Saturday, 21 March 2015

OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE LAUNCHES REPORT "Ghana,the rising star - progress in political voice,health and education"

Stakeholders in the health,education and civil society sectors have met at an event in Accra,to launch a 38-paged survey report titled,"Ghana,the rising star - progress in political voice,health and education".

The survey conducted by a leading policy think tank in the United Kingdom on international development and humanitarian issues,Overseas Development Institute (ODI) aims to among other things,explore progress Ghana has made in three key areas of political voice,health and education.

Speaking at the launch,Alina Rocha Menochal - who co-authored the report,said the research about Ghana forms part of a broad project the think tank was undertaking called 'development progress' - which is particularly directed at changing the negative narrative about development in Africa and instead better understand whether development is happening around the world and how this is happening as well as the drivers of same.

According to the report authored by Amanda Lenhardt,Alina Rocha Menochal and Jakob Engel,Ghana has made remarkable progress in human development over the past twenty years while achieving one of the most stable transitions to multi-party democracy in sub-Saharan Africa.

This has been largely due to the activities of civil society,the media (described as one of the freest in the world),the people and other key indices.

Ghana was once among the lowest 40% ranked countries in terms of 'voice and accountability according to the World Bank's Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) ,but has since moved to join countries in the top 40%,and this the report says gives Ghana the tag of being in the 'golden age' of political voice.

The report further reveals that Ghana is outpacing wealthier countries in terms of health provision,high immunization rates,major declines in child-stunting,as well as halving malaria deaths among children.

In the area of education,the survey reveals that access to education and enrollment at the pre-primary,primary and secondary levels have increased from 28% in 1980 to 50% by 2005 in pre-primary education,70% in 1988 to 80% in 2005 as well as below 40% throughout the 1980's and 1990's to 61% in 2012.

Deputy Education minister in charge of tertiary education,Honourable Okudjeto Ablakwa attributed the gains Ghana has made in the education sector to the massive investments the country has made and continues to make in education.

He said,in a bid to ensure the elements of the Free Compulsory Universal Basic Education in article 25 of the constitution was achieved,his government have rolled out interventions such as the distribution of uniforms,shoes,textbooks,exercise books and the elimination of schools under trees to achieve access,quality and equity.

"If education must be compulsory and universal,we must remove all the excuses,so if a parent would not send their child to school because they cannot afford basic needs - uniforms,shoes,books,transportation among others,all these hurdles ought to be removed and that is the founding principle guiding education," he added.

Hon Ablakwa noted that education over the period has received more resources compared to the other ministries and if more tangible progress is to be seen in the sector,more resources need to be committed in order to provide quality education to the people.

However,Executive director of the Ghana integrity Initiative,Vitus Azeem noted that political voice which the report described as key to the progress in development of the country,did not reflect the situation in practice.

While admitting that Ghana had made gains in this regard,he was of the view that political voice and it's positive impact has been largely exaggerated.

He added that aspects of the indicator such as the transition from authoritarian and military rule to democratic systems,peaceful elections in the multi-ethnic setting of the country have contributed to progress,even though other aspects such as demonstrations,people's participation in political debates,press engagements among others have been weak.

He further noted,that only in a few instances have governments acted on the voice of the people,and that cannot be explained to mean a golden age of political voice,since the instances where governments have overlooked the voices of the people far outweigh the former.

Executive director of Imani Ghana - Franklin Kudjoe explained that Ghana had achieved a lot in terms of political voice looking back at Ghana's history,but the nature of Ghana's constitution leaves very little for the people.

"The nature of our constitution in spite of our democracy encourages a lot of state capture,and the reason there's a lot of vitriol and voice when it comes to elections is because the stakes are high,and whoever captures power,captures everything.

You can have a situation where a lot of people are politically active voicing their opposition and demands,but when the political class gets into office,it creates an executive system that is an overbearing one and usually does everything," he added.

He said the partnership between the elected and the electoral college was almost non-existent - and if the real sense of political voice must be achieved,it must translate into ownership of the decision-making and resource allocation processes.
These he said,can only be reached if an effective decentralized system of governance and a decentralized system of ownership of resources are pursued.

In the health sector,prevalence of stunting among children under age five decreased from 35% in 2003 to 28% in 2008,while Ghana ranked 7th out of 153 countries in terms of progress of measles immunization between 1990 and 2010,the report revealed.

The Ghana statistical service report of 2009 pegged increase in child immunization rate from 19% to 70% and measles-vaccination rate stood at 91% - a figure above the regional average of 75%.

