258 63 2MB
English Pages [74] Year 1962
5054D UC - NRLF
B 2 823 946
JQ 3039 A5 C66
1962 MAIN
VIMEO
DeASHRAIND
LIBRARY
a PROGRAMME of the
Convention People's Party FOR WORK AND HAPPINESS
Price Is.
LOAN STACK
50540
TABLE OF CONTENTS Pages 3-7
INTRODUCTION THE PARTY AND ITS PROBLEMS
7-14
PART TWO PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE
National Planning Planning and its Enemies The Party and National Economic Deve lopment . Tax Reform
15-33 15-18 18-19
19-20 20
Agriculture Animal Husbandry and Poultry Produc
20-21
21-22
tion
Fish Production and Marketing
22–23
Forest Husbandry
23
Industrialisation
24
Handicrafts
25
25-26
Banking and Insurance The Post Office Savings Bank
26
Insurance - State Insurance Corporation
26
State Enterprise and Financing ..
27 27-28
State Enterprises
Foreign Private Enterprise
28
Enterprises jointly owned by the State and Foreign Private Interests 108
28
Pages 28-29
Co -operatives Small -scale Ghanaian Private Personal
Enterprises Transport and Communications Warehousing Workers' Participation in Management Labour Relations ..
29 29
30 30 30-32
Abolition of Unemployment (Full Employment) Civil Service
32
32-33 PART THREE
THE SOCIALIST REVOLUTION
34-40
Marriage and Divorce
34-35
Education
35-36
Literature and Publishing
36-37
Dramatic Art and the Cinema
37-38
National Languages
38
Culture and Leisure
38–39
Sport
39
Reform of Law and Correction of Crime Price Control
39
Opportunities for All
40
40
PART FOUR
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
41-47
United Nations
43–44
African Unity
44-46
Disarmament and World Peace
46-47
2
JQ 3039 A5C66 1962
MAIN INTRODUCTION
OUR PARTY's POLICY can be summed up in a single sentence : it is to provide work and conditions of
happiness for every member of our society. If we achieve this, and continue to work for the unity and
progress of Africa, we shall be making a positive contribution to the well-being of the Continent. This is one of our Party's central objectives. 2. Freedom from want and freedom from fear are
essential for the attainment of happiness. Happiness,
however, would be incomplete without the opportunity to lead a full cultural and spiritual life. Our Party's policy therefore is that no member of our population shall fear he will not have work or sufficient means, or
that he will be neglected in his old age, or be without help in times of sickness.
3. Our Party's policy is that no man shall fear 1
oppression ; that no woman shall be anxious that her child shall not be cared for or educated . Our Party is determined that all the people of Ghana shall look forward to ever -increasing social benefits and ever
widening opportunities for the enjoyment of leisure and culture .
4. But nothing in this world is achieved without effort. Thus, the attainment of these vital aims of our
Party's policy must be worked for, by increasing greatly and rapidly the greater wealth of the country and seeing to it that this greater wealth is fairly distri buted among our people . This in turn depends upon
the production andproductivity of the masses. 5. To attain these ends, our Party which stands dedicated to the service of the people, must have a workable plan and be able to put that plan into operation .
6. The Party has always had a consistent theory for enlarging the country's prosperity, as the outline of our history included in this programme will make clear.
This theory has been tried out in practice during the difficult circumstances of the last ten years. The
progress that has been made is indisputable proof of the practicability and correctness of the Party's line.
7. This theory has its basis in the principles upon which the Party is pivoted. What are these principles ? They are :
( 1 ) Socialism, because of the heritage of im perialism and colonialism , is the system by which Ghana can progress.
( 2) Socialism can be achieved only by a rapid change in the socio-economic structure of
the country. To effect this, it is absolutely essential to have a strong, stable, firm and
highly centralised government. This means that power must be concentrated in the
country's leadership. 8. Imperialism -colonialism left Ghana without the
accumulation of capital in private hands which assisted the Western world to make its industrial revolution .
Only Government therefore can find the means to
promote those basic services and industries which are essential prerequisites to intensive, diversified agricul ture, speedy industrialisation and increased economic productivity.
9. But Government, for the harmonious implementa tion of its plans must have the consent of the people. It must rest, therefore, on the firm foundation of mass
support, and the leadership must consult co inually with the people to ensure that its policy in all matters
is understood and is in accordance with the popular will.
10. This two-way exchange of confidence, especially in the context of our African environment, does not need the complicated and confused mechanics of multi-party parliamentarianism . 4
11. Independent African States are faced with urgent
and pressing problems of reconstruction, for the solution of which all the available national resources both human and otherwise must be mobilized. This
situation is almost analogous to a state of war and national emergency which is always met in the older established countries by the formation of coalition or
national governments. Moreover, a multi-party system is entirely alien to the traditional concept of govern ment in African Society.
12. For these reasons, a one party system provides the best answer for the problem of government in Africa. However, a one party system can operate successfully and satisfactorily only in a truly free and independent country . Otherwise, it becomes a dangerous weapon which can be used by the colonialists, neo -colonialists and their agents in puppet regimes and client States to
oppress the masses and subdue the will of the people. 13. This is why our Party supports the struggle of freedom fighters all over the continent and accepts the view that a resort to force is justified when all other means to end oppression have been tried and have failed and that, in these circumstances, the colonial regime
or a client State based on domination by a minority can justifiably be terminated through armed conflict. 14. Furthermore, a multi-party system provides unique opportunities for imperialism , colonialism and neo colonialism to intrigue behind the facade of different parties in order to intervene in the internal affairs of
the African States by promoting corruption, tribalism and dissension in the hope of barring progress to full economic independence. Without unfettered economic independence, the safety and security of our national
sovereignty and independence will continue to be in jeopardy. 15. The maintenance of our national independence, which is a condition for achieving national progress,
depends on a strong and well organised party deeply 5
rooted in the people and embracing popular organisa tions such as the Trades Union Congress, the United Ghana Farmers' Council, the National Council of
Ghana Women , Ghana Young Pioneers and all other bodies concerned with the training of youth.
16. The actions and practices of the Party must be based on policies founded on a well-defined ideology.
Such an ideology has been worked out by Kwame Nkrumah and expounded in his writings and speeches. It is based partly upon a study of the operations of colonialism and neo - colonialism and partly upon the
study and application of socialist principles to African conditions. This ideology is known as Nkrumaism
which is a guide in our struggle for the total emancipa tion and unity of Africa . 17. Nkrumaism teaches that in Africa to-day it is totally impossible to make a division between internal
policy and foreign policy. For national prosperity and national progress within individual African States at
the present stage of historical development depend largely upon the extent of co -operation between all the states. As long as Africa remains balkanised, no
single State upon our continent can be really pros perous. Once Africa is united, no single African State can fail to share in the increased prosperity that union will bring.
18. Speaking on the eve of Independence, Kwame said : “The independence of Ghana is
Nkrumah
meaningless unless it is linked up with the total liberation
of Africa ” . 19. Nkrumaism teaches that small States are even more vulnerable than the Great Powers to destruction
in a global war and, therefore, all countries, the small
no less than the great, must do all they can to secure world peace. This cannot be done by means of passive neutralism . It has to be achieved through a positive
policy of non -alignment, which will provide a bridge between the world's two great rival power blocs. 6
20. Nkrumaism , which is based on scientific socialism
is all-pervading, and while its theory in full can only be developed in and around the Party leadership, it must influence in some form all education and indeed all
thinking and action. Nkrumaism must be not only a
statement of aims and principles. It must also provide the intellectual tool by which these aims are achieved
and must concentrate on all constructive thinking around achieving these aims. Nkrumaism must also offer the ordinary man and woman some concrete, tangible and realisable hope of a better life within his
or her life time. Nkrumaism poses a full scale
intellectual, educational and organisational attack on colonialism and neo -colonialism , in all their forms and manifestations.
21. Nkrumaism teaches further that non -alignment is
a positive policy because it allows the countryfollowing
it to maintain its sovereignty by taking a definite and independent stand on international issues. This has a
very salutary effect on reducing world tension and
promoting peace by establishing a firm balance between the two Power Blocs.
22. The Party presents this programme to the nation in the knowledge that the time has come to take stock
of its past achievements. The Party, therefore, welcomes the frankest and fullest discussion of the programme
recognising the necessity to test theory against experi ence , and to make corrections where necessary. Out of
such exchange of views must come understanding and support of the Party's proposals. This programme is now being issued in its final form as fullyendorsed and
ratified by the people. 23. On the basis of this party programme, the Govern
ment at the beginning of January, 1963, will launch a Seven - Year Plan for the social, industrial, agricultural and technological advancement of Ghana . THE PARTY AND ITS PROBLEMS
24. The Convention People's Party was inaugurated on the 12th of June, 1949, at a mass rally at the West End 7
Arena in Accra when Kwame Nkrumah announced
its formation . In reality, however, the origins of the Party can be traced to the day, the 16th December , 1947, when Kwame Nkrumah returned to Ghana.
25. During his sojourn abroad, Kwame Nkrumah had devoted himself to a study of the practical methods by which not only Ghana but the whole of Africa could be freed from imperialism and colonialism and brought together in unity. He based his programme on the
following principles: First, that the liberation movement could only succeed if all the people were united behind it.
