Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04ACCRA2319
2004-11-29 11:22:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Accra
Cable title:  

FINANCE MINISTER'S UPBEAT STATUS REPORT ON GHANA'S

Tags:  KMCA EAID EINV EAGR EFIN GH OPIC MCA 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 ACCRA 002319 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

MCC FOR ROD NORMAN
TREASURY FOR ALEX SEVERENS
STATE PASS OPIC FOR CONAL DUFFY

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KMCA EAID EINV EAGR EFIN GH OPIC MCA
SUBJECT: FINANCE MINISTER'S UPBEAT STATUS REPORT ON GHANA'S
MCA PLANNING

REF: A. STATE 237954


B. STATE 239160

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 ACCRA 002319

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

MCC FOR ROD NORMAN
TREASURY FOR ALEX SEVERENS
STATE PASS OPIC FOR CONAL DUFFY

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: KMCA EAID EINV EAGR EFIN GH OPIC MCA
SUBJECT: FINANCE MINISTER'S UPBEAT STATUS REPORT ON GHANA'S
MCA PLANNING

REF: A. STATE 237954


B. STATE 239160


1. (SBU) Summary: Finance Minister Osafo Maafo gave an
optimistic appraisal of Ghana's planning for the Millennium
Challenge Act (MCA) during a November 22 meeting with
Ambassador Yates. In response to concerns raised by the
Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC),Osafo Maafo
reconfigured Ghana's MCA working group. The current GoG
proposal focuses on agri-business, and Osafo Maafo predicted
his team would submit its draft to the MCC by January 2005.
The GoG's core MCA team now includes several private sector
representatives and will deepen consultations with civil
society over December. The GoG's objective is to use MCA
funds to create a world-class agricultural sector in Ghana.
End Summary


2. (SBU) Ambassador, USAID Country Director and EconChief met
November 22 with Finance Minister Yaw Osafo Maafo and key
advisors to congratulate the Minister in person on Ghana's
inclusion among the 16 eligible countries for the second
round of MCA funding (Note: Post delivered Ref A points via
letter November 10). The Ambassador noted that several other
countries were moving forward more rapidly in the process,
even engaging in early due diligence discussions with the
MCC. The Ambassador also commented that while Ghana was
under no set timeline it would be useful to determine a
realistic timeline for Ghana to complete its draft compact.
The Ambassador also asked for an update on how the
consultation process was progressing, an area of concern
during the MCC visit in August.


3. (SBU) Osafo Maafo acknowledged that Ghana's early concept
paper was unfocused -- "a maze of projects" -- and the
consultation process inadequate. However, he argued that he
started broadly on purpose. By using the economic priorities
of the Ghana Poverty Reduction Strategy as a starting point,
he achieved buy-in from other Cabinet members. Starting with
a more specific concept would have been "political suicide."
This created a situation where all Cabinet members were vying

for inclusion of their own pet projects, and the initial
draft concept paper reflected that.


4. (SBU) Osafo Maafo claimed he won President Kufuor's
support to include non-government representatives on the MCA
core working group to give credibility to his Ministry's
efforts to focus Ghana's concept paper. (Note: Osafo Maafo
added business sector representatives to the core team and
also invited USAID-funded Sigma One Corporation to serve as
an unofficial advisor to the core team, filling in
information gaps and serving as a sounding board on key
issues. End Note) The reconfigured core team eliminated
many of the competing projects and eventually settled on
agri-business as the prime focus of Ghana's MCA compact.


5. (SBU) Osafo Maafo subsequently elaborated in writing on
his decision to revamp his MCA team (November 23 letter and
proposal development schedule faxed to MCC). In his letter
he states that his intent was to address the issues the MCC
team raised in August: 1) the initial concept paper was
unfocused; 2) the process to develop the proposal appeared so
far to be heavily government driven; and 3) the GoG needed to
deepen the consultative process. The restructured and
private sector-driven core MCA team addressed these concerns
by expanding consultations with stakeholders, which resulted
in the selection of agri-business as the proposal focus.
Osafo Maafo promises to continue with a robust consultation
schedule to assist the GoG to continue to narrow down the
proposal.


6. (SBU) The basis for the agri-business focus is that Ghana
is rare in that a huge percentage -- 85 to 90 percent -- of
its land is arable. Osafo Maafo stated the idea was to take
advantage of this "natural endowment" by removing constraints
to the sector and opening up agricultural areas to
investment. He said the GoG's objective was to use MCA funds
to "promote private sector-led growth through agri-business,"
with the end-goal to position Ghana as a world-class
agricultural-based economy. He did not want to lose focus of
the goal of poverty reduction, commenting that MCA funds
would mostly be used in non-cocoa growing regions, which are
already benefiting from huge cocoa crops and relatively high
world cocoa prices.


7. (SBU) Osafo Maafo and Michael Ansah, who heads the GoG's
core MCA team, both indicated that they understood that
programs to promote the agricultural sector should
concentrate on removing constraints rather than providing
direct government supports to private and/or government-owned
agriculture operations. As an example Osafo Maafo noted that
wholly inadequate infrastructure is the main constraint
facing the Affraim Plains region - which should be a
"bread-basket" for Ghana and is thus a likely selection for
MCA funding. Ansah stated that the GoG plans to use a
"franchise approach," taking the same methodology they
develop for the MCA proposal and applying it to develop other
agricultural areas in Ghana -- such as in the northern region.


8. (SBU) Now that they have a focused program, the core team
is working to complete an "initial draft proposal," which
they will use in further consultations with civil society.
The outcome of the consultations should be a more complete
proposal, which Ansah hopes to submit to the MCC in late
December. Osafo Maafo agreed that January is the more likely
time frame.


9. (SBU) Comment: While Osafo Maafo insists that the MCA is
still the most important recent development for Ghana's
economy, the GoG effort to complete a compact clearly lost
focus in the September-November period. The main reason is
that Osafo Maafo and other principle Ministry of Finance and
GoG officials are fully occupied with the upcoming
Presidential and Parliamentary elections (on December 7). It
is only recently that the core team has made progress,
primarily because in early November project leader Michael
Ansah moved from London to Ghana to manage the process
through completion. Post is reassured that Ghana will
develop a more effective, growth-based, private sector-driven
proposal under his more dynamic leadership End Comment.
YATES