The report also indicated a significant reduction in maternal and child mortality rates,and this former Health minister and ranking member of the health committee of parliament,Dr. Richard Anane attributed to deliberate policies initiated and carried on by successive governments.

He noted that the introduction of a social engineering venture- the national health insurance scheme under the John Kufuor administration in 2001 and pursued further by successive governments,has largely played a role in achieving health stability in Ghana.

Dr. Anane said access of free health care for all pregnant women and children formed part of innovations in this regard,but over the years has resulted in some pressure on the scheme,thereby requiring a new funding regime.
Private sector participation,he added,have been key in providing financial and geographical access to the people in the healthcare sector.

The report admitted that there were challenges of quality distribution,equity,financial sustainability,inclusivity of political voice as well as making the state accountable through increased participation and democratic space, but researchers at the institute are confident with a lot more effort,Ghana could achieve more through pre-established,agreed upon and publicly countable framework of rules.

"Ghana,the rising star - progress in political voice,health and education", is one of a series of development case studies being carried out by the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) across the world.

The project,funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation,is a four-year research initiative which aims to better understand,measure and communicate progress in development across countries and to provide evidence of what has worked,examine drivers of the process and serve as a benchmark for other countries to emulate.

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

CLIMATE CHANGE AND ITS IMPLICATIONS



-with reference to the Rio declaration

Gradually, climate change is inching closer to achieving a status (though unpleasant) of the deadliest phenomenon to have happened to human race and the ecology since the past three-four centuries.
Like it or not – believe it or not, it has wiped away thousands of human and animal species directly and indirectly, leading to something of an extinction of a sort to some animal species.

It is in this regard that a landmark conference was held in Rio – Brazil in 1992, to strategize and develop a blueprint towards improving the situation.

The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), Rio de Janeiro, 3-14 June 1992 has since been described as the beginning of an awakening to the realities of climate change, which scientists predicted about four to five decades prior to the conference.

The two-week Earth Summit was the climax of a process, began in December 1989, of planning, education and negotiations among all member states of the United Nations, leading to the adoption of Agenda 21,a wide-ranging blueprint for action to achieve sustainable development worldwide.

While the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro was unprecedented for a UN conference, in terms of both its size and the scope of its concerns, it also sought to help governments rethink economic development and find ways to halt the destruction of irreplaceable natural resources and pollution of the planet as a result of the climate inconsistencies. 

Hundreds of thousands of people from all walks of life were drawn into the Rio process and persuaded their leaders to join other nations in making the difficult decisions needed to ensure a healthy planet for generations to come.

The Summit’s message — that nothing less than a transformation of our attitudes and behaviour would bring about the necessary changes — was transmitted by almost 10,000 on-site journalists and heard by millions around the world. It reflected the complexity of the problems facing the world: that poverty as well as excessive consumption by affluent populations place damaging stress on the environment.

It influenced all subsequent UN conferences, which have examined the relationship between human rights, population, social development, women and human settlements — and the need for environmentally sustainable development. The World Conference on Human Rights, held in Vienna in 1993, for example, underscored the right of people to a healthy environment and the right to development, controversial demands that had been met with resistance from some member states.

Governments recognized the need to redirect international and national plans and policies to ensure that all economic decisions fully took into account any environmental impact, but twenty years after the first global environment conference, the message has produced results, making eco-efficiency a guiding principle for business and governments alike, but to what end?.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPPC) refers to climate change as any change in the state of the climate that can be identified by changes in the mean/or the variability of its properties, and that persists for an extended period, typically decades or longer.

However, according to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), climate change is attributed directly or indirectly to human activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and that is in addition to natural climate variability observed over comparable time periods.
The phenomenon may be limited to a specific geographical region or may occur across the whole earth – which is the case in the world today. Climate change which is a long term change in the statistical distribution of weather patterns over periods of time that range from decades to millions of years.

Scientific opinion has it that the Earth’s climate system is unequivocally warming, and it is extremely likely that humans are causing most of it through activities that increase concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, such as deforestation and burning fossil fuels.

Science is not a house of cards, ready to topple if you remove one line of evidence. Instead, it is like a jigsaw puzzle. As the body of evidence builds, we get a clearer picture of what is driving our climate.
We now have many lines of evidence all pointing to a single, consistent answer – the main driver of global warming is rising carbon dioxide levels from our fossil fuel burning, says John Cook who has been studying issues of the climate and indicators of a human fingerprint on climate change.