Secondly, that a strong centralized leadership based upon the popular will and support of the masses was essential in any struggle for freedom and the maintenance of sovereignty. Thirdly, that the full benefits of freedom would not be realised in any one African State until all the other African territories were also free and
united , and
Fourthly, that in order to organise a genuine popular movement it was necessary to build on all existing foundations wherever this was possible.
26. The Convention People's Party was the first political Party as such ever to be established in Ghana. Pre
viously all organisations for independence had been without a definite party policy and without any mass organisation.
national “ movements movements ”
27. The formation of the Party thus introduced for the first time into Ghana the party -political system which
was accepted as an essential pre-requisite forindepen dence. Its slogan was “ SELF -GOVERNMENT NOW " . To achieve this object, the Party put forward the idea of Positive Action . Kwame Nkrumah has des
cribed Positive Action as the adoption of legitimate and constitutional means in the first instance, and as a last resort, the use of force and insurrection to attack and
destroy the ramparts of imperialism and colonialism . 8
28. The original object of imperialism and colonialism was to secure cheap sources of raw material and to
create markets for the manufactured products of the imperialist power. This is the division of labour under colonialism .
29. “ Colonial development ” therefore consisted in exploiting the mineral, agricultural and other national resources of the country and exporting them to feed
the industry of the imperialist power and its allies. In this system wages were kept as low as possible and no encouragement was given to the production of any but the cheapest type of food for the peasants and
workers, irrespective of its nutritional value, since the colonial administration was more interested in the
industrial power of the metropolitan country than in the welfare of the colonial people. 30. In effect, the colonies were regarded as mere
markets for the purchase of agricultural products and the sale of manufactured goods of the metropolitan power.
31. The metropolitan power dictated the prices both the agricultural products and of the manufactured goods. The social and economic conditions of our
people under colonial rule left much to be desired . Health services were poor and education was limited to the training of clerks and subordinate staff to man the lower grades of the Government services and in commerce and industry.
32. The Party and Government therefore inherited a miserable legacy of poverty, disease and illiteracy and had to grapple quickly with the problem of reorganising the whole of the life of the nation based on improve ments in agriculture, commerce and industry, finance,
education, communications, housing and health services. 33. Owing to the absence of facilities for capital formation , it was clear from the very beginning that this prodigious task could only be accomplished successfully by the institution of socialism . There is no half way to socialism . The total industrialisation of the 9
country, the complete diversification and mechanisa tion of agriculture, and a national economic planning based on the public ownership of the means of pro duction and distribution must be the order of the day.
This pre -supposes the complete electrification of Ghana. 34. In their determination to promote and advance
the welfare and progress of the people as a whole, the Party and Government have been committed to travel on this path of socialism. 35. Ghana's trade and industry remains largely under
the domination of alien monopoly interests. This is a relic of colonialism which the Party is determined to eradicate.
36. In pursuit of this objective, the Party and Government lost no time in setting up Statutory Boards and Corporations in the fields of commerce
and industry and agriculture in order to control
effectively the national effort for progress and develop ment.
37. As stated before, the most important single factor for the establishment of industry was the supply of cheap power. The Party and Government therefore
devoted great energy to the planning of the Volta River Project. This project and other smaller hydro electric projects which are being started constitute
the key to the industrialisation ofGhana. The success so far achieved in the implementation of these pro jects is a measure of the persistence and determination of our Party and Government in the face of difficulties that seemed at times to be almost insurmountable .
38. Agriculture and industry depend on good and efficient communications. The Party realised this fact
and therefore gave priority to the construction of first-class roads throughout the country. Since 1951 nearly 1,500 miles of first-class roads have been con structed and extensive links of secondary and feeder
roads provided. The railway network has been con :siderably expanded and the rolling stock completely 10
modernised . 67 modern diesel locomotives have been
acquired and an extended and improved railway system is being planned .
39. Port capacity has been greatly expanded . In 1951, the maximum tonnage of cargo handled was 27 million tons. This figure has been doubled in the ten -year
period ending in 1961. This expansion has been achieved by extensions to Takoradi, where 4 new
berths have been provided and by the construction at Tema of the largest artificial harbour anywhere in Africa at a cost of £G274 millions, every penny of which has been provided bythe Government of Ghana. 40. When the Party came into power, wages were as low as ninepence per day. The Party intervened at once to correct this position , and appropriate measures
were adopted by legislation ,both as regards wages and trade union organisation. Today it can be said with some pride and justification that there has been a general rise in the living standards of the workers whose national minimum wage is now 6s. 6d. a day.
41. Trade Unions have been afforded great opportuni ties for organisational activities. Furthermore, the
Party has evolved an approach to trade unionism which has made it possible to create a new Trade Union Congress which acts not only as a free and independent organisation, but also as an effective liaison between the Government and the working masses of our
people.
42. The Party realised from the first that there is an essential difference in the role of Trade
Unions
operating in a capitalist country and Trade Unions operating in a country where the State machine is directed by a Party which is based on the mass support of the people and which can consult the people's wishes on every issue. 43. The Trade Union Movement in Ghana has been
closely associated with the Party and with the Govern
ment . Only thus could the objectives of the Trade 11
Unionists be achieved. The Party and the Government therefore do not regard the Trade Union organisation
as evolving out of conflict between employer and the employee. On the contrary, the Party has always considered that the Government has a positive duty to assist the Trade Unions to develop the structure best suited to their needs . The correctness of this policy
has been shown by the fact that wage increases have been secured without causing inflation or increasing the cost of living and without any loss of productivity which would have resulted from resort to strike action .
44. Housing accommodation for the people still re mains a difficult problem which the Party and the
Government are making every effort to solve. The
Ghana Housing Corporation and the Rural Housing Corporation have been established . Since the establish ment of these statutory Housing Corporations, several
thousand houses have been provided for the people. 45. The Party has adopted a progressive and vigorous
health policy, designed to remove the disabilities Considerable advances
inherited from colonialism .
have been made in curative and preventive medicine and there has been a striking improvement in the health of our people. Many modern hospitals, clinics and health centreshave been provided. The two major hospitals at Accra and Kumasi compare favourably with the best hospitals anywhere in the world. Endemic diseases have been brought under control
and will be completely wiped out in the course of time. Infant mortality has been remarkably reduced. Itinerant medical field units reach the remotest corners of the
country and bring relief and cure to the people. But that is not the whole picture. Hundreds of Ghanaian boys and girls are studying medicine all over the world under State scholarships. In the near future the number of doctors in Ghana per head of the population will be one of the highest in the world. The Party is under taking, as a matter of urgency, the establishment of 12
more hospitals, health centres and clinics throughout the country. The Party's ultimate objective is socialised
medicine for our people. Medical and Health services ( including facilities for research ) are being re- organised and plans for the establishment not only of a Medical School but also a Medical Centre are far advanced.
46. Our first task is to carry out a systematic campaign against endemic diseases such as malaria, river blind
ness, yaws, bilharzia , guinea -worm and other disabling diseases. In order to accelerate the eradication of
malaria throughout the country , the Party and Govern ment have devised a special scheme of spraying with the use of helicopters.
47. The Party's programme for health aims at intro
ducing within the Seven - year Plan Period a national health service which will embrace all medical practi
tioners. Its implementation will depend in part upon the fullest mobilisation of doctors, nurses, dentists
and surgeons, midwives and the many other specialists needed to maintain a fully competent and countrywide scheme.
48. The total number of medical practitioners for a population of seven millions is 400. The ratio is there
fore about one doctor to every 150,000 persons. The implementation of the national health scheme will involve a re- distribution of doctors throughout the country.
49. The Party holds the view that doctors and other
medical staff by virtue of their calling have a particular
responsibility to the community. They must be inspired by devotion to duty and not relate the quality of their work and their relationship with the public to material reward .
50. Our health programme will include services relating to the control of all categories of disease carriers and
will cover all aspects of health from prophylaxis ito nutrition . Special health schemes for miners and other : 13
workers liable to industrial accidents and diseases will be worked out. An extensive network of health
services will also embrace general sanitation and nutritional services with special attention to those areas at present without modern sanitary arrangements.
51. In 1950 not more than 30 per cent of children of
school- going age were in the Middle and Primary schools. At that rate of progress it would have taken
over fifty years for all our children to be provided with basic education . The Party therefore introduced in 1951 the accelerated educational plan which, for the
first time, offered to our people fee-free Primary education on a national basis. A further step forward has been taken in the introduction of fee - free and
compulsory Middle School education . In 1950 the enrolment in Primary and Middle Schools was 204,000 . By 1960 this figure had risen to over 600,000, a three fold increase. The enrolment in Secondary Schools also increased from 2,800 in 1950 to over 11,000 in
1960, while in Technical and Commercial Institutes
the corresponding figures are 266 and 2,700 respectively . 52. In higher education the Party was faced with the problem of a University structure designed primarily
to produce a type of graduates trained mainly for commerce, industry and administration, and who were
completely divorced from the needs and aspirations of the people. Little or no emphasis was laid on the training of students in the vital fields of agriculture
and the applied sciences, or in the culture and rich heritage of our national life.
