Governments of advanced countries hate each other. The ugly truth be told, even the closest allies have enmity towards each other. Why? Because they each possess resources that the other does not. And regardless how diplomatically close two nations may be, one cannot simply act as a Father Christmas to the other. No one nation gives without expecting something in return.
Yet all world governments collaborate with one top priority amongst military, cyber terrorism and global warming. That is to merge powers to combat financial chaos and deflation across the globe. The struggle has been a lengthy and demanding one but it stands to reason to say that the battle has been won, in the meantime, of course.
The IMF projected last year that for the first time since 2007, every advanced economy will enlarge. Advanced country growth should have exceeded 2% for the first time since 2015 and America, the center of the global economy is likely to increase its inertia-stricken interest rate. Yet after such a projection, the rich-world economy still encountered a number of menaces; from China’s shaky markets to the Greek debt saga that threatened to burst its economy, just to mention a few. Regardless of this there has been evidential growth spurts in marketing and advertisements expenses, manufacture and sales of native products. The secret to this is investment.
All rich economies have something in common; they use fish to catch fish. If Ghana and any developing nation wish to develop, it may be left to eradicating corruption and other economic malpractices. True though but re-injecting the nation’s funds back into itself is the most ideal thing to do. A nation that invests in itself believes in itself. But how will Ghana do that? The taxpayer is poor. His tax belongs to a non-tax payer.