Government to boost domestic content in procurement
process
Accra, Feb. 27, Ghanadot/GNA – State institutions
would be required under a new initiative, Policy of Domestic Content, to rely on
locally manufactured goods for their logistic requirements as part of moves to
shore-up indigenous companies, Vice President John Dramani Mahama announced on
Friday.
He said specific provisions on the initiative were likely to be made in the 2009
budget or fiscal policy, the essence of which, he said, was to “generate a
momentum” that could help to propel indigenous businesses to bloom.
Interacting with a delegation of OMATEK, a joint Ghanaian-Nigerian ICT concern,
at the Castle, Osu, on Friday, Vice President called on Ghanaians to patronize
locally made goods and by so doing demonstrate their commitment towards moves
aimed at making small enterprises flourish.
He said to grow up Ghana’s economy substantially; there was need for citizens to
patronize their own products and cultural artefacts as a way of mobilizing
indigenous capital for development.
The Vice President said it was incumbent for state organizations to procure
locally made goods to help generate income and create employment for the large
majority of unemployed youths.
Tracing the emergence of industrialized societies, Vice President Mahama said
almost all of them owed their current state of development to reliance on
indigenous businesses and asked Ghanaians to be buoyed up by that experience.
The Vice President commended the management of OMATEK, which deals in the
assemblage of completely knocked down computer parts, for building on President
Kwame Nkrumah’s idea of Africa developing on the basis of an inter-regional
trading, and said the NDC administration would continue along that path.
He called for further cooperation among businessmen of the two countries in
other sectors of the economy other than the banking so as to build a solid
regional market able to withstand global financial pressures.
Madam Florence Seriki, Chief Executive Officer of OMATEK, pleaded with
government to bring about strategies that would enable students, particularly
tertiary students, to own their own computers at reasonable prices.
Musiliu Olatunde Obanikro, Nigerian High Commissioner, corroborated the Vice
President’s notion of expanding inter-regional trading for income generation
since that could help reduce poverty on the continent.
Accompanying the OMATEK delegation, which included academics, business captains
and politicians, was Dr Agrey Ntim, Immediate-Past Minister of Communications.
GNA