53. A radical re-organisation of the whole University structure was therefore required. The firststeps in this direction have already been taken . An International
Commission was appointed to review the whole University system , and reformsbased upon their report have been put into operation . 14
PART TWO PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE
54. This programme has been formulated in the
conviction that Socialism implies central planning in order to ensure that the entire resources of the State,
both human and material, are employed in the best interests of all the people.
55. The basic aim of our economic development is to free our economy from alien control and domination.
To achieve this, it is necessary for the State to partici pate in the wholesaleand retail sectors of trade through out the country. This is the only means of protecting the people from unbridled exploitation by alien monopoly interests. The Party is firmly of the view
that the planning of the national economy can only. be really effective when the major means of production, distribution and exchange have been brought under the control and ownership of the State. The Party is determined to implement its plans, fully confident of
the support, enthusiasm and loyalty of the over whelming majority of the people. National Planning
56. Socialist planning calls for decisions about the raising of capital to finance development and how the money so raised shall be spent. It must decide what amounts shall come from taxation and other sources
of raising capital, and what proportion of the National Incomeshall be devoted to consumption and invest ment. Since we are, as a result of our heritage of colonialism and imperialism , still operating in a pre -industrial society , we have, above all, to decide
upon priorities for getting us started or transforming our economy.
15
57. Not only, therefore, does our planning have to decide what proportions of our available and estimated income shallbe spent on general administration , on our
Army and our Police, but also to decide, according to our development targets, what ratios shall go to education , health and social welfare ; what amounts shall be devoted to railways, harbours, telephones and telegraphs and other forms of communication. Our planning has to decide what allocations shall go to agricultural and industrial investment, and also how to attract labour and ration some raw materials to the
various sectors of the economy to avoid imbalance or inequalities.
58. Finance raising and spending, however, constitutes only one side of planning. If we are to make the best use of our human resources — which are certainly more
important than our natural resources in our develop ment - our planning must decide how our education has to be organised. We have carefully to estimate what numbers of engineers, agricultural and industrial artisans, skilled Building Workers and experts will be needed ; how many scientists, and technologists includ
ing chemists, biologists, architects, doctors, lawyers, accountants, administrators, and the many other
specialists we shall need from year to year. 59. We have to plan what our primary and secondary schools shall teach, what technical education is neces
sary, and where the schools and institutions of higher education shall be situated.
60. Planning also requires examination of what forms of agriculture and industry shall be encouraged. For example, should some crops be discouraged , others limited, as they prevent other more necessary crops
from being grown ? What proportion of our farming shall be given over to foodstuffs for our people ? How
much to the provision of raw materials for secondary industries and for export ? 61. What domesticated animals shall be encouraged
and how best can this be done ? Shall our agriculture, 16
fishing and animal husbandry be undertaken by Government farms, or by co -operatives, or by the encouragement of individuals to increase their farming,
their cattle herds and poultry stocks ? Or shall we combine all three ? Where are our animal feeds to come
from ? How much should we import from abroad, and how much grow in Ghana ? How much money and effort shall be spent on encouraging new crops like cotton, soya beans, groundnuts, rubber and sugar, and how much on crops to replace imported foodstuffs ? 62. The Party and Government, assisted by our plan ners, have to consider what new industries we need, and their location and how they can best be encouraged. How far shall they be financed by Government ? How far can they be financed by controlling invest
ment from banks and insurance companies ? How far can they be financed by foreign, private or Govern mental capital ?
63. These are only a few of the problems of socialist planning. It needs statistical information to guide the planners. The Government is the only body which has the full statistics and other relevant information upon
which over -all planning can be based.Only the Govern
ment can decide what the over-all effect of building a new road will be or how many teachers will be needed
for the country as a whole in so many years time. 64. All these and many other factors are involved in
exact planning for the future. However, such planning is incomplete unless the Government gets advice from below , from the mass of workers, farmers and peasants. For it is the workers, peasants and the farmers who know how things work out on the actual
job. The farmer has his experience to guide him , as does the miner. The expression of their views — the views of the people—is therefore important in plan
ning, and must be consulted. This means giving the Farmers' Council, the T.U.C., the local authorities, the houses of chiefs, the women's organisations, and 17
other similar bodies, an opportunity to make sugges tions as to planning, and the targets set and to criticise the draft plans produced . In this process, the National
Assembly must also play its constructive role as representatives of the people. Planning and its Enemies 65. Apart from the avowed enemies of socialist plan ning for Ghana, that is imperialism and neo -colonialism ,
there are the equally potent and insidious evils which can become cankerworms eating slowly but surely
into the fabric of our society. These are the evils of
bribery, corruption and nepotism , against which the Party is vigilant and determined to continue to pursue a relentless and ruthless campaign. 66. These evils are basically alien to the general Ghanaian nature, and can be attributed in part to the hangovers of colonialist practices and to the serious social effects of the imposition of a money economy upon our traditional social customs. At the present
time we are in a transition stage, emerging into new ways of life brought into being as a result of the new developments in industry, science and technology . 67. At the same time, there are certain of our customs,
- like that of “ dash ” and service to the family and oman ”—which are being accommodated to the new ways. In various degrees, the bribery, corrup
the
tion and nepotism which have found their way into our national life are being used to gratify the money
consciousness and greed of certain individuals and sections within our society.
68. Considerable harm is being caused by them to the general national effort. This is a position which the
Party refuses to tolerate, and it will, therefore, mobilise all its resources in a determined effort to correct it.
69. Nkrumaist principles provide the guide to action, through which all Party members, high and low, 18
will be subject to the same treatment. There cannot be within the Party, one law for leaders and another for followers.
70. Akin to corruption are careerism , opportunism and bureaucracy. Those who have these vices are stimulated by the urge for self-aggrandisement. They
disorganise all planning by refusing to work in a team. They use their positions to promote their own careers
and to keep in their hands the control of organisations or departments of Government in order to add to their own prestige. The harm done by such persons
can be as great as the evil done by corruption, bribery and nepotism . 71. We would add here a comment upon the pressures
brought to bear upon members of parliament by their constituents to force the establishment of projects in their villages or towns, irrespective of the value to the general community or to the wider needs of the nation.
This has just as detrimental effects as outright bribery, and is, in fact, a form of corruption which deflects the
national loyalty of parliamentarians to sectional interests. There can be no room for this kind of
pressure in our national life.
The Party and National Economic Development 72. The aim of our economic development is to make Ghana free of alien control of its economy and thus support our political independence with economic
independence. As a first step towards this vital objective, the Government will institute measures to enable it to
participate more and more during the period of the Seven - Year Plan , in the wholesale sector of the coun try's internal trade, as well as in its foreign trade.
73. While ensuring national control of the country's trade, these measures will also promote capital accu mulation for financing development. They will protect
the farmers and workers and the rest of the population in town and countryside from the unbridled exploita
tion by alien monopoly trading interests which have 19
hitherto dominated Ghana's domestic and import trade. They will enable proper checks and balances to be put upon inflation and will foster the establish ment and growth of domestic industries. Tax Reform
74. The Party considers that the tax methods employed in Ghana at the present time require re-examination in order to ensure that we have a system of taxation
which meets our rapidly expanding economy and also spread the burden of taxation equitably. 75. In the past the majority of expatriate and indi genous private enterprises have taken advantage of the weak structure of our tax legislation (which , for example, grants liberal capital allowances) to declare losses and thus secure exemption from taxation. The 1961 Budget proposals introduced by the Government have made it very much more difficult for these firms
and companies to escape payment of their share of taxation.
76. In planning for socialist developmentand economic growth, different methods of taxation will undoubtedly present themselves from stage to stage as less burden
some and more practicable and productive than the forms of direct taxation now current. Our Party will strengthen the investigation section of the Income Tax Department and keep under constant examination
the role of taxation in our expanding society. The Party will continue to maintain those policies most
advantageous to capital investment and productive management.
Agriculture
77. It is the aim of the Party and Government to
increase agricultural productivity by the application of modern methods of cultivation through diversifica tion and mechanisation. The agricultural problems which Ghana faces are four- fold . First, there is the
question of increasing the yield and of marketing them overseas with a view both to increasing the prices and 20
the quantity sold. Obviously any planned increase of production of cash crops must be accompanied by detailed plans for selling profitably the extra amount
of the commodity produced. Secondly, there is the question of introducing new cash crops which can find a market abroad . Thirdly, there is the problem of using at home for food and in industry the cash crop now
produced or which could be produced but for which at present there is no method of processing in Ghana. It is
clearly absurd that Ghana should be the largest single cocoa producer in the world and yet haveno home industry which is based on the use of the cocoa bean
whether as food or as an ingredient for pharmaceuticals
or cosmetics. Finally, and fourthly, there is the problem of producing at home foodstuffs to replace those that are at present imported . 78. In connection with the establishment of State and
Co -operative Farms, the Party will also establish national and tractor stations. Our country is fortunate
in possessing large tracts of uncultivated land on which will be constructed agricultural towns and villages and
provide new settlement centres for our patriotic young men and women. Modern amenities will be provided in these new centres of population and agricultural development.
