Help Black Stars Akufo-Addo begs bank CEOs LISTEN
APR 30, 2021
President Akufo-Addo has solicited the support of Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) of banks in the country for the senior national football team, Black Stars, as they prepare to participate in the 2022 African cup of Nations (Afcon) and compete for a place in the world cup to be hosted by Qatar, in June next year.
At a breakfast meeting with CEOs of banks doing business in Ghana at the Jubilee House today the 30th of April 2021, President Akufo-Addo said the Ghana Black Stars under the leadership of the current coach, C. K. Akornor, is poised to make history after forty (40) years since the team last won the continental thropy, but they do need the help of corporate Ghana to do so.
President CISCM, Richard Obeng Okrah
The Chartered Institute of Supply Chain Management (CISCM) has lauded government’s efforts at promoting electronic governance (E-egovernance) to enhance Ghana’s industrial revolution.
“As a nation, I am happy to observe that we are heading in the right direction, particularly with the systematic implementation of E-Governance that is the prime-mover of our quest to be part of the fourth industrial revolution,” Mr. Richard Obeng Okrah, the President of the CISCM, said in Accra.
He was speaking at the supply chain panel discussion on the theme: “Importance of End-to-End Integrated Supply Chain Practice for Sustainable growth in times of uncertainty.”
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Graphic Online
BY: Kester Aburam Korankye
Category: General News
Prof. Justice Nyigmah Bawole (left), Dean, University of Ghana Business School (UGBS), addressing the participants. Picture: Maxwell Ocloo
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The Dean of the University of Ghana Business School (UGBS), Professor Justice Bawole, has urged the government to intensify the campaign on financial literacy to help deepen awareness of the subject among the public.
He said as an important component of national development, it was necessary for the government to shift from the command and control approach of tackling the recurring challenges in the financial sector. ’Command and control’ means that aawe set rules and expect the people to obey them, and when they don t, then we chase them with regulators. But that is expensive to deal with and difficult to achieve in developing countries where corruption is high, Prof. Bawole said.