With rapid climate change and weather variations, one- fourth of earth’s species could be headed for extinction by 2050, according to scientists, and this has sent governments into deep-thinking and policy redirection to ensure what has been described as a ‘human catastrophe’ , will not see the light of day, at least momentarily.

For thousands of years, people have expected the climate to remain more-or-less the same while the weather varies and seasons sometimes disappoint.
Using forecasts no more sophisticated than these, the human race has prospered.
But are things different now?
For the fifth time, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPPC) claims they are – the difference, the body claims is increased human emissions of carbon dioxide, a colourless odourless gas; a gas that is a by-product of growing prosperity.
The IPPC assumes that a relatively small human contribution of the gas will trap the warmth of the sun and cause dangerous warming in the future.

Other scientists contest that assumptions on the grounds that the effect of the gas is smaller than IPPC assumes, and that the climate is so complex and insufficiently understood that the net effect of human emissions on warming cannot be calculated with any confidence.

Climate change is already beginning to transform life on earth, and it’s increasingly reaching alarming heights – which is hanging around the necks of countries like an albatross. 

Around the globe, seasons are shifting, temperatures are climbing through the rooftops and sea levels are rising beyond imaginable limits, meanwhile, our planet must still supply us – and all living things – with air, water, food and safe havens to live, so you can imagine. 

If we as a collective fail to act towards achieving some kind of freedom from the shackles and vagaries of the climate, the phenomenon will rapidly alter the lands and waters we all depend upon for survival, leaving our children and later generations, with a very different world and posterity will not be kind to us.
Talk of the devastating backlash of temperature variations to human species as well as the ecology of the earth, a lot more needs to be done urgently to arrest an impending global disaster.

A few of the most dangerous consequences of climate change can be discussed ranging from risks to wildlife, increased risk of drought, fire, floods and stronger storms hitting the earth – and to be fair, these are occurrences that will surely impact our lives and places we care about and have evidently ravaged regions in the Americas, the Caribbean, Asia and Africa.
Sandstorms in the gulf region, tsunamis in Asia and severe drought in parts of Africa are testament to the debilitating consequences of climate change – at least scientists have proven.

Temperature changes have been scientifically proven to be directly related to
more heat-related illnesses and diseases which may include heat strokes, exhaustions, cramps and rash and Ghana has not been spared some of these cases.

A changing climate thus affects population health: clean air and water, sufficient food, natural constraints on infectious disease agents, and the adequacy and security of shelter. A more variable climate leads to higher levels of some air pollutants and more frequent extreme weather events. 

It subsequently increases the rates and ranges of transmission of infectious diseases through unclean water and contaminated food, and by affecting vector organisms and intermediate host species that harbor the infectious agent (such as cattle and rodents).
As warming proceeds, the severity of weather-related disasters will increase - and appears to have done so in a number of regions of the world over the past several decades. 

Therefore, in summary, global warming, together with resultant changes in food and water supplies, can indirectly cause increases in a range of adverse health outcomes, including malnutrition, diarrhea, injuries, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, and water-borne and insect-transmitted diseases. 

A World Health Organization Commission on Social Determinants of Health report, points out that disadvantaged communities are likely to shoulder a disproportionate share of the burden of climate change because of their increased exposure and vulnerability to health threats. 

Over 90 percent of malaria and diarrhea deaths are borne by children aged 5 years or younger, mostly in developing countries whose annual Gross Domestic Product and income returns are unable to meet the economic needs of these countries.

Other severely affected population groups include women, the elderly and people living in small developing states and other coastal regions, mega-cities or mountainous areas.

Droughts and floods are constantly destroying especially the crops and harvest of farmers in developing countries, leaving them in a miserable situation. In most of the African countries, and in Ghana specifically, the majority of the workforce is working in the agricultural sector (largest income earner) but their contributions are only a little percentage to the national Gross Domestic Product of these countries.

 Most of the farmers live in sincere poverty, struggling with life and are often forced to accept a second or third job in order to survive, yet their farms are not spared the devastation of the climate.

Rain-fed agriculture, which is the most practiced in these parts are greatly affected – farmers are not able to predict correctly the rainfall patterns for similar reasons of temperature and climate variations. These are the harsh realities peasants and commercial farmers have to contend with.

In parts of Ghana, and other African countries, the slightest rains leave magnitudes of flood in their wake, submerging plantations, destroying properties and livelihoods.

Recent reports of floods in the Upper East and Upper West regions are evidences to the worrying trend, which has become an annual occurrence – leaving the country to cough up resources to provide relief facilities to displaced persons in such areas.