Animal Husbandry and Poultry Production 79. The Party proposes to establish as soon as possible new machinery for the import, distribution and market
ing of meat and eggs. 80. This new machinery will take the form of State
Corporations or Agricultural Co -operatives. A Ghana Meat Import and Export Corporation will revolutionise the distribution and marketing of cattle, sheep, goats,
pigs, game and poultry, by : ( a ) setting up buying centres in Mali, Guinea, Upper Volta and other neighbouring African countries which at the moment export live
stock to Ghana through middlemen ; 21
(6 ) providing a guaranteed market or stable prices for livestock imported or produced in this country, and eliminating step by step all middlemen engaged in the livestock trade ; and, ( c) entering into agreements with other State enterprises for the construction of cold storage depots, abattoirs and slaughterhouses for the storage and distribution of livestock and for
the processing and preservation of imported and locally produced meat, so that Ghana will become self-sufficient in the production of meat, poultry and egg supplies.
81. Similarly an Egg Marketing Board will assist in the marketing of eggs and in the lowering of prices. Chicken feedwill be locally produced. Fish Production and Marketing
82. The Party proposes that the Seven - Year Plan should contain plans for: (a) acquiring a fleet of modern fishing vessels and trawlers to provide sufficient fish and fish
products to feed the nation, to displace all imported fish and fish products, thereby con serving our foreign exchange. (6 ) providing a guaranteed market and stable
prices to all engaged in the fishing industry, thereby raising the standard of living of our fishermen ;
( c) establishing cold storage depots as well as a chain of fish processing and fish smoking plants for the storage and distribution of fish in all the important towns of the country ;
( d ) expanding the present facilities for the training of all those who wish to make fishing their career ;
22
( e) establishing a network of fish markets and shops throughout the length and breadth of the country so that a regular supply of fresh and smoked fish at reasonable and stable
prices will be available to workers and farmers in town and countryside;
( f) establishing in those parts of the country with plentiful supplies of water, fish farming or fish ponds, so that an alternative source of fish supplies, will be created .
Forest Husbandry 83. The Party will establish a Forestry
Products
Corporation which will run State Timber Concessions
and develop the timber industry. Legislation will be introduced to make it obligatory for all timber con cessionaires to plant and nurse three new trees for
every matured tree cut down or infant tree destroyed
accidentally during the currency of their concessions. 84. Expatriate concessionaires hold at the moment
about 90 per cent of the country's timber concessions. There is no obligation on their part to plant new trees in place of matured trees cut down or infant trees
destroyed accidentally . 85. The Party will also establish, during the currency of the Seven - Year Plan period, Research Institutes whose main task will be to carry out scientific research
work in forestry and to learn from the experience of other countries in forestry research to formulate and
enforce regulations concerning technical operations and educate and train cadets in forestry work and prepare conditions for future development of forestry. 86. In the Northern and Upper Regions of Ghana, the Party will, during the Seven - Year Plan period,
carry out large scale afforestation projects. State-owned nurseries will also be established ; bamboo and other
such plants will be cultivated and industries for pro cessing them will be established . 23
Industrialisation
87. Industrialisation depends first upon the availability of cheap power and, secondly, on the availability of materials required for processing as well as a skilled
labour force. Electricity and steel make the modern industrialised State.
88. The Volta River Project and the Bui Project, together with other hydro -electric stations which are
planned, should provide an adequate supply of cheap power. The Party proposes that the Seven - Year Plan shall contain proposals for establishing those types of heavy industry which are large consumers of power and for which raw materials are available locally . 89. The National Planning Commission has started on a detailed study of the type of heavy industry most suitable for Ghana. Clearly a heavy chemical industry for the manufacture of fertilisers and the utilising of
wood as a raw material from which to make plastics and artificial yarn, are matters which require careful and immediate study. The use of our iron ore resources
might form the basis of an iron and steel industry. 90. A second type of industrial development consists of industries which utilise new cash crops and thus
provide very considerable agricultural employment. The sugar industry is a case in point. For every man
employed in the factory, ten agricultural workers are needed. Sugar-cane is now being grown in areas where
there is little agricultural development. The saving in foreign currency by Ghana producing her own sugar
is very considerable. From the by-products of sugar production not only can alcohol be produced as a
beverage (in the form of rum and liquors) but also industrial alcohol can be made and used in cosmetic
and pharmaceutical industries . Sugar is also a provider of basic raw material for the plastic industries. 91. The third type of industrial development comprises light industry such as textiles and the making of shoes, clothing, furniture, diamond polishing, and fittings for building 24
Handicrafts
92. The Party and Government will encourage handi craft workers to organise themselves into co -operative societies so as to qualify them for State aid through
long -term loans for the acquisition of up -to - date machinery and equipment, and hiring of premises. In addition, short-term credits will be provided to handicraft co -operatives for the purpose of buying raw materials.
93. In particular, the Government will encourage gold smiths , Kente cloth weavers and other craftsmen so that their individual work may become known both
nationally and internationally. In order to encourage an export trade in gold ornaments, the Government
will set up an organisation for standardising the quality of gold jewellery. Schools will be provided whereby experienced craftsmen will teach the youth. The Government will recruit skilled craftsmen from other
countries to teach our youth in such crafts as carpet making, etc.
Banking and Insurance 94. The Bank of Ghana is the central Bank of Issue
and the Party will ensure that it provides credits which should be channelled through all sectors of our
national economy as directed by the National Planning Commission . This will enable the Bank to play a more
positive role in the economic development and planning of the nation's resources . 95. The Government will also establish an Investment Bank. This Bank will provide loans on a long-term credit basis to small-scale Ghanaian enterprises on easy terms. It will also grant long- term credits to
State enterprises, Co -operatives and Local Councils
for industry, mining, agriculture, housing, etc. The Investment Bank will, through its Agricultural Credit Departments, serve as a medium enabling the Govern ment to exercise control over agriculture on a planned basis.
25
96. When the nation's economy and productivity in
industry and agriculture have resulted in the rise in the living standards of the people, hire-purchase financing will be expanded to assist individuals who wish to buy such durable consumer goods as refrigerators, radios, etc.
The Post Office Savings Bank
97. The Party and Government will re- organise the Post Office Savings Bank with the object of encouraging
the savings habit among the masses of the people. The powers of the Bank will be modified so as to
enable it to grant loans and advances to its depositors. This is a new innovation proposed by the Party in
order to provide facilities to those who patronise the Post Office Savings Bank. A system of graduated interest rates will be arranged which will work to the
advantage of those depositors who allow their savings to remain in the Bank for long periods. The manage ment of the Bank deposits will be entrusted to the
State Bank with which the Post Office Savings Bank will work in close co -operation, so as to make the issue of National Development Bonds and National Savings Certificates a success .
Insurance — State Insurance Corporation
98. The Government will through the State Insurance Corporation enter into an agreement with local insurance companies to surrender their net assets
covering all policies of life assurance effected on Ghanaians. The State Insurance Corporation will participate in all types of insurance business and
arrange for re-insurance with overseas insurance com panies or other State Insurance Corporations at the most advantageous rates.
99. Investment opportunities will be created by the
State Bank to enable the net premium income of all insurance companies operating in Ghana to be invested in Ghana instead of overseas. 26
State Enterprise and Financing 100. With the conclusion of the Volta Loan Agree ments, the Government has received a large number
of enquiries from business and financial interests from overseas which demonstrate keenness to participate, to an increasing degree, in the development of the country's economy. The Government, therefore, con
siders that it is necessary to re -define its policy on private enterprise and investment in general. 101. The Government reiterates its declared policy of building a society in which the principles of social justice will be paramount, and towards this end will maintain its policy of economic planning and increasing
participation in the nation's economic activity. 102. Thus, the Government has decided that in no
sector of the economy will exclusive rights of operation
in respect of any commodity be conferred on any single person, and all enterprises are expected to accept the economic policy of the Government as the basis of their activity and to operate within the framework of the laws of the nation.
103. The Government recognises five sectors, all operat ing side by side in the nation's economy. These sectors are :
( 1 ) State enterprises.
(2) Enterprises owned by foreign private interests. (3) Enterprises jointly owned by the State and foreign private interests.
( 4 ) Co -operatives. (5 ) Small -scale Ghanaian private enterprise.
State Enterprises 104. These are the enterprises completely owned and operated by the State, and will include all enterprises 27
managed under the direction of the competent govern mental organs. The main aims of operating State enterprises are :
( a ) to ensure an ever growing and steady employ ment for the people; (6 ) to increase national income and the revenues of the State in order to raise the living standards
of the people, to expand and improve both education and health services ;
(c) to have atthe command of the State significant and growing stocks of commodities in order to be able to influence the market, this influence
being aimed at the stabilization of the price level and that of currency ;
( d ) to supply those services, which the private sector does not wish or is not allowed to supply.
Foreign Private Enterprise 105. The Government accepts the operation in the country of large - scale enterprises by foreign interests. 106. The objectives of this policy are, firstly, to accele rate the growth of Ghana's capital stock. Secondly to conserve Foreign Exchange and maintain the national reserves at a safe level.
Enterprises jointly owned by the State and Foreign Private Interests
107. Such enterprises are to be owned and operated jointly by government and private foreign interests whose respective shares in the equity capital shall be agreed by both parties. Co -operatives
108. Government will support and encourage the formation of co -operative enterprises of producers both in agriculture, trade and industry and will also assist 28
small scale individual Ghanaian Farmers through such institutions as the Investment Bank.
