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Is Good Statistics Equal to Good Life?
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
The news from the United Nations and Ghana's Statistical
Service about Sierra Leone and Ghana is good. At least
from statistics point of view. Since 1990 Sierra Leone
has been at the bottom of the United Nations Human
Development Index. The Index measures human well-being
globally. With good governance, Sierra Leone is bouncing
back not only from its brutal civil war that lasted over
ten years but the well-being of Sierra Leoneans.
The 2010 United Nations Human Development Index Report
reveals that Sierra Leone has remarkably moved up the
development ranking, from 167th to 158th position. On
the other hand, in Accra, the latest figures, after
re-evaluation, released by Ghanas Statistical Service
say Ghanas economy stands at GH¢44 billion, thats 60 per
cent more than earlier estimated.
Per this new figure, Ghana is deemed to have attained a
middle income status. That makes Ghanas Per Capita
Income the largest in West Africa. bWhile the Sierra
Leonean progress was greeted with many cheers, Ghana"s
was lukewarm. The centre-right columnist Ebo Quansah, in
a piece entitled The Paradox of a Middle Income Nation
carried in the Accra-based The Ghanaian Chronicle,
skeptically argued that, What is it that makes the
Government Statistician waver in her presentation? After
all, we have just
worked out a miracle beyond the reach of any nation on
earth. Barely 10 years ago, were we a Heavily Indebted
Poor Country. We have a head of state who said his
predecessor did nothing. He himself is a Professor
Do-Little, according to his main challenger in the 2008
elections. We have transformed the economy beyond any
imaginable thing by doing nothing. Is that not a miracle
worthy of a grand feast?
Such skepticisms aside, Sierra Leones rise in progress
has come about through hard planning and good
governance, considering its recent bloody affairs.
Sierra Leones President Ernest Koroma is among a new
generation of Africa good leaders who have been praised
globally. Youve got to be good to turn things around if
you have passed through horrendous civil war. There is
no two ways about this.
Analyzing Sierra Leones progress in a write-up entitled
Joy, as Sierra Leone shoots up the UN Human Development
Index, the editor and academic, Leeroy Wilfred Kabs-Kanu,
in the USA-based Cocorioko News, said The dramatic
socio-economic and political turnaround brought about in
SierraLeone by President Ernest Koroma s Agenda For
Change has started reaping rich dividends, saw Sierra
Leone impressively moving up the ladder from 167
to 158 in another undeniable indication that the All
Peoples Congress (APC ) Government has succeeded in
improving the quality of life of Sierra Leone, even
though many challenges remain for the nation, which is
still recovering from one of the bloodiest and most
destructive wars in human history.
Whether Ebo Quansah is a centre-right journalist with
sympathies for the main opposition National Patriotic
Party of Ghana or Leeroy Wilfred Kabs-Kanu is a darling
of the ruling All Peoples Congress of Sierra Leone that
has appointed him the Minister Plenipotentiary to the
Sierra Leone Mission to the United Nations, at issue is
whether the good statistics equal good life. The Quansah
and Kabs-Kanu interpretations, with some political
twist, nevertheless, do not affect the statistics from
the UN and Ghana's Statistical Service.
Most Ghanaians or Sierra Leoneans will tell you they
arent living
comfortable life, that their material conditions arent
so good, that they arent seeing gains from the
statistics on the ground, that life
expectancy is still not encouraging, that some children
still attend
classes under trees, that unlike Brazil over the years
millions of
Ghanaians and Sierra Leoneans have not been lifted out
of poverty, and that even in good number of places it is
hard to find water to drink or toilets to use.
All these hard lives are true and make nonsense of the
good statistical news but so also is the fact that the
statistics (despite some of its abstractness) actually
come from real life in the real world. How easy it is to
eat three-times-a-day? Has homelessness being reduced?
How many toilets have been built to deal with the poor
sanitation? Those who agree with the good statistics
will tell you that part of the successes have come about
because of Ghanas Better Ghana Agenda or Sierra Leones
Agenda for Change that have created the conducive
atmosphere for the
rule of law, good governance, human rights, freedoms and
democracy to drive progress.
This is unlike years ago when brutal military juntas and
autocratic
one-party systems destructively infested Ghana, Sierra
Leone and other parts of West Africa and suppressed the
tenets of democracy and freedoms.
No matter the Ebo Quansah and Wilfred Kabs-Kanu take on
the good statistics, what have garnered some upliftment
of Sierra Leoneans and Ghanaians are the emergent
democratic tenets, especially freedoms. The Indian
economist and Nobel Prize laureate Amartya Sen will not
dispute theimplications of freedoms to the two countries
progress.
In Sen's Development as Freedom (1999) the inherent
implications of freedoms as cruise for progress is very
much examined. The relevance is seen more in Sierra
Leone and Ghana, where long-running unfreedoms had
stifled progress but are now flowering because of the
growth of freedoms.
In both countries, Sens scrutiny of the connection
between freedom and progress, the ways in which freedom
is both a basic constituent of advancement and an
enabling key to other aspects of progress, are made
clear.
The Sierra Leone and Ghana success stories show that
there is no
propaganda in this. With long history of tyranny,
military juntas and
autocratic one-party systems, freedoms as fertilizer to
grow progress in Sierra Leone and Ghana have been weak,
and in some cases extremely bad, as we saw in Sierra
Leone, where the absence of freedoms helped collapsed
the states.
No doubt, Wilfred Kabs-Kanus joyful take on Sierra
Leones vivid escape from the bottom of the progress
Index is a reflection of not only Ghana but the entire
West Africa, where democratic tenets are flourishing
backed by new generation of leaders and mass media
genuinely committed to democratic rule. We cannot be
pessimistic about this.
Writes Kabs-Kanu: 'The result of all this transformation
is that Sierra Leone is no longer among the 10 least
developed nations in the world. At 158, there is still
much room for development but a UN official told me
today that President Koroma has provided the enabling
environment for Sierra Leone to move even further up the
human development index."
*Kofi Akosah-Sarpong is a journalist and academic.
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