President
John Dramani Mahama has demonstrated his call on Ghanaians to patronize
made in Ghana products by flaunting a pair of locally made shoes he was
wearing to Members of Parliament.
Delivering his State of the
Nation Address in Parliament on Tuesday, the president bemoaned the lack
of appreciation of made-in-Ghana goods and the over-reliance on foreign
imports.
According to him, local investors in the country
should be assisted to produce locally-manufactured products on a large
scale in order to halt the practice of Ghanaians depend on imports from
outside the country.
To buttress why the country needs to limit
its dependence on foreign products, President Mahama disclosed that the
country expended 1.5 billion dollars in foreign currency on the
importation of consumables such as rice, sugar, cooking oil, tomato and
fish; monies “which could have gone into the pockets of Ghanaian
entrepreneurs”.
“If this money had been retained and spent in
Ghana it would have gone into the pockets of Ghanaian entrepreneurs
which would subsequently remain here to boost the economy,” he said.
As
if on cue, President Mahama demonstrated by example, the need to
purchase Ghanaian made products, and nearly dared to remove his footwear
which he indicated was made by Horseman Shoes to Parliamentarians.
Horseman
Shoes is a Ghana-based footwear manufacturing company which seeks to
provide reasonably-priced but good quality footwear for the Ghanaian
market.
He revealed that beginning this year, a campaign for
Made-In-Ghana goods will be launched to help promote Ghanaian products.
He further noted that he has requested the board and management of the
Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) to encourage the local manufacture of
electrical products such as cable, transformers and meters by
purchasing from local producers who meet their quality standard.
“Mr
Speaker, we will this year launch a broad campaign to encourage
Ghanaians to buy made in Ghana goods. Any import items we buy as
Ghanaians constitute an export of jobs in this country especially in
respect of the items for which we have comparative advantage to
produce,” President Mahama noted. |
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