Small -scale Ghanaian Private Personal Enterprises 109. In order to encourage and utilise personal initiative and skill, Ghanaians can undertake small-scale enter prises, provided that they are not nominees or sleeping partners of foreign interests. Transport and Communications Transport
110. In the interests of efficiency, elimination of waste, reduction of fares, and overlapping of functions, in the transport and communications industry, the Party proposes to establish a public corporation to control: ( a ) inland transport; (b) sea and river transport ; and (c) civil aviation .
111. The Inland Transport Division will absorb the
Municipal Bus Services, the Ghana Railways and the Government Transport Department, the administra tion of river ferry service, and the road haulage and
transportation services at present being performed by all Government departments, and statutory boards and corporations. 112. The Sea Transport Division will absorb the Black Star Line and the administration of all ports and harbours in the country, including stevedoring. 113. The Civil Aviation Division will incorporate the Ghana Airways . Telecommunications
114. The pursuit of closer African unity dictates that telecommunication facilities existing between all the African States should be rapidly expanded. The Party will foster the expansion of a network of radio stations and other telecommunication systems linking us with
our neighbouring sister States. 29
Warehousing 115. The diversification of agriculture and the promo
tion of home and foreign trade depend to a certain 'extent upon the availability of an efficient warehousing service. Banks must be guaranteed the safety of their advances against produce or merchandise stored in warehouses in urban or in the rural areas. Without this
guarantee, the rapid turnover of working capital in the hands of State trading corporations cannot be ensured .
116. Accordingly, the Party will set up a National Warehousing Corporation to serve as the Central Warehousing Agency and Left Luggage depot of the State .
Workers' Participation in Management 117. To strengthen labour's interest in increased pro
ductivity and national progress, it is the Party's policy that there shall be the strongest form of workers' participation in management.
118. Such participation will not be confined to simple representation
on
management
boards.
Effective
methods of consultation between management and workers will be provided for at all levels ; guarantees
against frivolous and arbitrary dismissals will be given ; and the Government will institute Joint Production
Committees which will meet and take decisions on all
matters affecting production . Labour Relations
119. The Government which is formed by our Party is a People's Government, that is, a Government of the
workers, farmers and peasants ; indeed, a Government
of the people, free, strong and independent, pursuing a socialised pattern of reconstruction. The interest of workers is therefore well protected by the State. The Trade Union Movement must therefore pursue a
different role from that of Trade Unions in a capitalist
society. The desires and wishes of our working people, 30
farmers and peasants, from the basis of our social and economic policy. 120. It is the policy of the Party to see our people in full employment. There must be jobs for all and we envisage a society in which he who is able but does not work neither shall he eat. Our educational facilities
have been expanded to enable Ghanaian children whether of workers, farmers, and peasants, to have
equal opportunities for education. Our health services are being improved. All this progress is directed towards improving the living standards and cultural spiritual needs of our people.
121. In the present stage of our development, Trade Union officials must discard their colonial mentality and methods and remember that they are not struggling
against capitalists. When they have to fight against exploiters, the State will be their protector. Today, the worker of Trade Union officials must be different.
The Trade Union Movement must spearhead their
efforts to raise production and productivity and cease to be advocates for out-moded conditions.
122. The Party will ensure that our Trade Unions do not limit their activities to the education of the workers
only as regards their rights, but also regarding their duties and responsibilities. The Party will take steps to inculcate in our working people the love of labour
and increased productivity. The Party and Govern ment will continue to pursue those socialist policies which will be to the ultimate benefit of the workers
and will see to it that Trade Unions explain these measures to the rank and file instead of becoming mere agitators for rights already protected and guaran teed by the State.
123. The Party considers that our Trade Union officials should have a new orientation of their role in the
programme of reconstruction. The new era of Trade Unionism must come about through increased educa tional facilities for all Trade Union Branch officials 31
and arrangements will be made for the Trade Union
Congress to take full advantage of the courses at the
Kwame Nkrumah Ideological Training Institute at Winneba and at our Universities.
124. The Party recognises, however, that it is of the utmost importance that in the countries where colo nialism and neo-colonialism still hold sway, trade unions have a vital obligation to support Freedom
Fighters to over - throw puppet and neo - colonialist regimes, and oppressor Governments.
Abolition of Unemployment
(Full Employment) 125. The Party and Government inherited from the
Colonial Power large pockets of unemployment in the urban areas and hidden unemployment and an under employed labour force in the rural areas. This reflected
the agrarian character of the economy, the lack of basic industries as well as over-all national economic
planning. The Party will change this situation, and pursue a policy of positive and conscious abolition of unemployment. 126. The Party is convinced that with the diversification
and mechanisation of agriculture and the establishment of large scale farms, a substantial force of surplus labour will be released from the rural areas which can
be transferred into industry.
127. In short,theParty proposes that by the end of the Seven - Year Plan Period unemployment will have been abolished in Ghana . Civil Service
128. When the Party came to power in 1951 there were only seven Ghanaians in any worthwhile positions of
responsibility in the Civil Services. It was a basic policy of colonial rule to preserve these posts for expatriates. The Party at once set out to correct this 32
position by adopting a vigorous policy of Africanisa tion. As a result, the Civil Service today has been virtually Africanised. 129. The Party proposes that the Civil Service should be
completely re-modelled so as to release it from its colonial restraints and mentality and to bring it into line with our socialist aspirations. The Party and Government are keenly aware of the needs of the people and are animated by a strong sense of urgency.
The Civil Service must be revitalised and animated by the same sense of urgency .
130. The existing qualifications for appointment to the various positions in the Civil Service will be revised so as to relate them to Ghanaian needs and conditions.
When this has been achieved, the existing serious shortage of manpower in the Civil Service resulting from adhrence to standards established in colonial
days will be abolished. The training of Civil Servants, particularly of the junior grades, will be accelerated . 131. The Organisation and Methods service will be expanded, and special attention will be paid to the supervision of subordinate staff and the organisation and maintenance of efficient Registries in the Ministries and Departments .
33
PART THREE THE SOCIALIST REVOLUTION 132. The socio - economic revolution of Ghana which
the Party is carrying out has for its main objectives work and happiness for all the people. This revolution proceeds along five main fronts : Agriculture, Industry,
Commerce, Social Relationships and Culture. 133. The Party's policy for the re- organisation of agriculture, commerce and industry has been outlined earlier in this programme. This programme of recon struction will make such an impact on the framework
of our traditional life as to require a re-examination of our customs relating to marriage, divorce and inheri tance .
Marriage and Divorce 134. Our marriage laws are at present a mixture of
our own indigenous forms and the system existing in the advanced industrialised nations which we in
herited through colonialism . The new circumstances which have been created by a changing socio -economic pattern , and the popularisation of education with its increasing movement of people from village to town
and subsequent break -up of clan -life, makes the polygamous systems of marriage inappropriate. New
forms of family life are breaking up the old loyalties. Moreover, the Party stands for complete equality between the sexes and complete equality is, strictly
speaking, incompatible with polygamy. 135. The Party believes that there should be only one
form of marriage, and that is monogamy. It recognises, however, that existing polygamous marriages will not
disappear with the enforcement by law of monogamy. Hence there can be no legal or social discrimination
against children in the form of illegitimacy, which is 34
completely alien to our African custom. The State's responsibility in the new social order will be to all children and not merely those from monogamous marriages.
136. As regards divorce, the Party will put forward detailed plans based upon the comments and discus sions which followed the Government's White Paper
on Marriage and Divorce. Broadly speaking, the Party does not regard the Courts as the only suitable arbiter in matters of matrimonial disharmony. It feels that traditional arbitration is a surer means of settling
discord through reconciliation. Divorce will be recom mended onlywhere reconciliation proves impossible, and will be registered by the Courts, which will also consider the question of maintenance and division of property acquired during the marital union . Education
137. Primary and Middle School education, as already stated, has been made compulsory and fee- free. The
duration of the Primary and Middle School courses will be reduced to eight years and the Secondary School courses will last four years. The Party proposes that
Secondary School education will also become free and compulsory during the operation of the Seven - Year Plan. Provision will therefore be made for the training and recruitment of larger numbers of Teachers. 138. University Education will be expanded to enable
all who can profit from it to take advantage of the facilities for higher education provided by Government. The Party and Government propose that University Entrance Examinations shall be abolished and that the West African School Certificate shall be sufficient
qualification for entry into our Universities. Accord ingly, the Party proposes that the present Sixth Form courses provided in the Secondary Schools should cease, and that Sixth - form work should become the
first year of the four- year University course. 35
139. The curricula for schools will be revised so as to
bring them more into line with our national aspira tions. One of the most neglected aspects of Ghanaian
education at present is, in the Party's view, Technical Education . The Party therefore proposes to increase
the number of Institutes providing technical and
vocational training ; polytechnics and other institutes will be provided for the training of skilled personnel
required for our national reconstruction . Such technical training will cover metallurgy, Engineering, Economics, Statistics, Accountancy and Management. 140. The Party and Government will make further provision for education overseas for students who require further education in fields which are not provided for locally . The Party considers that more research work should be done locally by our Univer sities and the Party and Government will make avail able the necessary funds for carrying out this important work.
