500,000 Ghanaians could fall into poverty by 2010

Ghana is used an African suc­cess story and for good rea­son. The coun­try had a great reduc­tion in poverty from 1999 to 2006. The per­cent­age of those in poverty in Ghana was at 36 per­cent but is now at 29 percent.

Now the World Bank pre­dicts that 500,000 Ghana­ians could fall back under the poverty line by 2010. In fact, the bank admits a pol­icy that the bank per­suaded the Ghana­ian gov­ern­ment to fol­low could con­tribute to the increase. The bank hopes that could turn around in the long term.

From Mod­ern Ghana, this State­man arti­cle quotes a World Bank report on the situatiuon.

Explain­ing what may give rise to an increase in income poverty for the next two years, the World Bank refers to the tight fis­cal pol­icy it has per­suaded the Mills gov­ern­ment to imple­ment. It says, poverty will rise fur­ther “because the planned macro­eco­nomic adjust­ment entails increased cost recov­ery in the energy sec­tor and increased tax­a­tion, staff fore­casts aggre­gate per capita pri­vate con­sump­tion growth to fall, which will result in income poverty ris­ing by as much as 2 per­cent­age points between 2008 and 2010 (an addi­tional 500,000 peo­ple below the poverty line at US$1.25 a day) assum­ing unchanged income dis­tri­b­u­tion.”

Mean­while, under the New Patri­otic Party , the World Bank admits that “all major regions recorded reduc­tions in poverty,” with some achiev­ing them much more rapidly than others.

Unfor­tu­nately, the bulk of poverty has become con­cen­trated in the three north­ern regions which now com­prise about 80 per­cent of the poor.

Efforts to address the spe­cial needs of these lag­ging regions had been ini­ti­ated in the recent past, and there are “ongo­ing efforts to amplify them in the con­text of an ambi­tious Savanna Accel­er­ated Devel­op­ment ini­tia­tive which is sup­ported by sev­eral Devel­op­ment Part­ners (DPs) includ­ing the Bank,” the report adds.

Though the NPP has been por­trayed by its polit­i­cal oppo­nents as anti-poor, the World Bank admits that when “the domes­tic price of food rose sub­stan­tially against that of non food items between Novem­ber 2007 and July 2008,” the Kufuor admin­is­tra­tion, went ahead to pro­tect the pur­chas­ing power of the poor with “ tax exemp­tions on fuel and food insti­tuted in 2008 and still oper­a­tional, and by a scal­ing up of safety nets (includ­ing addi­tional health and edu­ca­tional ben­e­fits, a new pro­gram of direct trans­fers to the ultra-poor, and sub­si­dies for fer­til­iz­ers in food inse­cure regions).”

This article is from Poverty News Blog: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/EOch/~3/Zemof2lKjLM/500000-ghanaians-could-fall-into.html




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