A report on the global human impact of climate change published by the Global Humanitarian Forum in 2009, estimated more than 300,000 deaths and about $125
billion in economic losses each year, and indicating that most climate change induced mortality is due to worsening floods and droughts in developing countries.

It has therefore emerged a necessary evil to discuss the vulnerability of the poor with regard to climate change and possible adaptation and mitigation strategies which have to be developed by all stakeholders in the country, if not the entire West African and African regions.

Climate change is thought to have brought about severe and permanent alterations to the planet’s geological, biological and ecological systems. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) contended in 2003 that “there is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities”. 

These changes have led to the emergence of large-scale environmental hazards to human health, such as extreme weather, ozone depletion, increased danger of wildland fires, loss of biodiversity, stresses to food-producing systems and the global spread of infectious diseases.

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 160,000 deaths, since 1950, are directly attributable to climate change, and this is desperately unacceptable – to which countries must rise up to.

Till date, a neglected aspect of the climate change debate, has been on the geophysical changes related to global warming, while a lot of the concentration and attention has almost always been on the impacts of climate change on health, food supply, economic growth, migration, security, societal change, and public goods, such as drinking water.

Climatic changes in Siberia, for instance, are expected to improve food production and local economic activity, at least in the short to medium term. Numerous studies suggest, however, that the current and future impacts of climate change on human society are and will continue to be overwhelmingly negative.

The majority of the adverse effects of climate change are experienced by poor and low-income communities around the world, who have much higher levels of vulnerability to environmental determinants of health, wealth and other factors, and much lower levels of capacity available for coping with environmental change.

Patterns of production, particularly the production of toxic constituents, such as lead in gasoline, or poisonous waste are being scrutinized in a systematic manner by the UN and governments alike; with the proposition of alternative sources of energy to effectively replace the use of fossil fuels which are linked to global climate change.

New reliance on public transportation systems is being advocated for, in order to reduce emissions from vehicles, congestion in cities and the health problems caused by polluted air and environment.
And this advocacy is gaining grounds in Ghana, with the imminent introduction of an integrated bus transit system by governments, expected to take effect by close of year.

In 2007, the IPCC published a report of key vulnerabilities of industry, settlements, and society to climate change. This assessment included a level of confidence for each key vulnerability:.

Many think the much talked about climate change and its repercussions are far away from them – but the earlier these groups of people become alive to the realities of the day, the better for them and the nation.
How about if I told you climate change has dire psychological impacts on individuals?

Well, a 2011 article in the American Psychologist Report, identified three classes of psychological impacts from global climate change which directly or otherwise hits the human population.

While the direct may be acute or traumatic effects of extreme weather events and a changed environment, the indirect has to do with threats to emotional well-being based on observation of impacts and concern or uncertainty about future risks.

Nobody can do any decent work in a condition of psychological imbalances – therefore health officials have constantly advocated a new regime of health awareness and health consciousness which will see individuals begin to take issues of their health a tad more seriously.
Climate change may dramatically impact habitat loss, for example, arid conditions may cause the collapse of rainforests, as has occurred in the past. 

A sustained wet-bulb temperature exceeding 35° C, is a threshold at which the resilience of human systems is no longer able to adequately cool the skin.
Not only would the habitats and greeneries of the countries be affected, but also water bodies and other natural resources

And when these happen and rise to exponential heights, human population as well as other living species will die.

Scientists have predicted an extinction of all living races in the coming centuries- but if this must be prevented, it starts from now! 

Human activities, which have long been described as the overriding cause of the variations in climate and weather conditions must somehow be looked at critically.

It is only if serious action is taken in this regard, that we would as a generation potentially spare ourselves of the predicted extinction scientists talk about. 
The Time is Now!

(Kingsley Komla Adom)

Upsurge in cases of indiscipline in Ghana and its implications

For much of the talk about the need for obedience, courtesy and respect for the elderly in our society, nothing seems to have changed among the youths of today. Virtues have been corrupted, good manners have run ill, discipline as we knew it has been relegated to the dogs and everyone seems to have abandoned their basic courtesies.

These forms of indiscipline appear to have transcended large sections of the social sphere so much so that the youths and even adults – to a certain extent are culprits of acts of indiscipline.

Gone are the days when young people extended a hand of assistance to the elderly under the circumstances. Growing up in the past, I could remember our mothers and grandmothers especially advising us to help the elderly with the loads off their heads, allow them take our seats when they are standing and then ran errands for them, no matter who they may be.

