Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Good… and The Bad

Another year, another stay in Ghana, another rendering of accounts. Let’s start with the bad:

1. Roads: There is a rapid uptick in the number of roads being repaired or expanded in Ghana. Some, like the Accra-Sogakope road, have been completed but others, like the New Hampshire highway, remain perpetually under construction. Of particular note, the Tetteh Quarshie Roundabout-Dodowa road looks rather similar to what it was a year ago. This has led not only to bone jarring bumps and car wrecking conditions but a lot of dust coating everything red and damaging our lungs.
2. Pollution: Of land, air and water. You’ve heard of the dust but what you haven’t heard are the multiple bush and other fires, and cars with bad exhausts spewing smoke into the air. I only breathe fresh air in my village. One still sees trash like (un?)pure water sachet bags on the ground and our water bodies are clogged or dead from dumping of trash and waste. And the smell, oh the smell...
3. Driving: If you take a taxi in Accra, sit at the back, put on your seat belt, and pray. From overspeeding through the bad roads, taking risky short-cuts, disrespecting road traffic laws, attempting to pass a mile of cars in a rush of oncoming traffic to riding the shoulders of roads, drivers in Ghana have invented a code that is neither safe in the least nor for the faint hearted. Why, I saw someone drive onto the shoulder of the opposite lane so one set of tires could avoid a speed bump.

The good:
1. The Changing Landscape: I now know not where Accra ends and the rest of Ghana begins. Inside and outside of the city, buildings are springing with rampant regularity along the major roads. It is turning the city into a really metropolitan one but also creating a suburban class. Maybe the economy is good after all.
2. Street naming exercise: This was started a while ago and continues. With Google map and GPS functionalities catching up or ahead of it, you can now find exactly where that wedding is held or a business is located without driving to the big tree and then finding the roasted plantain seller is not there to be asked for the rest of the directions.
3. The business climate: There has been a spur of investment in Ghana in recent years with an especial resurgence of the financial sector, among them real estate trusts, commercial and investment banks and private equities. They have provided employment to more than a few graduates, albeit at crazy work hours, and contributed to the glut of cars on our streets.
4. Rural business section of TV3 News: I was particularly gladdened to see a news station dedicate a part of the news hour to highlighting rural business successes and opportunities for financing. Being interested in business at the base of the pyramid and small scale enterprises, this is indeed, welcome news.

The unclassifiable:
I have noticed that in spite of government efforts to relocate them, street hawkers in our Drive-Thru Malls (apologies to Aisha Saaka), continue to run the roads. It is of course heartwarming to see people engaged in legitimate business but the risks of their trade—being run over by cars—and the fact that a lot of child labor goes into it as well gives me pause for concern. Did I miss something? Leave a comment, let me know.

Prime

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This is the way I choose, the destiny I pursue
To help the unfit and the fit
To treat each according to his need
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