of the existing Rent Act removed to promote a balance between the needs of tenants and landlords. When passed into law, the new Rent Act will ensure that the rights of vulnerable tenants are safeguarded and, also, real estate developers are not discouraged from investing in rental housing”.

Ameri report

The Mines and Energy Committee of Parliament will also present its report to House as to whether Parliament should rescind its decision to approve the Ameri Energy agreement.

The previous government signed the Build, Own, Operate and Transfer (BOOT) Agreement on February 10, 2015 as an emergency power arrangement to help reduce the power supply deficit at the time, and the project was expected to be delivered within 90 days after fulfillment of conditions precedent – but it wasn’t done within the stipulated period.

It is a Build, Own, Operate and Transfer agreement between government and Africa and Middle East Resources Investment Group (Ameri Energy) for the installation of ten aero-derivative gas turbines.

Ameri Energy was said to have overcharged government and sub-let the contract to Turkish firm Power Project SANAYI (PPR) at US$315million less than what was charged the Government of Ghana (GoG).

Cash for seat probe

Parliament set up the committee following allegations that expatriate business executives were asked to pay up to US$100,000 in order to have the privilege of sitting at President Akufo- Addo’s table at the recently held Ghana Expatriate Business Awards (GEBA).

The Committee, which is chaired by Majority chief whip Kwasi Ameyaw-Cheremeh, is expected to present its report during this sitting to ascertain authenticity of the motion filed by the Minority in Parliament.

Vetting of Special Prosecutor

Martin Amidu is also expected to be vetted by Parliament this current sitting, and when approved he becomes the country’s first Special Prosecutor – charged with prosecuting past and current public officials, and largely to protect public funds.

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