31 Selected Journalists Benefited Under PPP Capacity Building Workshop
Report by Joseph Kobla Wemakor
The Public Investment Division (PID)
of the Ministry of Finance has built the capacity of thirty-one (31) selected
journalists and Media Practitioners on the concept of the Public Private
Partnership (PPP) and its related issues.
The Four-day Training Workshop which
took place at the Capital View Hotel, Koforidua in the Eastern Region from the
1-4 October 2014 was the second of its kind since the inception of the PPP
program in Ghana. The first one which took place in Accra at the Alisa Hotel
was a one-day capacity building workshop equally aimed at sensitizing the media
on how to carry out factual and accurate reportage on PPPs
Mrs. Magdalene Apenteng, Director of the
Public Investment Division, Ministry of Finance, in her opening statement
indicated that the main
objective of the Workshop was to create awareness, improve knowledge and
understanding on PPPs, and to attract advocacy for PPPs on a national level.
This was read on her behalf by Mr. Ekow
Coleman, PPP analyst at the Public Investment Division of Ministry of Finance.
According to Mrs. Apenteng,
the understanding
of PPPs can only be achieved through systematic public information and
education through the media, and dialogue with key stakeholders hence the need
for building the capacity of Journalists has become crucial for the survival of
the PPP Program.
She maintained the importance of
correct and factual reportage on the Ghana PPP Programme cannot be
over-emphasised considering the fact that PPP could be misconstrued to mean a
take-over of public institutions by the private sector moreover, multiple
layers of unawareness among stakeholders, including public officials, public
institutions, private partners, trade unions and even the media in the complex
business of public-private-partnership, is a challenge which can only be met
through effective education.
She cautioned the
participants to desist from painting attractive picture of everything PPP but
rather be objective in the assessment of individual PPP arrangements and
Programmes in order to arrive at an accurate reportage. “Your task is not only
to paint a glorious and beautiful picture of everything PPP, As professional
and independent journalists, your objective assessment of the individual PPP
arrangements and of the PPP Programme as a whole could provide valuable
information and insights to assist us, as the implementers, in improving the
programme for the benefit of all Ghanaians” she stated.
Professor Linus Abraham, a
media expert and a resource person at the workshop urged the participants to
cultivate the habit of civic journalism which guarantee the use of building
stories around the thematic areas of PPP rather than the adopting the watchdog
journalism style which only deals with episodic story telling instead of
focusing on the thematic stories.
According to him
understanding the Public Investment Division (PID) and its work, and gaining
access to its key themes and messages, provides the basis for developing story
ideas and story angles that go beyond simple episodic stories whiles “thematic
stories,” build the public’s understanding and knowledge of what PPPs are,
their processes, and importance to the economic development of the nation.
While encouraging the
participants to be agents of change and helping bring to light the benefits of
the PPPs Projects in Ghana, he stressed that the media has a huge role to play
if the PPP programmes can work effectively to the development of the nation.
The PPP arrangement is a
long-term contractual arrangement where government taps the financial, human
and technical resources of the private sector for the delivery of
infrastructure and services traditionally provided solely by government. The arrangement ensures that there is a
significant degree of risk-sharing between the public and private sectors.
Principally, a PPP enables Government to provide better infrastructure and
services by adopting some of the efficiencies and good practices of the private
sector moreover it frees public resources that would have been used for such
projects for other equally important uses. The private sector, on its part,
derives benefits from the revenue generated from the projects.
The PPP Programme is aimed at
removing the pressures on limited government resources in provision of public
infrastructure and services, draw on private sector resources to accelerate
needed investments in public infrastructure and services, increase the
availability of public infrastructure and services and improve their quality
and facilitate investment by the private sector, by creating an enabling
environment for PPPs.
The Public Investment
Development is responsible for promoting awareness and understanding of
PPPs, creating an enabling context for appropriate development of PPPs and
supervising the Implementation of PPPs in the country.
A group of selected Journalists who benefited under the workshop |
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