Dr. Bawumia ListsĀ Gov't's Digital Interventions In Ghana

The Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia has listed major challenges within the Ghanaian economic and social space, which the Akufo-Addo government has successfully addressed, or is addressing through its digitization drive.

Delivering a public lecture at the Ashesi University last night on how the government is transforming the Ghanaian economy through digitization , Dr. Bawumia recalled how the NPP, prior to assuming office in 2017, had identified these problems in the Ghanaian system, and how it envisioned to solve the problems through digitization.

"Our system had major shortcomings and presented challenges for the digitalization of the economy,” Dr. Bawumia noted.

The major shortcomings, Dr. Bawumia noted, included lack of unique identification for citizens, inefficiency and corruption in the delivery of public service, lack of functional national property address system, existence of large informal sector and dominance of cash payments, manual data base in public services, difficulty in collecting taxes for development, inefficiency in the delivery of health services and inefficiency in security surveillance.

“We were operating in a system where most of the population could not be uniquely identified. It was possible to be born in Ghana, live a full life, die and be buried and there would be no trace of you on any documentation that you ever lived and died in this country,” Dr. Bawumia added to sum up the magnitude of the shortcomings the government has fixed.

Dr. Bawumia spoke extensively about each shortcoming, and provided digital interventions by the government for each of them to address the challenge.

Biometric national ID card

On the issue of lack of unique identification of citizens, the Vice President said the implementation of the biometric national ID cards by the government is addressing this major issue.

“So far, 15.5 million people have been enrolled on the Ghanacard by the NIA and most of the population will be enrolled by 2022. The issuance of the Ghanacard has provided Ghana with a database that will be the anchor for all transactions in the future, providing unique identity to all individuals.”

"With the Ghanacard: the identity of people (even dead people) can be established using their fingerprints," the Vice President said.

Property Address System

On lack of proper address system, Dr. Bawumia said ''to solve the problem of a lack of working address system in the country, we have leveraged on GPS technology to implement a digital address system for Ghana capturing every square inch of land. In the process, we have identified and provided unique addresses for all properties in Ghana (7.5 million properties)".

“The Land Use and Spatial Planning Authority (LUSPA) has also provided street names and house numbers for every street in Ghana."

Dr. Bawumia described Ghana’s property address system as unique, because Ghana is the first country in Africa to implement a digital system in combination with house numbers and street names.

“It is a superior address system and leapfrogs the addressing systems that have been implemented and in use in many advanced countries,” he added.

Mobile Money Interoperability

Dr. Bawumia said one of the biggest problems which was impeding financial sector development in the country was financial exclusion. He said most of the population were excluded from fully participating in the financial system because they wehe unable to open and operate bank and financial services accounts - a problem he said reinforced the dominance of cash payments.

“When we assumed office in 2017, we decided to use digitization to solve this problem. The data showed that 70% of people in Ghana had no bank accounts but 80% of the adult population had mobile phones with 30 million mobile money accounts,” Dr. Bawumia said.

“It was also not possible to send money to customers of different telecom companies. So we asked the questions: why can’t we make it possible to send mobile money across different telecom companies and also why can’t the mobile money account function like a bank account ‘by making it interoperable with bank accounts? The answer to these questions was the implementation of the ground-breaking mobile money interoperability system .”

“Thanks to the Bank of Ghana and Ghana Interbank Payments and Settlement System (GhIPSS) the mobile money payments interoperability has made it possible to transfer money seamlessly across different mobile money providers and between bank accounts and mobile wallets.”

“It has also solved the major problem of the over 70% of people not having bank accounts. Today, because of mobile money interoperability (MMI), you can transfer money from a customer of one telco to a customer of a different telco and also make payments from your mobile money account into any bank account and you can receive payments from any bank account into your mobile money account. You can receive interest on savings, acquisition of loan (e.g. qwick loan) on your mobile wallets. As a result of MMI over 90% of the adult population now have access to a 'bank account'.”

The Vice President further noted that Ghana is the the first country in Africa to implement ineroperability between bank accounts and mobile wallets, describing it as “no small feat, especially at the cost we did it”.

Dr Bawumia noted that hitherto, service delivery in the public sector was replete with so many bottlenecks including delays, long queues and bribery and corruption.

But with the implementation of digitization, he added, government services such as applications for scholarships, passports and drivers license, services at the ports, registrar general department, renewal of national health insurance cards, motor insurance, among many others, have all been digitized, thus making it easier for citizens to access these services and make payments through their mobile phones, and on government’s integrated digital platform, the Ghana.gov.