During that same period, you hardly would find people indiscriminately littering the environment owing in part to the fact that the use of plastics and other materials at the time was limited – if not non-existent.

It is apt to add that even the act of buying was measured – that’s some personal fiscal discipline there; you buy when you needed and not for the sake of buying or showoff.

This used to be the guiding principles we had been living by, until a certain time they call the “21st century”.

On our way to school, one could not help but lend a helping hand to the tired, aged and frail-looking woman returning from the market with a heavy load on head, neither could one afford to get past an elderly man, pushing a yam-loaded wheelbarrow all by himself from his farm, as slow and tiring as it may be en route to his home.

Kwame’s grandmother returning from the stream with a bucket of water on head does not get past us in her obvious struggles in containing the bucketful.

Similarly, Akuna’s widowered father, in his late seventies is able to get his clothes washed, his compound swept and water to bath and drink, not by wishful-thinking or by the touch from the magic wand of a fairy, but by the courtesies afforded him by a few young men and women in the neighborhood.

Even in the cities, in public places or on commercial vehicles, sitting young people naturally vacate their seats to allow for stranded elderly persons’ occupation at their expense.

Additionally, young people in queues to purchase a commodity or anything-say “Hausa koko or waakye or beans”, allowed the elderly ‘jump’ the queues and get served because of their age and plight and it took nothing whatsoever away from them who extended these acts of courtesies to these elderly persons.

Greetings and exchange of pleasantries which existed between those who were young and then the elderly in our society has taken a very minimal tilt or worse of it all are non-existent almost like a taboo.

 Myself and some of my mates glide past these elderly people in recent times on a very consistent bases as if they were not present. Then again I make reference to what it looked like in the past, the complete opposite.

Inadvertently or not, we are all caught in this web – instances of indiscipline, one or another.

Unlike in those days, a lot has changed.

Disappointing as it appears, one cannot help but sit and think deeply about how all these good times seem to have simply eluded us.

I am unable to tell if this seemingly “unhealthy way of living” has anything to do with the consequences of our “modern age”. There has been rapid increase in youthful indiscipline - as I would want to call it, during our supposed modern age.

Everything has almost over-turned. A myriad of such undisciplined acts I have witnessed, points absolutely to this assertion of the fallen virtues in our society today.

Indiscipline among the youth is a problem which all concerned citizens are expressing strong views about. One of the factors that promote the vice is peer group influence.
As young people move about with their friends, and social classes, they influence one another positively or negatively.
A group of five young men are likely to influence positively or negatively their timid counterpart, especially if he is not strong-willed.
Gradually he begins to learn from them, their ways of life, and their mannerisms, among others.
Chances to get negatively influenced are greater than chances to get the positive end of the impact.
Indiscipline among the youth, some experts in child and youth development have argued is as a result of the adoption of some western cultures – and to attempt to debunk this will amount to being untruthful in my opinion.
The youth, learn from their homes to receive education from the primary source of information from the family – that’s their parents. 
But when parenting goes wrong, then a massive issue of breeding miscreants arises. Especially in the case where the marriage breaks and the children are torn between both parents, it becomes an arduous task to regulate behaviours of these children, and that is where it starts.
They enjoy freedom from family control and behave the way they think is right, but this is a silent destroyer if you comprehensively analyze the times these children have all to themselves and what they are potentially seen doing within these periods.
A desperately serious consequence of this is drug abuse. The use of drugs like cocaine, marijuana and heroin causes the youth to be undisciplined due to the adverse effects of such hard drugs on their physical and mental make-up.
According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), the second most popular drugs of abuse in the U.S. are psychotherapeutics including painkillers, tranquilizers, stimulants and sedatives but this is not a phenomenon restricted only to the US but is mainstay in lots of other countries even in Ghana.
This involves the nonmedical use of prescription drugs, over-the-counter drugs and drugs that may be manufactured illegally, such as methamphetamine and ecstasy.
One of the myths floating around about drug abuse is if it can be or usually is used as a medication, it's not harmful.

