Vice President Kwesi Amissah-Arthur on Thursday affirmed that government under the leadership of President John Dramani Mahama is still committed to the structural transformation of the country’s economy.
He said the government is also working to develop the long-term vision of the economy.
[contextly_sidebar id=”B18SBvadIosyzAJjFEv0n4TQ7JlyJV63″]The Vice President was speaking at the Standard Chartered Africa Summit 2015 in Accra.
The conference, which is on theme: “The last frontier: Is Africa ready for transformation,” is to help Ghana benefit from panel experts assembled to review the global developments and how the country can take advantage of the opportunities offered in the international arena.
The one-day conference was attended by financial analysts across the globe, business groups, investors and the academia.
Vice President Amissah-Arthur stated that Ghana’s prospects in the medium-term are still bright with latent advantages in the oil and gas, agriculture and light manufacturing.
He said the country can maximize these possibilities “if we are able to reduce the vulnerabilities created by the fiscal imbalances we have experienced over the past decade.”
According to him, since the National Economic Forum at Senchi in May last year, the government has worked to create conditions for non-inflationary growth.
He further stated that despite the impact of the tightening monetary policies on emerging economies, Ghana still need to position itself to take advantage of the opportunities in the global economy.
The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Seth Terkper on his part gave the assurance that Ghana’s economy will rise again and return to strong growth in the next three years.
He said the current economic challenge facing the nation is due to budget overruns in the past few years.
He disclosed that government has been able to put the economy back on a sound footing ready to take off.
Mrs Mansa Nettey, the Executive Director and Head of Financial Markets, Standard Chartered Bank (SCB), Ghana, stated that, the Standard Chartered Summit is a flagship programme for the SCB global market event for the financial year.
She said the event is held annually in several key markets around the world including London, Hong Kong and Dubai.
She said the summit provides an opportunity for the bank to share its products and market research with clients, investors and stakeholders as well as discuss the “Africa rising narrative” intended to project the continent to the rest of the world.
Mrs Nettey also said over the past decade Africa has grown consistently faster than the rest of the world.
She added that on average growth for Sub-Saharan Africa is 5.6 percent in 2013, adding that, the continent is now a growing investment destination.
Source: GNA