Local Economic Development Policy launched in cognisance of African Union Agenda 2063
The Ministry of Local Government, Decentralization and Rural Development has launched the Local Economic Development Policy (2024-2029) and implementation plan to coordinate and facilitate improvement on the native stage.
The five-year financial improvement plan, amongst different issues requires Metropolitan Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) to give attention to optimising native sources to create alternatives that allows a conducive native enterprise atmosphere for all actors.
During an occasion on the Institute of Local Governance to launch the brand new Policy, Minister for Local Government, Decentralisation and Rural Development, Martin Adjei-Mensah Korsah stated the brand new coverage implores MMDAs to make financial actions simpler to undertake, including that it’s the non-public sector that instantly creates jobs and wealth.
“The new policy takes cognisance of the African Union Agenda 2063, as the overarching strategic framework for Africa, which is ‘a global strategy to optimise the use of Africa’s resources for the benefit of all Africans’. Specifically, the Policy ties in with the first aspiration, which is ‘A Prosperous Africa, based on Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development’, with clearly outlined targets aimed at inclusive economic development; modernising agricultural production; transformed economies; incomes, jobs and decent work; economic diversification and poverty reduction amongst others.” The Minister famous.
Director on the Institute of Local Government Studies, Prof. Nicholas Awortwi stated the institute has created a map of Ghana, exhibiting each district, their useful resource potentials, what the district themselves have mapped to assist in the implementation of the native financial improvement plan.
Professor Awortwi defined that “IGES has already done a nationwide training with opportunity. We want to repeat this, especially now with a new policy. We are going to look at the policy perception, the strategies, and tailor it for training, so that we are not just doing training based on a colonial idea on what local economic development means. We are going to do training based on what we think are needed, and to be practical based on this policy.”
Head of Industrial Art and Craft on the Ghana Export Promotion Authority (GEPA), Ms. Nelly Joana Spio-Abaidoo urged district assemblies to make sure well timed collaboration with stakeholders in implementing the coverage.
“If I join you in the middle of the year and tell you that let’s build this for this group of people, for all you know that is not what the people need. You have been with them, you have listened to them, you have done your needs assessments and you know that actually this is just a common shed that they need for production or it’s just a simple machine that they need. You bring it ahead of time as we engage, then we plan, we factor it into our yearly plan, then we move together. So, I will also encourage the stakeholder engagement and the collaboration as well.” She concluded throughout a panel dialogue following the launch of the native financial improvement coverage.
According to the Ministry, the Local Economic Development (LED) has more and more been recognised as a pivotal pressure in driving the financial dynamism of areas and communities.
The urgency to harness this pressure in Ghana is anchored in nationwide insurance policies and legislations. This Manual is designed to information the implementation of LED in Ghana, drawing inspiration from the National LED Policy (2024) and Implementation Plan, which emphasises actions to “promote a conducive environment at the district level for sustained local business growth, decent employment opportunities and economic empowerment for all Ghanaians”.
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