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Ways to meeting high standards of good corporate governance, and the Ghanaian

In recent times, Ghana has witnessed serious corporate and economic failures in many fronts; the collapse of seven commercial banks, sev­eral savings and loans companies and finance house companies between 2017 and 2019, the collapse of the national economy as witnessed between 2020 and 2023 with high levels of debts overhang, high cost of living and rising inflation, worsening unem­ployment situation, that were at a level that can be described as unprecedented in Ghana.

The above are attributable to the much-talked about lack of economic diversification and high dependence on few export crops, high dependency on excessive borrowing for infrastructural de­velopment and even for recurrent expenditure, high debt repayment obligations denominated in an external currency, high cost on the service sector as opposed to the productive sector, massive corruption and wastage across board, and largely, the hatred to see others make progress in Ghana.

We have witnessed, over the years, institutionalised regulatory infractions with impunity.

This, however, leaves the question as to whether truly “the black man is capable of manag­ing its own affairs”.

The General Attributes of ‘the Ghanaian’

Generally in Ghana, the community is everything. As a people, we share an immensely powerful bond with each other, and it is evident all throughout the country. For example, if you are eating next to a total stranger who does not have anything in front of him, our customs oblige us to say, “You are invited.” Everyone shares. This is heart­warming to visitors to Ghana to see such a simple kindness between two unrelated individu­als. Complete strangers may show up at funerals, weddings, or any other ceremony because all are welcome.

In Ghana, greetings are im­perative; basic conversation is expected in most environments, especially when asking for some­thing, it is considered impolite to get straight to the point; first one should question the other on their day and well-being. When you desire to ask a Ghanaian a question, you need to start it with ‘please,’ as it is usually considered that the one answering you is per­forming some favour when doing so. Closer friends frequently use a handshake, a kind of snap between one’s thumb and middle finger for casual greetings.

We are a people of music and dance. We adore dancing!! We love soccer. We are largely casual in nature.

The resultant effect, in my view, is that as a people, we de­test following laws, rules/proce­dures, policies and standards. We would prefer doing things in our own ways. Where rules must be followed, we either do it blindly, forgetting its substance or we are orchestrating how to circumvent such rules.

We are naturally averse to systems of accountability, and lay credence to collective respon­sibility; when something goes wrong within an organisation, a community and the nation as a whole, we would rather give it the colour of collective responsibility and do the fire-fighting.

Our casual attitude, even at the level of the state, regulators, corporations etc. leads us into finding only temporary solutions to our economic growth and developmental challenges. We adore speaking good English, even better than the owners of the language, the English.

In doing so, we mostly lose out on the substance. In Ghana, Sys­tems Don’t Work, rather People Do. To us, face-to-face interac­tion is more effective than any programme or technology. It is ‘a way to say that efficiency comes second always.

In the developed world, time is associated with money and productivity. In Ghana, we take it slowly and easy. These character­istics described of the Ghanaian reflect in everything we do.

This characterisation of the Ghanaian has negative impact on our performances. I would demonstrate this by categorising ‘the Ghanaian’ as follows:

Ghanaian as Religious bodies:

In my humble view, church goers and their pastors form part of our bigger challenges. There is some degree of religious bigotry, untruthfulness, extortion and in large part, lack of accountability among the church leadership. The church has rather become a space for business where the poor are extorted using the very word of God that was intended for shaping moral uprightness in any society. To muddy the waters, the politician is able to manipu­late the leadership of the church.

Ghanaian as Family

Family refers to biological, associations, professional group­ings, etc. Socialisation and par­enting in Ghana is largely built on pretense. The child grows up only knowing how to pretend to win favour from others. As a child and at tender age, you are exposed to how to manipulate people to win their favour. For example, when your mother requires some favour from your father, her husband, that moment she becomes more responsive to the needs of the husband. For the first time you hear your mother calling him honey, sweetheart…. etc. As soon as the need is satisfied, the relationship reverts to normal.

We therefore extend this same manipulative attitude to the work place. Such work places become polarised, leading to poor organ­isational culture and terrible job output.

Ghanaian as the Professor, Lecturer (PhD), Tutor/Teacher

The role of teachers is to help students learn by imparting knowledge to them and by setting up a situation in which students can learn effectively. He is ex­pected to set the moral standard for the students to emulate. In Ghana, the situation is different. If your lecturer can photocopy someone’s book and sell to large number of students and make income thereof, if your lecturer makes the buying of his hand­out a condition to you passing his examination, if your lecturer would not review his lecture notes which remains unchanged, for example, between 1980 and 2020; what character are you then acquiring as students?

Currently, our professors have become appendixes to the polit­ical actors. They blatantly would even support their wrongdoings. In Ghana, you will find that while the economic actors; market women, farmers, industrialists, civil society, students, etc. are not served appropriately with economic policies, you would see or hear the professor vehement­ly justifying those. They fail to bring knowledge to bear on our economic forward march.

Academic researchers have little/no bearing on national development. Students engage in barter trade to acquire degrees etc. What kind of character are we building?

Ghanaian as Professionals; Banks/Banker, Accountant, Auditor, etc.

In Ghana, the moral question remains, how does one become professional when your back­ground is largely pretense? Our professionals lack detailed knowl­edge and the requisite skills to discharge their jobs. Our profes­sionals only depend on hearsays and misleading information and half-truths in the discharge of their jobs.

Our audited financial reports are largely a misrepresentation of the facts, largely because the internal auditor did not do his job well, the internal control of­ficer went to sleep, management lacked direction, and the exter­nal auditor told himself that his job was not to detect fraud. For him, management explanation is enough.

Any institution that has col­lapsed would have had weak­nesses in their financials over the past five years. Who were the internal and external auditors of UT, Sovereign Bank, UniBank, Capital Bank, Heritage Bank, etc., and others that were bailed out? Do they not belong to the ICA/ACCA? Were they held account­able? No.3

How about the public sector issues of corruption, misappro­priations and misapplication of funds?

These institutions also have managers, internal auditors and Auditor General. Are they being held accountable? What happens after the sitting of the Public Ac­counts Committee of Parliament?

Who follows up to ensure clo­sure on those corrupt cases?

To be continued

The writer is the Chief Executive Officer of Com­modities Investments Ghana Limited

 BY CONSTANCE GBEDZO

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