141. The Party and Government are determined that
our Universities will no longer produce “ Ivory Tower graduates and that Ghanaian boys and girls, who have had the benefit of the best education that the country
can provide, will identify themselves completely with the cause of the people. Literature and Publishing
142. At the moment there is an absence of publishing opportunities for Ghanaians, whether they write in a
Ghanaian language or in English. Expanding education will create a rising demand for literary works by Gha naians in both the African languages and English.
143. The Party considers it of the utmost importance that a State Publishing House, run on commercial lines, should be established as soon as possible. We already
have the basis for developing a publishing industry, and it is intended that the National Publishing House should serve as the central printing and publishing establishment of the country. 36
144. In the interests of economy and efficiency the
Printing Division of the National Publishing House will absorb printing establishments now run by Govern ment, educational institutions and boards and other
State organisations.
145. The publishing section of the National Publishing House will take over the publishing of text-books for the schools and also printing for the Government and State Corporations and co -operative organisations.
It will publish newspapers and magazines. Dramatic Art and the Cinema
146. A national theatre for the promotion of drama, music and dancing has been a long-felt need. The Party proposes to build such a theatre for the people. 147. Ghanaian musicians will be encouraged to estab lish a national orchestra and the Party and Govern
ment will open schools for the teaching of drama, music and dancing.
148. Orchestras and bands will be protected by Law against exploitation by foreign interests. 149. The Party considers that the cinema can provide a most valuable source of entertainment and cultural
education. Unfortunately, many of the films shown to the public at present over -emphasize sex and crime and thus exert an undesirable influence on the morals of
the people. The Party and Government will, during the period of the Seven-Year Plan, establish a Film Import Agency which will secure for Ghana suitable
films from all parts of the world, making use where appropriate of the cultural agreements which have been entered into with many countries.
150. The Party and Government propose to build a
Ghana Film Industry in co -operation with other countries which have had long experience in film pro duction. Meanwhile, the Party and Government will provide every facility to the Ghana Film Production 37
Corporation to embark upon the production of films that will portray the new African in Ghana and other parts of the Continent.
National Languages 151. In the world today, industrialisation and technical
progress is dependent to a large extent upon a thorough knowledge of one or more of the main international
languages . On the other hand, the development of African culture will be arrested unless it is based upon
a thorough study and understanding of the national languages. It is natural that an independent nation should seek to promote the use of a national language
which expresses the true spirit, ideas and aspirations of
its peoples .The attainment of this ideal is a long term objective. But in order to ensure its realisation in the long run the Party and Government propose that Ghanaian languages should be made additional subjects at our secondary schools and universities along with the ancient and modern languages.
152. Closely linked with the use of national languages is the preservation of traditional culture and institutions. 153. The Ghanaian Constitution provides for the main tenance of Chieftaincy and the Party strongly supports this constitutional provision. The institution of Chief
taincy will assist the preservation of all that is best in our traditional culture. Culture and Leisure
154. The Party considers that everyone in Ghana should have sufficient leisure and opportunity to
engage in cultural activities and sports. 155. The full use of leisure will include the opportunity to travel inside Ghana. The provision of holiday resorts where the people can enjoy sport and relaxation is part of the general question of tourism and will be included in the overall plans for a well balanced tourist industry. 38
156. Our game reserves will be improved as part of these plans. At present there are three Game Reserves in Ghana but they lack facilities for tourists and for the scientific study of the habits of animals. These defects will be remedied. As part of the internal and external tourist trade and as part of our general
educational programme, the Party and Government will take steps to provide National Parks and further Game Reserves .
Sport
157. The Party and Government will see to it that
sport is controlled centrally and the policy established by Kwame Nkrumah continued and developed. During the Seven - Year Plan Period, it will be the policy of the Party and Government to extend the activities of the Central Organisation of Sports. 158. International sporting events and the provision of entertainment of the people are an important factor in the development of the tourist industry, The Party and Government will therefore encourage the con struction of stadia, swimming pools and sports grounds in various parts of the country . Reform of Law and Correction of Crime
159. Our legal system which is a legacy of colonial rule requires urgent reform in many directions. In the industrial field , it unduly favours foreign conces sionaires and does not sufficiently protect the small man against his financially powerful competitor. In commercial relations, the law is heavily weighted in favour of private enterprise and does not sufficiently
provide for State and co -operative enterprise. In social questions, existing legislation is framed on United Kingdom law and procedure. 160. In the Seven - Year Plan period, the Party and Government will revise our present body of laws so as
to bring it into line with our socio -economic problems and with progressive socialist thought. 39
Price Control
161. Steps will be taken to prevent profiteering, and the system of price control which hasbeen introduced will be rigidly enforced .
162. The most effective control of prices will be that exercised through the State Import Monopoly when this is established, since the State Monopoly will be able to fix retail prices throughout the country. The system of licensing retail traders will provide further
control and over-chargingwill result in the withdrawal of the offenders' licence. The people will no longer be
at the mercy of unscrupulous traders. The people will thus be protected against exploiters.
Opportunities for All 163. In this programme the Party and Government have made exhaustive references to vast resources that
exist in the mineral and agricultural wealth of this
country which they are determined to develop to the utmost capacity for the benefit of the people. The Party and Government consider, however, that an even greater national asset is the nation's manpower
reserve in the ever-increasing number of healthy and trained children , our busy and energetic market women ,
school teachers, farmers, skilled and manual workers of all grades, professional men and women who are helping in the challenging task of nation -building. 164. The Party and Government are equally determined that this other pool of national resources shall be so developed that every man , woman and child in Ghana
shall have the fullest opportunity to express to the highest limits possible all their cultural spiritual,
intellectual and physical powers and potentialities, for so long as these are employed not in the selfish interests of individuals, but rather in the service of their fellow men and women in accordance with the
best traditions of socialist thought and practice. 40
PART FOUR INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
165. We have already stated that it is unrealistic to separate domestic from foreign policy, since the one is closely related to the other. For Ghana to be pros perous she must be able to trade with any country
in the world capable of supplying her needs. She cannot do this, if she aligns herself with non - African trade blocs such as the European Common Market
designed to further the interests of the advanced capitalist countries at the expense of the newly develop ing countries. To join the European Common Market would be merely to revive the position by which Ghana was a supplier of raw materials to the industrialised
countries of the West. As a bulwark against this form of neo -colonialism , Ghana will support the promotion of a Common Market with a common monetary zone
in Africa, which would assist the industrialisation of African countries and make them independent of
manufactured products from other parts of the world . 166. Thus Ghana's domestic policy is clearly a neces
sary corollary of her foreign policy . In order to develop our country we must seek loans from other Govern
ments, and our field of borrowing must be as wide as
possible. If we limit our borrowing to members of some particular bloc we shall become dependent upon that
bloc and impose upon ourselves restrictions that
interfere with our economic growth. To safeguard our developing economy, therefore, we must pursue a
foreign policy which saves us from dependence upon any one group of powers. 167. The Party considers that Ghana as a developing nation should pursue a policy of non -alignment in international affairs. 41
168. Non-alignment is a positive policy because it .consciously seeks to alter relation -patterns inherited
from colonialism . It is a positive policy also because the non-aligned countries can combine in putting forward their own solutions for international problems, as was demonstrated at the Conference of non -aligned powers in Belgrade. 169. Ghana, as a former colonial territory, has parti
cular interest in the ending of colonialism throughout the world and especially in the African continent.With the experience of the evils of colonialism still fresh in her mind the existence of colonialism anywhere in the world cannot but outrage her conscience. For just as
no man can bear with equanimity the sight of injustice perpetrated on his neighbour, so can Ghana not remain
unconcerned when she sees the evil system of colonial ism still practised in other parts of the world. She is
interested in seeing that the old relationships by which certain countries are exploited as producers of raw materials for the benefit of highly industrialised countries on other continents come to an end.
170. Colonialism endangers the safety of the entire
.continent, since the colonial territory may be dragged into a war against its will by the administering power, as was the experience of Ghana and other former
.colɔnial territories in Africa. Colonialism also imposes completely distorted economic , social and cultural patterns whose effects extend beyond their own terri torial limits. Economically, it diverts the foreign trade of the colonial territory from its natural direction the neighbouring African states — to the metropolitan "power overseas.
171. The evil effects of colonialism are evident today,
particularly in the field of inter - African communica tions. There is little or no rail or road connection between the former British and French colonial terri tories. Postal and telecommunication services are still
largely based upon the old colonial pattern which made 42
the imperial power the nerve -centre of communica tions through which all mail, telephone and telegraphic communications were routed. 172. The lack of inter-communication between African
countries is one of the greatest obstacles to inter continental development. This obstacle can only be
overcome when independent African states are able to plan their communication systems in concert. And this will only be possible when colonialism has been
eradicated ; for as long as colonialism still exists in any part of this continent it will be impossible to plan African development on a continental basis , or make the fullest use of African resources for the benefit of
the people. To ensure the economic stability of the Continent, Africa must begin to look inwards in planning of her road and rail communications. Far
too long has Africa been made to look outward in her commercial relationships.
173. For these reasons, the Party considers that it is the duty of our Government to continue to be in the forefront of the struggle for the liberation of Africa .