However, contrary to what some ill-informed believe, the abuse or nonmedical use of any drug can have long-lasting effects on our health same as the hard drugs or even worse.
The truth is even the "safest" drugs can have negative effects on your health and well-being if they are used too often or over too long a period of time. 
Besides alcohol (which has its own set of health effects), the above are the most commonly abused drugs even in Ghana, in order of popularity, and how they can affect the health of those who consumed.
Several studies have revealed a correlation between the upsurge in cases of indiscipline among the youth in Ghana and their affinity to taking drugs – what is however unclear is whether or not these drugs are necessarily banned substances, or ordinary analgesics or other.
The result – we see on our streets, the increasing numbers of society’s derelicts, who have been reduced to squatters and paupers have been described as effects of an addiction of a sort to hard drug or liquor. Once they take in these drugs, they begin to react hyperactively and in the process commit severe acts of indiscipline.
Approximately 2.1 million people in the U.S. use cocaine, making it the third most abused category of drug. 

Cocaine can be snorted, injected and even smoked in some forms of the drug. 
In all cases, cocaine is a strong central nervous system stimulant which affects the brain.
A recent survey implicated Ghana as one of the leading consumers of marijuana – and that has been described by watchers as a bad image for the West African nation struggling to deal with a multiplicity of issues confronting it.
Once many people are believed to be in the act of consuming hard drugs, the likelihood of breeding miscreants who are mostly culpable when acts of indiscipline are referred to, is twice as much as would have been without parental guidance.
Misconduct of the various forms that exist has their peculiar causes, and no discipline strategy should ignore the causes while trying to ameliorate the undesirable symptoms.
In the queue the other day to get aboard a bus at the terminal on my way home, I witnessed the worst incident yet, in this regard.

It was sunny and the queue was long and winding, then an old man appeared, I suspect could be in his late seventies and wanted to get aboard the bus.

He did not join the queue, he simply walked to the head end of the queue and appealed to the two young men leading the queue, to allow him “jump” it and get onto the bus”, which otherwise back in the day would have been easily done even without the old man uttering a word. From where I stood around the tail-end of the queue, I realized there erupted a near-brawl up top.

Apparently, the two young men would not allow the frail-looking old man “jump” the queue and board the bus unless he joined the queue at the end of it.

The distraught old man was as well determined by whichever means possible to get aboard the bus, so words were exchanged, the two young men spilt some very terrible invectives at him, just because he sought some preferential favors from them and insisted he be granted this wish because of age, state of health and all.

Amidst all of the brouhaha, a bus arrived and those in the queues began jumping in, and no sooner had the elderly man attempted jumping into the bus than he fell onto the ground, via a push by these young men.

I felt very terrible from where I stood and thought to myself, why this should happen in our modern day.

The man could easily pass for my grandfather and theirs too. And so I ask the questions: where and why have we as young men and women abandoned our courtesies, discipline and virtues?

Implications of these sickening levels of indiscipline permeate every fiber of society - industry, education, health, sports, economy, and environment among others.

Imagine one or all of these;
-That the health aid worker reports to the health facility an hour later than they are expected to
-That a fruit juice manufacturing company’s employees are rude to clients
-That students at the nation’s premier university absent themselves from lectures and party all their stay on campus – they fail to do assignments and course works
-That footballers for the national team refuse to attend team training at major tournaments and subsequently beat up officials 
-Or that residents in a settler community indiscriminately defecate about the area and litter everywhere
These scenarios have one underlying theme- that’s indiscipline. However their implications first of all on the individuals and of the institutions they work for, can be particularly terrifying.
Productivity is reduced; lives may be lost at the health facilities, sportsmen may lose their spots in the team to other disciplined fellows, and the community gets polluted with all forms of human waste.
All these have a net effect, which is stunted growth in the country’s economic fortunes – and this in the short to medium terms has injurious consequences for Ghana and our forward-march to attaining global recognition as a beacon of everything a developing country should have.
Human resources required by the various industries in Ghana to remain productive may also become extinct – owing to drug abuses, laziness, lateness, incompetence, and other forms of indiscipline.
Then another phenomenon may arise, many companies may not be willing to employ people from the jurisdiction, and this will leave thousands of youths and graduates churned out from the universities annually, unemployed.
If the trend in the increase in cases of indiscipline should be reduced and the fight against the vice should be won, then it requires an all-encompassing change in attitudes of the citizens.
If people will take their jobs very seriously like it’s their own, and the average Ghanaian will vow not to litter and indiscriminately pollute the environment, the health worker will be professional in his dealings, the school teacher will not charge illegal fees from students, the students themselves will take their lessons very seriously, the footballers and other sportsmen will learn to play for their nation for patriotic reason - with the nation at heart, the public sector worker will shun the apathetic attitude towards work, the driver will obey all road traffic regulations, and the politician will learn to be honest, life generally will be as tasty as it gets – with milk and honey flowing for all to enjoy.

(Kingsley Komla Adom)