Every presidency must ultimately be judged by the vision it brought to governance and the structural changes it sought to make to the nation it led.
When history examines the eight years of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, it will likely conclude that, whatever criticisms may be made of that era, it was not devoid of ambition.
On the contrary, it was one defined by an unusually broad attempt to transform multiple pillars of Ghana’s national life simultaneously.
From the outset, the man came with a vision and a programme and a team deliberately picked to deliver. The Akufo-Addo administration set itself a number of clear objectives. For the purpose of this piece, let me mention ten of them.
First was education. The decision to extend free education to the secondary school level fundamentally altered access to opportunity for hundreds of thousands of Ghanaian families.
For the first time in the country’s history, secondary education became a universal aspiration rather than a privilege reserved for those who could afford it.
Alongside this expansion came the most deliberate push yet toward STEM and vocational education, aimed at preparing Ghana’s youth for the demands of a rapidly changing global economy.
Second was industrialisation. Through the One District, One Factory initiative, the government attempted to reverse a long-standing structural weakness of the Ghanaian economy: exporting raw materials while importing finished goods.
By encouraging value addition at the district level, the policy sought to decentralise industrial activity and stimulate enterprise and job opportunities beyond the traditional urban centres and find a long-term solution to our imports-dependent society.
Third was financial sector stability. In one of the most controversial but consequential decisions of the administration, the government undertook a sweeping clean-up of the banking and financial sector.
At a cost estimated at about GH¢26 billion, insolvent institutions were closed or restructured in order to restore confidence and safeguard funds of over 4 million depositors and asset management investors.
Fourth was agriculture. Programmes, like Planting for Food and Jobs, aimed at supporting farmers sought to improve yields per hectare and strengthen Ghana’s food production base.
This was supported by building warehouses across districts. The underlying objective was simple: a country that cannot feed itself cannot sustain long-term economic stability.
Fifth was infrastructure. Road construction and rehabilitation were pursued on a scale that the records show has no historical precedents in the country’s development trajectory.
Sixth was healthcare delivery. Through Agenda 111 and the One Constituency, One Ambulance programme, the administration sought to build the most ambitious health infrastructure project in Africa by ensuring that modern health facilities and emergency services would be accessible to every district and community across the country.
Seventh was institutional reform in the fight against corruption. The establishment of the Office of the Special Prosecutor, alongside increased funding for anti-corruption agencies, represented an attempt to strengthen the independence and capacity of the country’s accountability institutions, supported by a comprehensive effort to replace human discretion with digitisation.
Eighth was national security. Significant investment was made in recruitment, training, remuneration and equipment for the security services, reflecting a broader effort to strengthen law enforcement and border protection in a region increasingly challenged by instability.
Ghanaians were able to sleep peacefully at night because men and women of our security agencies stayed busy but quietly 24-7. It was not by accident that Ghana experienced no terrorist attack, compared to what was happening all around us.
Ninth was decentralisation. The creation of new regions and the push for the election of Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives were intended to deepen democratic participation and improve governance at the local level.
Tenth was digital transformation. The Akufo-Addo administration launched what many observers regard as the most comprehensive digitalisation programme undertaken by any sub-Saharan African country, integrating digital identity systems, mobile financial services and public sector platforms in an effort to plug Ghana into the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
Taken together, these initiatives formed the backbone of a broad vision for structural transformation. It would be a shame if the John Mahama administration focuses so much on “reset” to lose focus from continuing and/or improving on these critical, transformational initiatives.
Yes, no presidency operates in ideal circumstances and the challenges encountered should not blind us from the strength of the vision unleashed. The Akufo-Addo government faced extraordinary external and internal shocks.
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted global supply chains and national economies alike. Soon after came a global cost-of-living crisis that placed additional pressure on developing economies, including Ghana’s.
These external shocks collided with long-standing domestic vulnerabilities, which his policies were designed to counter once consolidated, such as fiscal imbalances, structural weaknesses in the economy and, to add insults top injuries, the 2020 general elections offered President Akufo-addo an unprecedented reality of a hung Parliament with an opposition Speaker.
The combination created one of the most difficult economic periods Ghana had faced in decades and it took remarkable leadership to pilot Ghana peacefully across the storm.
And, it should be appreciated that the Akufo-Addo government did not simply retreat in the face of crisis. It sought innovative responses, major of which the current John Mahama administration is benefiting from and calling it ‘reset’.
Among the most notable was the decision, championed by Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia, to leverage Ghana’s gold resources more strategically, using gold to support foreign exchange stability, to facilitate oil purchases and to rebuild the country’s gold reserves to their highest level in history.
This approach successfully created a new stabilisation framework around one of Ghana’s most enduring natural assets.
By the end of the administration’s tenure, the economy had begun to recover. Ghana recorded GDP growth of 5.7 percent in 2024 after painful but necessary fiscal adjustments, including debt restructuring and the difficult sacrifices borne by domestic bondholders.
Economic stabilisation rarely comes without cost. But stabilisation is often the first step toward recovery.
The full verdict on the Akufo-Addo years will ultimately belong to historians. But one conclusion already appears difficult to dispute: the administration did not lack vision. It pursued an ambitious agenda aimed at reshaping key sectors of the Ghanaian economy and state institutions.
Akufo-Addo once famously said that his focus on education was to prepare Ghanaian youth to be well-positioned to take full advantage of the exciting future of a common African market.
Whether all those ambitions were fully realised is a matter for continued debate which time should certainly tell. What is less debatable is that those years represented a determined attempt to place Ghana on a different developmental trajectory.
And that, in itself, is part of the record history will examine.
Dr. Kofi Omintinminim Apesemaka
Source: asaaseradio.com
