By Owei Lakemfa

 I lived in 
Ghana  continuously for about three years  from January 6, 2013 and 
thought President John Mahama could easily be defeated by a determined 
opponent. This was what  happened on   December 7, elections when  his 
challenger from the  New Patriotic Front (NPP) Nana Akufo-Addoh beat him
  securing 5,716, 026  or 53.85 percent of the votes, and Mahama 
recording 4.713,277 or 44.40 percent.
 It was not that the opposition
  could proffer, or did come up with better ideas. But given the state 
of the average Ghanaian,  any hope, or even promise of change, was 
enough to sway him.
President Mahama is a charismatic  politician who 
can easily charm his way into peoples’ hearts.  I met him twice and 
watched him sing the national anthem in a melodious tune  to wild 
applause. People smiled at him, but the economy did not; it was in 
pains.  Unfortunately,  the Mahama government could not break itself 
free of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank (WB)  
straight jacket. These institutions  applied make-up on the Ghanaian 
economy, and commended its beautiful looks. They   needed a poster boy 
in Africa, and picked Ghana; a myth of fantastic growth was woven around
 the country with a false paint of prosperity.  The country was then 
presented on the  international  stage where illusion replaced reality.
 Behind the flattery of their economic statistics which presented Ghana 
as the role model of development in Africa, were the ugly scars of a 
run-down economy, the pangs of hunger and the stretch marks of distress.
  
 The first issue that confronted me in Ghana was the cost of food;
 it was twice that of the Nigeria I just left. As I watched Ghanaians 
eat in public places, balanced diet seemed off the menu; many simply 
stuffed their stomachs and resumed the race to make  a living. A year 
before, I had been one of the leaders of a mass movement that fought the
 Nigerian government  through mass strikes and street protests for 
increasing the price of petrol (PMS)  but in Ghana, the price increased 
almost weekly. I wondered how a manufacturer  or employer could plan if 
he did not know how much a litre of fuel could cost the next minute. 
Although occasionally, I saw an ancient train wail noisily  past some 
areas, but there was no mass transit, and, compared to Nigeria, 
transportation  cost was quite high. Yet the National Minimum Wage in 
Nigeria which stood at a monthly $112.5  was far higher than that of 
Ghana that hovered around  $72.
 I was chief executive officer of an 
organization and we paid some 70 percent higher than the average wage in
 Ghana, yet our staff found life quite challenging.  One day, a 
dedicated junior staff submitted her resignation and I invited her for a
 chat hoping to dissuade her even if I needed to increase her salary.  
She said the cause is the cost of transportation. She told me the area 
she lived and calculated the amount that went for  transportation, and I
 was shocked. She explained that even if I gave her an increase, it 
would still go mainly for transportation. Besides, in order to get to 
work on time, she left home quite early to beat the traffic. 
 Power 
failure was common, but unlike Nigeria where electricity supply has some
 organized madness and you could, like an experienced pools forecaster, 
predict when your power supply will be restored, it was impossible to 
predict that of Ghana. Power could be off a whole day, two or three. I 
once experienced a four-day power outage. With this, all sorts of power 
generators flooded the country and there was of course more demand for 
fuel to power them.
 Mass unemployment was rife as the so called 
economic miracle of 7-10 percent economic growth over the years, did not
 translate into jobs. The fastest growing industry  I noticed was the 
FOREX Bureau as people engaged in reckless currency speculation. Within 
two years, the Cedi in relation to the dollar, had climbed from 190  to 
400. To make matters worse, you could not collect the dollars in your 
account; you were paid  in Cedis at official rate. At a period, 
depositors were allowed S1,000 withdrawal  weekly.
 I had an inkling 
on what was to come when in 2015, I had a discussion with an 80-year old
 lady on the state of the country. I expected her to be unhappy with the
 government, but not the vehemence and analysis of the cause. She blamed
 Kwame Nkrumah – who had been overthrown in 1966 – for  introducing 
stupid economic policies and politics. In any case, she assured me, I 
should wait until the next elections when Nana Akufo- Addo will sweep 
the polls and allow knowledgeable people run the country.
 That was 
when I realized that the now President-elect might be  running on  two 
tracks of ethnocentric politics  and a return to anti-Nkrumah and anti 
‘verandah boys’ politics.
 Indeed, his father,  Edward Akufo-Addo  
was part of the establishment Big Five, Nkrumah broke away from in the 
struggle for independence. Their followers had gone on to establish an 
armed resistance group, the National Liberation Movement  (NLM) which 
Nkrumah crushed. It might not have been coincidental that the military 
regime that overthrew Nkrumah on February 24, 1966, christened itself 
the National Liberation Council (NLC)  Nkrumah had also dismissed the 
Senior Akufo-Addo as a Supreme Court Justice.
 Also among the  
anti-Nkrumah Big Five,  were two of Akufo-Addo’s  uncles; William 
Ofori-Attah and  Joseph Boakye (JB) Danquah  who died in detention 
during Nkruma’s reign. The Senior Akufo-Addo had gone on to be Chief 
Justice under the military (1966-1970) and ceremonial President  from 
August 31, 1970 until  January 3, 1972 when the military overthrew the 
Kofi Bussia government. The NPP which produced the President-elect is 
actually a coalition of politicians of  the  Danquah-Bussia anti-Nkrumah
 tradition.
 Akufo-Addo had been careful to sell a different image, 
promising to develop Nkrumah’s town, Nkroful. Also, after his victory 
was announced this week, his supporters   circulated a photograph of 
Nkrumah meeting a thirteen year-old American, George Miller, purporting 
it to be the President-elect as a young man meeting Nkrumah.
 
Akufo-Addo has promised Ghanaians mass employment under his “One 
District, One Factory”  programme, and to check inflation and budget 
deficit. Under his poverty alleviation project, he promises to spend 
$275 million annually over the next four years. He is also to probe the 
Mahama administration for alleged corruption; this promises to have 
Ghanaians fixated for a year or two. However, in the tradition of 
Mahama, he promises to run  Ghana on the basis of Market Forces; pray, 
what force has Ghana that makes it committed to the forces at the market
 place? Under  Akufo-Addo, I think that Ghana would remain  an African 
dream, deferred.