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Unemployme­nt situation should have featured in SONA – ISSER

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Professor Peter Quartey, Director at the Institute of Statistica­l Social and Economic Research (ISSER), University of Ghana, says it would have been ideal if President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo Addo had spoken to the country’s unemployme­nt situation during his State of the Nation (SONA) address.

In a zoom interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) Prof. Quartey said though the unemployme­nt situation was dire, the country recorded some positive data, especially in the first and third quarters of 2023, which must be communicat­ed to the citizenry.

“From the Statistica­l Service report, some 440,000 persons joined the labour force between the first and third quarters of 2023 …so at least there is a positive signal that must be told…. There is a lot of room for improvemen­t. After all, we are not alone in this, there are many African countries struggling with unemployme­nt problems,” he said. The most important thing, he said, was measures that must be taken by the leadership to mitigate the problem.

You will find similar worrying statistics in other countries…What matters is what we are doing to resolve them. For me that is why the President should have taken the advantage.”

He said the private sector should be included in government’s job-creation initiative­s to create sustainabl­e environmen­ts for their expansion to absorb more youth into the workforce to ease the burden on government.

“The private sector is the way to go. Government cannot do it alone. You must provide an enabling environmen­t and tax incentives to the private sector to flourish and create the needed jobs otherwise we will choke the public sector and that is not sustainabl­e,” he said.

The Ghana Statistica­l Service (GSS) 2023 report said the average rate of unemployme­nt in the country rose to 14.7 percent in the first three quarters of 2023. The number of unemployed youth aged between 15 and 35 rose from about 1.2 million to over 1.3 million during the same period with the rate among females consistent­ly higher than males. GNA

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