The Party recognizes that freedom is indivisible. The
heroic fight which the Algerian people have fought for seven years against colonialrule is apart of the struggle now being waged in East, Central and South Africa, as well as in the Portuguese colonies. An imperial power does not willingly grant freedom . Freedom is ceded by an imperial power only as a result of pressures from an organised, militant movement in a colonial territory. United Nations
174. The Party and Government strongly support the United Nations which they consider to be the most important instrument in the world today for the
preservation of peace and for securing orderly change. The Party considers, however, that the United Nations
should not play a purely passive role in international 43
affairs. There are in the world today great movements for change which no power on earth can restrain. It is the duty of the United Nations to ensure that these
changes take place in an orderly and peaceful manner. The Party considers that the United Nations would
fail if it ever became a body for enforcing the status
quo. It must not be converted into a “ Holy Alliance ” of the early nineteenth century type, playing the role of preserver of arbitrary frontiers and maintaining
intact the existing colonial relationships. The Party realises that if the United Nations fails to effect a
change in the colonial system by peaceful means the continued existence of colonialism would constitute
a serious threat to world peace and security. The Party and Government will therefore pursue at the United Nations, in the General Assembly and in the Security Council, a most vigorous policy aimed at securing
peaceful settlement of all international issues, including the complete and final liquidation of colonialism which is the surest means to world peace.
African Unity
175. The Party has always been dedicated to the
principle of African Unity and our Constitution provides for the surrender in part or in whole of our
sovereignty in the interest of African continental unity. The Party considers, however, that the surrender of sovereignty is a condition which we in Ghana must accept,if necessary , in order to promote the cause of unity in Africa. In the view of the Party and Govern ment, a united Africa should seek three objectives:
Firstly, we should have over-all economic planning on a united continental basis which would increase the
industrial and economic power of Africa. So long as we remain disunited, so long as we remain balkanized
regionally or territorially, we shall be at the mercy of colonialism and imperialism . 44
There is a great contrast in this respect between Africa and Europe today. Whereas Europe is making frantic efforts in the direction of economic and political
integration,
Africa
is
sadly
being
torn apart by the manoeuvres and intrigues of neo colonialism .
The Party and Government see no alternative to
the political unification of Africa through economic integration.
Secondly, we should aim
at the creation of a
Joint Military Command . There is no wisdom in our present separate efforts to build up or maintain
vast military forces for self defence which, in any case would be ineffective in any major conflict. If we examine this problem realistically, we would be able to ask ourselves this pertinent question: which
single State in Africa today can protect itself against an imperialist aggressor ?
Recently, anti-apartheid leaders have alleged that
South Africa is building a great military might with all the latest weapons of destruction in order to crush African nationalism. If this is true, only the unity of
Africa can prevent South Africa from achieving such an aim . If we do not unite and combine our military forces for common defence, the individual States, out
of a sense of insecurity, may be drawn into making defence pacts which will endanger the security of us all. There is also the expenditure aspect of this problem . The maintenance of military forces imposes a heavy financial burden on even the most wealthy States. For young African States, who need every penny they can get for development, it is ridiculous — indeed,
suicidal— for each State, individually, to assume such a heavy burden when the weight of this burden could be easily lightened by sharing it among themselves. The third objective which we should have in Africa comes from the first two just described . 45
If we in Africa set up a common economic planning organisation and a joint military command, it follows that we shall have to adopt a common
foreign policy to give political direction to our national continental defence and our national
continental economic and industrial development planning.
176. In the higher reaches of our endeavour, the Party and Government should devise some constitutional
structure which secures these objectives and yet
preserves the sovereignty of each country joining the Union . For example, countries in such a union will naturally maintain their own constitutions, continue to use their national flags, their national anthems and
other symbols and paraphernalia of sovereignty which they do not have to surrender. Our survival depends upon the political unity of Africa. The forces that unite us are far greater than the difficulties which divide us at present .
177. It is most important that African leaders must now begin to find the best and quickest means by which we can pool our economic resources together for our mutual benefit. If we achieve this, we shall
raise in Africa a great industrial, economic and financial
power comparable to anything the world has seen in our time.
178. The Party and Government consider, however, that we cannot establish such effective economic links
in Africa without giving them sound political direction, force, and purpose. We must therefore come to grips with themajor and basic issue of African unity which alone will make the artificial boundaries and regional demarcations inherited from colonialism obsolete and
superfluous. Disarmament and World Peace
179. It is the policy of the Party and Government to do everything possible to promote the cause of world peace. In this regard , the Government has lost no 46
opportunity to make its voice heard clearly and unequivocally on issues of war and peace bothinside and outside the counsels of the world .
180. The failure of the great powers not only to agree on the cessation of nuclear testing, but also to disarm and the stock-piling of atomic weapons for mass destruction , remain the greatest source of danger to mankind. The Party and Government have taken a definite stand on these matters by supporting the convening of a World Assembly in Accra to discuss ways and means whereby the world can be freed from
the dismal gloom and horror of possible annihilation resulting from the use of atomic weapons. The Party and Government, in this connection, will continue
its efforts to secure the preservation of Africa as a non -nuclear zone and will endeavour to obtain the
co -operation of other African countries towards the achievement of this objective. 181. The Party and Government have always stated that Africa has a vested interest in peace and that the
complete and total liquidation of colonialism is a vital means to world peace. Surely, the implementation of a programme such as the Party now lays before the country cannot be successfully achieved except in an atmosphere of peace and harmony in the world. It is our fervent hope that the powers that be will endeavour to iron out their differences around the negotiation
table in a spirit of mutual understanding and concord in order to ensure that peace and sanity prevail through out the world .
47
THE ELEVENTH
PARTY CONGRESS
ADDRESS
by OSAGYEFO DR. KWAME NKRUMAH
At the Eleventh Party Congress at Kumasi on 29th July, 1962
ADDRESS
BY
OSAGYEFO
DR .
KWAME
NKRUMAH , GENERAL SECRETARY OF THE C.P.P.
AND CHAIRMAN OF THE CENTRAL
COMMITTEE AT THE 11th PARTY CONGRESS AT KUMASI ON 29th JULY, 1962
Comrades,
The last annual Party Congress took place in 1958 at Koforidua and under very different circumstances. Ghana was then a Dominion. Today we meet as
citizens of the Republic of Ghana, exercising our sovereign rights in the best interests of ourselves. Our great party, in the meantime, has undergone serious changes in its structure and organisation, and what is more, it has set the country on the road to socialist reconstruction . In this exercise some of us
have fallen by the wayside by the weight of our own conduct. We who have gathered here today must have cause to rejoice that we have withstood the tempest of these trials and changes and have survived.
Our party's aim is all-embracing, inspired and dedicated to the people and Nation . We have stated often and made it clear that our objective is a one party
state, which gives equal opportunity to all the people
and distinguishes citizens for merit and achievement but not privilege.
This Eleventh Congress of our great party being held in this historic city of Kumasi, is unique in many ways.
In a sense, it is the party dividing line between the past and the future, between what we have achieved and what we plan to achieve. We must therefore mark the
importance of this occasion by positive decisions. When we met in 1958 at Koforidua, the National
Headquarters of the party secretariat was accommo dated in a small office in Kimberley Avenue in Accra.
The general staff numbered less than thirty. The office 51
was poorly equipped and the administration was a sort of stop gap arrangement. We launched a building appeal fund . Party members and friends. generously subscribed. The result is the magnificent headquarters
building of the National Secretariat which
now
imposes its gorgeous personality on the scene around George Padmore Road in Accra.
The Party Administration was re -organised and streamlined , both at the centre and in the Regions. Sixteen departments were set up to cater for various aspects of Party activity. The Party now employs over two hundred full -time officials at National Head
quarters and in the Regions. No one who visits our National Secretariat can fail to be impressed by the effective and efficient arrangements for serving not only our Party members but also the general public. One of the most successful exercises carried out by the
Party during this period was the change of membership cards. The Central Committee decreed a change in
membership cards and directed that new cardsof a simple design be issued. The cards were distributed on a basis whereby every member had to obtain his member ship card from his branch Party. By this method floating membership is eliminated . Today every single party member belongs to one branch or another. Our
membership, not taking account of supporters and sympathisers, stands at two and half million. In 1961 , a major change took place in Administration. I assumed office as General Secretary of the Party and Chairman of the Central Committee. I did so in response to the invitation of the Central Committee to
me, to take up the post in order to give personal direction to Party administration . Our youngmen , imbued with a spirit of dedication and service , are thronging by the thousand to the colours of
the Party. Looking at them , I am sure that Ghana has a bright future in human material. Our young generations
led by the Young Pioneers, will grow up with the slogan :52
“ Ghana First ” on their lips and give of their best to Ghana in honest work andhonest living.
The Party organisation is effective in all its sections
and the Party integral bodies —— the Trades Union Congress, the United Ghana Farmers Council, the Co -operative Movement and the National Council of
Ghana Women - are all active and doing good work . I am aware that hard work still lies ahead of this
Party and that we must try not to allow our continued
success to make us over optimistic. It is only human and right, however, that we should congratulate ourselves on our achievements so far. The danger lies in com placency. Aslong as we do not rest on our oars, as long as each Comrade realises the importance of
carrying
on,” the Party will keep on its path of success. I have frequently pointed out that here in Ghana, and
for that matter in other parts of Africa, political action must be taken all along the line for as long as possible.
The ravages of colonialism and imperialism are such that only political action based on proper political con siderations and direction can effectively repair the
damage. That is why it is most important that the party should be in a position to give essential leadership to all national action , at all times. This demands that the Party leadership must be well informed and its actions well considered. The party has therefore built at a great cost, the Kwame Nkrumah
Institute of Ideological Studies at Winneba. Its object is to give party ideological education. Deserving activists, as well as those comrades who are interested,
are given opportunity to gain ideological training in theory and practice and to advance their knowledge in other aspects of Party education . Many successful seminars have recently taken place at the Institute and more and more Comrades are becoming interested in the work of the Institute.
The Party must keep faith with the nation and work hard to provide full employment, good housing and 53
equal opportunity up to the highest level for educa tional, spiritual and cultural advancement for all the people. Our task therefore is to build a socialist state, an equitable and progressive social order in which the
condition for the development of one is the condition for the development of all. This means a reconstruction crusade led by the Party . The National Executive and the Central Committee
have therefore given the most careful consideration to the agenda for this Congress and decided that our main work should be the consideration and adoption of the
Party Programme for Work and Happiness and the approval of the Party revised Constitution. The Programme has been widely circulated through out the country. It has been discussed and explained at
Party rallies and meetings and by the newspapers and the radio. Opportunity was given not only to Party members but also to everybody to study and criticise, thus fulfilling our promise to the masses that no action would be taken on the Programme until the people had
fully expressed their views on it, thus giving effect to the general policy of the Party that the masses should be consulted in all our actions.
I must report that we have received criticisms and suggestions in this regard but that by and large, the
nation overwhelminglysupports theprogramme and by resolutions, telegrams, letters and other means, demon strated its will for Congress to adopt it for implemen tation.
I do not find it necessary to comment here on the
contents of the Programme. Surely delegatesmust have studied its provisions before nowsince the Programme has been in the hands of the Public for several months.
It deals with varied subjects covering the whole of our national life including Tax Reform , National Planning, Banking and Insurance, Forest Husbandry, Animal Husbandry and Poultry Production, Fish Production and Marketing, Industrialisation, Agriculture, Educa tion, Culture and Leisure, Transport, etc. 54
The Central Committee put considerable work and thought into the draft programme. It is prudent there
fore,not to dismiss any provisions lightly. The amendments to the Constitution are straight
forward and not complicated . One major amendment deals with the establishment of Party Special Branches. It provides that special branches of the Party shall be established in working places. The purpose of these
special branches is to study and propagatethe principles of Nkrumaism , Party decisions, policies and pro grammes. Already most of these special branches which
are not chartered branches have actually been esta blished and are doing very useful work . It is important for Party members to realise that the
Party Constitution is the fundamental law of the Party and therefore the protector of all Party members. Party Comrades, for their own sake, should endea
vour to acquire a good working knowledge of the Constitution. In this way, their rights and duties will be clear to them and their conduct will be properly guided by it at all times. Apart from the protection that the Party Constitution gives, Party members can also
protect themselves by their own integrity and honesty. I have in recent times spoken so much on this subject and have emphasised this point very clearly both in the Dawn Broadcast and in my Address to the National
Executive at the Ideological Institute at Winneba, the
subject-matter of which has been printed and formsthe Guide to Party Action . Delegates who have not had
copies of the Guide to Party Action can obtain these at the Congress Secretariat.
This great Party is deeply rooted in the people. The masses swear by it. Its prestige is reflected in the confidence reposed in it not only by Ghanaians but also by Africans elsewhere. The Party therefore has a
duty and an obligation to stand by the people. Our
performance mustbe first-class. Our sincerity must be above suspicion and we must always have the courage 55
of our convictions. To achieve this, we have periodically to examine ourselves critically and to establish a firm
discipline. In future we shall even be more critical of our conduct and actions .
As Comrade delegates know , we are embarking upon a period of intensive industrialisation and the mechani
sation and diversification of agriculture. This is the time, therefore, when we shall need every available hand . The intelligentsia, the workers, the farmers and peasants, all the people must pull together in one great effort to liquidate and abolish all the remnants of the evils of colonialism - illiteracy, disease, poverty,
hunger, malnutrition and squalor. All the people must work together, for our interests are one and
inseparable and our destiny is one and single. It is good to note, in this connection, that more and
more of our intelligentsia are finding their way into the Party and identifying themselves with it. It istime they identified themselves with the masses.
Ghana is blessed with some of the greatest assets and attractions any country can offer. Ours is a secular
democratic State. We have no knowledge of inter race tensions. We accept all colours, creeds and
religions. Our mineral and agricultural potential is great. Our per capita income is comfortably high and our economy is buoyant. We can make Ghana a show
piece of African success if this party gives the correct leadership to our people. Hitherto development action has been taken on the surface. The places at the base have been little affected
by the extensive changes taking place. The Party has therefore decided to re-organise local government in order to get action down to affect the life of the people at the base in their homes and villages. New districts have been created bringing up the number of districts from seventy to about one hundred and fifty. It is intended that a district shall not only constitute a local council area administered by a District Commissioner 56
but shall also constitute an electoral constituency. In
addition there have been created town and village committees so that the internal life of villages can be
substantially administered by the villagers themselves. The ordinary worker, farmer and peasant thereby becomes an active participant in the government of the
country and the life of the community generally becomes organised right at its base. All this work needs a steady party machine and administration which in turn need money for upkeep. Comrade delegates will realise that our party has no
sources of income. It does not engage in trade or business. It depends solely on its membership, that is to say on dues paid by Party members and donations. We must therefore find more effective ways and means
for collecting membership dues and donations.
Expenditure on the National and Regional Secre tariats per month, amounts to almost twenty thousand pounds. We need a steady income of approximately
two hundred and fifty thousand pounds annually therefore for running the Party's Administration and maintaining an
effective political machine. This
amount can be raised without much difficulty if every member pays regularly his dues of only three
shillings a year. The Central Committee will request Finance Committee to work out new methods of collection to ensure that all members pay their dues
as a duty to the Party.
The Party and Government have, during these years, worked tirelessly for a rapid economic transformation to catch up with our political advance. We have
achieved much in the field of actual development and this is dealt with in outline by the Party Programme.
Under the leadership of the Party, Ghana has main tained a steady progress since independence. Con sidering that these are our formative years of nationhood, we can afford to look at the future with confidence.
57
I have often pondered on the plight of most of our
people in regard to social security . Surely citizens of Ghana must have the right to maintenance in case of
sickness, disability, old age or some other handicap. Now only a few people in the Service of the nation enjoy such rights. We must look at this matter with new eyes and plan an elaborate scheme of national
insurance and pensions which would cover all the people. For example, imagine the lot of Party officials
now, were some to suffer severe and protracted illness or some disability which prevented them from being able to work any longer - it could be a very sad and hard lot, for the Party would not be in a position to
give such officials the adequate provision which would be necessary for their upkeep. This illustration is also true of many public workers. Such a state of affairs is rather undesirable and can work considerable hard
shipand misery on our people. I invite Congress to pay particular attention to this matter and urge the intro duction of social security and national insurance schemes for all our working people as quickly as possible. It is incumbent upon this great Party to plan comfort
and happiness for our old people. Old age could be a blessing if the aged can have succour necessary to keep themselves and their peace of mind. Unfortunately, most old people are often poor and since they get no
income from any source whatever, their days end in sorrow and misery. We must correct this at all costs. Many of the aged must have rendered useful service
of one type or the other to the state at sometime and they must not be forsaken in their last days. Social
Security should also provide for loss of bread-winner
pensions, vocational training for disabled persons and maintain institutions for health, rest and leisure.
As you all know , this party cannot achieve all that it
has achieved without efficient organisation. Rightfrom the start the Convention People's Party has always
placed a premium on organisation, for organisation decides everything. 58
We have passed through trials and tribulations. We have weathered fierce storms and upheavals in the
young life of the Convention People's Party. Comrades, a serious development is beginning to take place on our national scene. You all remember the
cocoa politicians and the considerable havoc they caused with their seasonal activity. Every cocoa season
they went about fabricating stories about offer of high prices of cocoa. They spread incredible and fantastic stories so as to deceive and confuse our common folk .
Every cocoa season the Party and Government fought hard to counter these treacherous activities until the
truth was established and the cocoa politicians dis appeared with their inevitable doom.
Now a new traitor of the Nation hasappeared. He is even worse than the cocoa politician. He is what I call the Budget politician. This vicious person goes about when budget time approaches, spreading all sorts of fabrications about cost of commodities, telling lies
about the Party and Government and thus causing alarm and despondency among the people. We must declare war upon these rascals and if they are in the Party, weed them out ruthlessly. If they are without, we must mercilessly and ruthlessly crush their
activity and render them harmless, and like the cocoa politicians, send them to their inevitable doom . I charge all Party members to report to the authorities the activities of any person or persons found indulging in this shameful and unpatriotic practice. The Party and Government will launch a ten-year electrification scheme. Since we have placed our
national emphasis on rapid industrialisation, it is essential that we should build electric power to the
point where the smallest nook and corner of Ghana
can obtain electric supply readily and cheap to facilitate activity. The Government will also launch a Seven -Year
Development Plan on a scale unprecedented in this 59
PUBLISHED BY THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE PARTY AND PRINTED BY THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING DEPARTMENT ACCRA • GHANA .
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